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1596 lines
57 KiB
C
1596 lines
57 KiB
C
/* hyperloglog.c - Redis HyperLogLog probabilistic cardinality approximation.
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* This file implements the algorithm and the exported Redis commands.
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*
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* Copyright (c) 2014, Salvatore Sanfilippo <antirez at gmail dot com>
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* All rights reserved.
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*
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* Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without
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* modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions are met:
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*
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* * Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright notice,
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* this list of conditions and the following disclaimer.
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* * Redistributions in binary form must reproduce the above copyright
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* notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer in the
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* documentation and/or other materials provided with the distribution.
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* * Neither the name of Redis nor the names of its contributors may be used
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* to endorse or promote products derived from this software without
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* specific prior written permission.
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*
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* THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY THE COPYRIGHT HOLDERS AND CONTRIBUTORS "AS IS"
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* AND ANY EXPRESS OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, THE
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* IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE
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* ARE DISCLAIMED. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE COPYRIGHT OWNER OR CONTRIBUTORS BE
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* LIABLE FOR ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL, SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY, OR
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* CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES (INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, PROCUREMENT OF
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* SUBSTITUTE GOODS OR SERVICES; LOSS OF USE, DATA, OR PROFITS; OR BUSINESS
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* INTERRUPTION) HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON ANY THEORY OF LIABILITY, WHETHER IN
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* CONTRACT, STRICT LIABILITY, OR TORT (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE)
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* ARISING IN ANY WAY OUT OF THE USE OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE
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* POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGE.
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*/
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#include "server.h"
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#include <stdint.h>
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#include <math.h>
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/* The Redis HyperLogLog implementation is based on the following ideas:
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*
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* * The use of a 64 bit hash function as proposed in [1], in order to don't
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* limited to cardinalities up to 10^9, at the cost of just 1 additional
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* bit per register.
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* * The use of 16384 6-bit registers for a great level of accuracy, using
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* a total of 12k per key.
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* * The use of the Redis string data type. No new type is introduced.
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* * No attempt is made to compress the data structure as in [1]. Also the
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* algorithm used is the original HyperLogLog Algorithm as in [2], with
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* the only difference that a 64 bit hash function is used, so no correction
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* is performed for values near 2^32 as in [1].
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*
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* [1] Heule, Nunkesser, Hall: HyperLogLog in Practice: Algorithmic
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* Engineering of a State of The Art Cardinality Estimation Algorithm.
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*
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* [2] P. Flajolet, Éric Fusy, O. Gandouet, and F. Meunier. Hyperloglog: The
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* analysis of a near-optimal cardinality estimation algorithm.
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*
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* Redis uses two representations:
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*
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* 1) A "dense" representation where every entry is represented by
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* a 6-bit integer.
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* 2) A "sparse" representation using run length compression suitable
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* for representing HyperLogLogs with many registers set to 0 in
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* a memory efficient way.
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*
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*
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* HLL header
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* ===
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*
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* Both the dense and sparse representation have a 16 byte header as follows:
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*
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* +------+---+-----+----------+
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* | HYLL | E | N/U | Cardin. |
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* +------+---+-----+----------+
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*
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* The first 4 bytes are a magic string set to the bytes "HYLL".
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* "E" is one byte encoding, currently set to HLL_DENSE or
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* HLL_SPARSE. N/U are three not used bytes.
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*
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* The "Cardin." field is a 64 bit integer stored in little endian format
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* with the latest cardinality computed that can be reused if the data
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* structure was not modified since the last computation (this is useful
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* because there are high probabilities that HLLADD operations don't
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* modify the actual data structure and hence the approximated cardinality).
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*
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* When the most significant bit in the most significant byte of the cached
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* cardinality is set, it means that the data structure was modified and
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* we can't reuse the cached value that must be recomputed.
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*
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* Dense representation
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* ===
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*
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* The dense representation used by Redis is the following:
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*
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* +--------+--------+--------+------// //--+
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* |11000000|22221111|33333322|55444444 .... |
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* +--------+--------+--------+------// //--+
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*
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* The 6 bits counters are encoded one after the other starting from the
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* LSB to the MSB, and using the next bytes as needed.
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*
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* Sparse representation
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* ===
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*
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* The sparse representation encodes registers using a run length
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* encoding composed of three opcodes, two using one byte, and one using
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* of two bytes. The opcodes are called ZERO, XZERO and VAL.
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*
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* ZERO opcode is represented as 00xxxxxx. The 6-bit integer represented
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* by the six bits 'xxxxxx', plus 1, means that there are N registers set
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* to 0. This opcode can represent from 1 to 64 contiguous registers set
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* to the value of 0.
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*
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* XZERO opcode is represented by two bytes 01xxxxxx yyyyyyyy. The 14-bit
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* integer represented by the bits 'xxxxxx' as most significant bits and
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* 'yyyyyyyy' as least significant bits, plus 1, means that there are N
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* registers set to 0. This opcode can represent from 0 to 16384 contiguous
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* registers set to the value of 0.
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*
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* VAL opcode is represented as 1vvvvvxx. It contains a 5-bit integer
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* representing the value of a register, and a 2-bit integer representing
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* the number of contiguous registers set to that value 'vvvvv'.
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* To obtain the value and run length, the integers vvvvv and xx must be
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* incremented by one. This opcode can represent values from 1 to 32,
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* repeated from 1 to 4 times.
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*
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* The sparse representation can't represent registers with a value greater
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* than 32, however it is very unlikely that we find such a register in an
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* HLL with a cardinality where the sparse representation is still more
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* memory efficient than the dense representation. When this happens the
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* HLL is converted to the dense representation.
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*
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* The sparse representation is purely positional. For example a sparse
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* representation of an empty HLL is just: XZERO:16384.
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*
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* An HLL having only 3 non-zero registers at position 1000, 1020, 1021
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* respectively set to 2, 3, 3, is represented by the following three
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* opcodes:
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*
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* XZERO:1000 (Registers 0-999 are set to 0)
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* VAL:2,1 (1 register set to value 2, that is register 1000)
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* ZERO:19 (Registers 1001-1019 set to 0)
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* VAL:3,2 (2 registers set to value 3, that is registers 1020,1021)
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* XZERO:15362 (Registers 1022-16383 set to 0)
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*
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* In the example the sparse representation used just 7 bytes instead
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* of 12k in order to represent the HLL registers. In general for low
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* cardinality there is a big win in terms of space efficiency, traded
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* with CPU time since the sparse representation is slower to access:
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*
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* The following table shows average cardinality vs bytes used, 100
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* samples per cardinality (when the set was not representable because
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* of registers with too big value, the dense representation size was used
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* as a sample).
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*
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* 100 267
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* 200 485
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* 300 678
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* 400 859
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* 500 1033
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* 600 1205
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* 700 1375
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* 800 1544
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* 900 1713
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* 1000 1882
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* 2000 3480
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* 3000 4879
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* 4000 6089
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* 5000 7138
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* 6000 8042
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* 7000 8823
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* 8000 9500
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* 9000 10088
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* 10000 10591
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*
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* The dense representation uses 12288 bytes, so there is a big win up to
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* a cardinality of ~2000-3000. For bigger cardinalities the constant times
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* involved in updating the sparse representation is not justified by the
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* memory savings. The exact maximum length of the sparse representation
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* when this implementation switches to the dense representation is
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* configured via the define server.hll_sparse_max_bytes.
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*/
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struct hllhdr {
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char magic[4]; /* "HYLL" */
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uint8_t encoding; /* HLL_DENSE or HLL_SPARSE. */
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uint8_t notused[3]; /* Reserved for future use, must be zero. */
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uint8_t card[8]; /* Cached cardinality, little endian. */
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uint8_t registers[]; /* Data bytes. */
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};
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/* The cached cardinality MSB is used to signal validity of the cached value. */
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#define HLL_INVALIDATE_CACHE(hdr) (hdr)->card[7] |= (1<<7)
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#define HLL_VALID_CACHE(hdr) (((hdr)->card[7] & (1<<7)) == 0)
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#define HLL_P 14 /* The greater is P, the smaller the error. */
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#define HLL_Q (64-HLL_P) /* The number of bits of the hash value used for
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determining the number of leading zeros. */
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#define HLL_REGISTERS (1<<HLL_P) /* With P=14, 16384 registers. */
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#define HLL_P_MASK (HLL_REGISTERS-1) /* Mask to index register. */
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#define HLL_BITS 6 /* Enough to count up to 63 leading zeroes. */
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#define HLL_REGISTER_MAX ((1<<HLL_BITS)-1)
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#define HLL_HDR_SIZE sizeof(struct hllhdr)
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#define HLL_DENSE_SIZE (HLL_HDR_SIZE+((HLL_REGISTERS*HLL_BITS+7)/8))
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#define HLL_DENSE 0 /* Dense encoding. */
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#define HLL_SPARSE 1 /* Sparse encoding. */
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#define HLL_RAW 255 /* Only used internally, never exposed. */
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#define HLL_MAX_ENCODING 1
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static char *invalid_hll_err = "-INVALIDOBJ Corrupted HLL object detected\r\n";
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/* =========================== Low level bit macros ========================= */
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/* Macros to access the dense representation.
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*
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* We need to get and set 6 bit counters in an array of 8 bit bytes.
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* We use macros to make sure the code is inlined since speed is critical
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* especially in order to compute the approximated cardinality in
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* HLLCOUNT where we need to access all the registers at once.
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* For the same reason we also want to avoid conditionals in this code path.
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*
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* +--------+--------+--------+------//
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* |11000000|22221111|33333322|55444444
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* +--------+--------+--------+------//
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*
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* Note: in the above representation the most significant bit (MSB)
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* of every byte is on the left. We start using bits from the LSB to MSB,
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* and so forth passing to the next byte.
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*
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* Example, we want to access to counter at pos = 1 ("111111" in the
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* illustration above).
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*
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* The index of the first byte b0 containing our data is:
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*
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* b0 = 6 * pos / 8 = 0
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*
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* +--------+
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* |11000000| <- Our byte at b0
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* +--------+
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*
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* The position of the first bit (counting from the LSB = 0) in the byte
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* is given by:
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*
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* fb = 6 * pos % 8 -> 6
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*
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* Right shift b0 of 'fb' bits.
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*
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* +--------+
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* |11000000| <- Initial value of b0
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* |00000011| <- After right shift of 6 pos.
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* +--------+
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*
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* Left shift b1 of bits 8-fb bits (2 bits)
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*
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* +--------+
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* |22221111| <- Initial value of b1
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* |22111100| <- After left shift of 2 bits.
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* +--------+
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*
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* OR the two bits, and finally AND with 111111 (63 in decimal) to
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* clean the higher order bits we are not interested in:
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*
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* +--------+
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* |00000011| <- b0 right shifted
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* |22111100| <- b1 left shifted
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* |22111111| <- b0 OR b1
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* | 111111| <- (b0 OR b1) AND 63, our value.
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* +--------+
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*
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* We can try with a different example, like pos = 0. In this case
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* the 6-bit counter is actually contained in a single byte.
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*
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* b0 = 6 * pos / 8 = 0
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*
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* +--------+
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* |11000000| <- Our byte at b0
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* +--------+
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*
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* fb = 6 * pos % 8 = 0
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*
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* So we right shift of 0 bits (no shift in practice) and
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* left shift the next byte of 8 bits, even if we don't use it,
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* but this has the effect of clearing the bits so the result
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* will not be affacted after the OR.
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*
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* -------------------------------------------------------------------------
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*
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* Setting the register is a bit more complex, let's assume that 'val'
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* is the value we want to set, already in the right range.
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*
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* We need two steps, in one we need to clear the bits, and in the other
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* we need to bitwise-OR the new bits.
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*
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* Let's try with 'pos' = 1, so our first byte at 'b' is 0,
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*
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* "fb" is 6 in this case.
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*
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* +--------+
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* |11000000| <- Our byte at b0
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* +--------+
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*
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* To create a AND-mask to clear the bits about this position, we just
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* initialize the mask with the value 63, left shift it of "fs" bits,
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* and finally invert the result.
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*
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* +--------+
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* |00111111| <- "mask" starts at 63
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* |11000000| <- "mask" after left shift of "ls" bits.
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* |00111111| <- "mask" after invert.
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* +--------+
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*
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* Now we can bitwise-AND the byte at "b" with the mask, and bitwise-OR
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* it with "val" left-shifted of "ls" bits to set the new bits.
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*
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* Now let's focus on the next byte b1:
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*
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* +--------+
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* |22221111| <- Initial value of b1
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* +--------+
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*
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* To build the AND mask we start again with the 63 value, right shift
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* it by 8-fb bits, and invert it.
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*
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* +--------+
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* |00111111| <- "mask" set at 2&6-1
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* |00001111| <- "mask" after the right shift by 8-fb = 2 bits
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* |11110000| <- "mask" after bitwise not.
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* +--------+
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*
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* Now we can mask it with b+1 to clear the old bits, and bitwise-OR
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* with "val" left-shifted by "rs" bits to set the new value.
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*/
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/* Note: if we access the last counter, we will also access the b+1 byte
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* that is out of the array, but sds strings always have an implicit null
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* term, so the byte exists, and we can skip the conditional (or the need
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* to allocate 1 byte more explicitly). */
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/* Store the value of the register at position 'regnum' into variable 'target'.
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* 'p' is an array of unsigned bytes. */
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#define HLL_DENSE_GET_REGISTER(target,p,regnum) do { \
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uint8_t *_p = (uint8_t*) p; \
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unsigned long _byte = regnum*HLL_BITS/8; \
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unsigned long _fb = regnum*HLL_BITS&7; \
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unsigned long _fb8 = 8 - _fb; \
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unsigned long b0 = _p[_byte]; \
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unsigned long b1 = _p[_byte+1]; \
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target = ((b0 >> _fb) | (b1 << _fb8)) & HLL_REGISTER_MAX; \
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} while(0)
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/* Set the value of the register at position 'regnum' to 'val'.
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* 'p' is an array of unsigned bytes. */
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#define HLL_DENSE_SET_REGISTER(p,regnum,val) do { \
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uint8_t *_p = (uint8_t*) p; \
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unsigned long _byte = regnum*HLL_BITS/8; \
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unsigned long _fb = regnum*HLL_BITS&7; \
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unsigned long _fb8 = 8 - _fb; \
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unsigned long _v = val; \
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_p[_byte] &= ~(HLL_REGISTER_MAX << _fb); \
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_p[_byte] |= _v << _fb; \
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_p[_byte+1] &= ~(HLL_REGISTER_MAX >> _fb8); \
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_p[_byte+1] |= _v >> _fb8; \
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} while(0)
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/* Macros to access the sparse representation.
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* The macros parameter is expected to be an uint8_t pointer. */
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#define HLL_SPARSE_XZERO_BIT 0x40 /* 01xxxxxx */
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#define HLL_SPARSE_VAL_BIT 0x80 /* 1vvvvvxx */
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#define HLL_SPARSE_IS_ZERO(p) (((*(p)) & 0xc0) == 0) /* 00xxxxxx */
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#define HLL_SPARSE_IS_XZERO(p) (((*(p)) & 0xc0) == HLL_SPARSE_XZERO_BIT)
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#define HLL_SPARSE_IS_VAL(p) ((*(p)) & HLL_SPARSE_VAL_BIT)
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#define HLL_SPARSE_ZERO_LEN(p) (((*(p)) & 0x3f)+1)
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#define HLL_SPARSE_XZERO_LEN(p) (((((*(p)) & 0x3f) << 8) | (*((p)+1)))+1)
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#define HLL_SPARSE_VAL_VALUE(p) ((((*(p)) >> 2) & 0x1f)+1)
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#define HLL_SPARSE_VAL_LEN(p) (((*(p)) & 0x3)+1)
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#define HLL_SPARSE_VAL_MAX_VALUE 32
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#define HLL_SPARSE_VAL_MAX_LEN 4
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#define HLL_SPARSE_ZERO_MAX_LEN 64
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#define HLL_SPARSE_XZERO_MAX_LEN 16384
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#define HLL_SPARSE_VAL_SET(p,val,len) do { \
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*(p) = (((val)-1)<<2|((len)-1))|HLL_SPARSE_VAL_BIT; \
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} while(0)
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#define HLL_SPARSE_ZERO_SET(p,len) do { \
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*(p) = (len)-1; \
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} while(0)
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#define HLL_SPARSE_XZERO_SET(p,len) do { \
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int _l = (len)-1; \
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*(p) = (_l>>8) | HLL_SPARSE_XZERO_BIT; \
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*((p)+1) = (_l&0xff); \
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} while(0)
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#define HLL_ALPHA_INF 0.721347520444481703680 /* constant for 0.5/ln(2) */
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/* ========================= HyperLogLog algorithm ========================= */
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/* Our hash function is MurmurHash2, 64 bit version.
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* It was modified for Redis in order to provide the same result in
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* big and little endian archs (endian neutral). */
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uint64_t MurmurHash64A (const void * key, int len, unsigned int seed) {
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const uint64_t m = 0xc6a4a7935bd1e995;
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const int r = 47;
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uint64_t h = seed ^ (len * m);
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const uint8_t *data = (const uint8_t *)key;
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const uint8_t *end = data + (len-(len&7));
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while(data != end) {
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uint64_t k;
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#if (BYTE_ORDER == LITTLE_ENDIAN)
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#ifdef USE_ALIGNED_ACCESS
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memcpy(&k,data,sizeof(uint64_t));
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#else
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k = *((uint64_t*)data);
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#endif
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#else
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k = (uint64_t) data[0];
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k |= (uint64_t) data[1] << 8;
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k |= (uint64_t) data[2] << 16;
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k |= (uint64_t) data[3] << 24;
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k |= (uint64_t) data[4] << 32;
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k |= (uint64_t) data[5] << 40;
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k |= (uint64_t) data[6] << 48;
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k |= (uint64_t) data[7] << 56;
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#endif
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k *= m;
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k ^= k >> r;
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k *= m;
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h ^= k;
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h *= m;
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data += 8;
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}
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switch(len & 7) {
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case 7: h ^= (uint64_t)data[6] << 48; /* fall-thru */
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case 6: h ^= (uint64_t)data[5] << 40; /* fall-thru */
|
|
case 5: h ^= (uint64_t)data[4] << 32; /* fall-thru */
|
|
case 4: h ^= (uint64_t)data[3] << 24; /* fall-thru */
|
|
case 3: h ^= (uint64_t)data[2] << 16; /* fall-thru */
|
|
case 2: h ^= (uint64_t)data[1] << 8; /* fall-thru */
|
|
case 1: h ^= (uint64_t)data[0];
|
|
h *= m; /* fall-thru */
|
|
};
|
|
|
|
h ^= h >> r;
|
|
h *= m;
|
|
h ^= h >> r;
|
|
return h;
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
/* Given a string element to add to the HyperLogLog, returns the length
|
|
* of the pattern 000..1 of the element hash. As a side effect 'regp' is
|
|
* set to the register index this element hashes to. */
|
|
int hllPatLen(unsigned char *ele, size_t elesize, long *regp) {
|
|
uint64_t hash, bit, index;
|
|
int count;
|
|
|
|
/* Count the number of zeroes starting from bit HLL_REGISTERS
|
|
* (that is a power of two corresponding to the first bit we don't use
|
|
* as index). The max run can be 64-P+1 = Q+1 bits.
|
|
*
|
|
* Note that the final "1" ending the sequence of zeroes must be
|
|
* included in the count, so if we find "001" the count is 3, and
|
|
* the smallest count possible is no zeroes at all, just a 1 bit
|
|
* at the first position, that is a count of 1.
|
|
*
|
|
* This may sound like inefficient, but actually in the average case
|
|
* there are high probabilities to find a 1 after a few iterations. */
|
|
hash = MurmurHash64A(ele,elesize,0xadc83b19ULL);
|
|
index = hash & HLL_P_MASK; /* Register index. */
|
|
hash >>= HLL_P; /* Remove bits used to address the register. */
|
|
hash |= ((uint64_t)1<<HLL_Q); /* Make sure the loop terminates
|
|
and count will be <= Q+1. */
|
|
bit = 1;
|
|
count = 1; /* Initialized to 1 since we count the "00000...1" pattern. */
|
|
while((hash & bit) == 0) {
|
|
count++;
|
|
bit <<= 1;
|
|
}
|
|
*regp = (int) index;
|
|
return count;
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
/* ================== Dense representation implementation ================== */
|
|
|
|
/* Low level function to set the dense HLL register at 'index' to the
|
|
* specified value if the current value is smaller than 'count'.
|
|
*
|
|
* 'registers' is expected to have room for HLL_REGISTERS plus an
|
|
* additional byte on the right. This requirement is met by sds strings
|
|
* automatically since they are implicitly null terminated.
|
|
*
|
|
* The function always succeed, however if as a result of the operation
|
|
* the approximated cardinality changed, 1 is returned. Otherwise 0
|
|
* is returned. */
|
|
int hllDenseSet(uint8_t *registers, long index, uint8_t count) {
|
|
uint8_t oldcount;
|
|
|
|
HLL_DENSE_GET_REGISTER(oldcount,registers,index);
|
|
if (count > oldcount) {
|
|
HLL_DENSE_SET_REGISTER(registers,index,count);
|
|
return 1;
|
|
} else {
|
|
return 0;
|
|
}
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
/* "Add" the element in the dense hyperloglog data structure.
|
|
* Actually nothing is added, but the max 0 pattern counter of the subset
|
|
* the element belongs to is incremented if needed.
|
|
*
|
|
* This is just a wrapper to hllDenseSet(), performing the hashing of the
|
|
* element in order to retrieve the index and zero-run count. */
|
|
int hllDenseAdd(uint8_t *registers, unsigned char *ele, size_t elesize) {
|
|
long index;
|
|
uint8_t count = hllPatLen(ele,elesize,&index);
|
|
/* Update the register if this element produced a longer run of zeroes. */
|
|
return hllDenseSet(registers,index,count);
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
/* Compute the register histogram in the dense representation. */
|
|
void hllDenseRegHisto(uint8_t *registers, int* reghisto) {
|
|
int j;
|
|
|
|
/* Redis default is to use 16384 registers 6 bits each. The code works
|
|
* with other values by modifying the defines, but for our target value
|
|
* we take a faster path with unrolled loops. */
|
|
if (HLL_REGISTERS == 16384 && HLL_BITS == 6) {
|
|
uint8_t *r = registers;
|
|
unsigned long r0, r1, r2, r3, r4, r5, r6, r7, r8, r9,
|
|
r10, r11, r12, r13, r14, r15;
|
|
for (j = 0; j < 1024; j++) {
|
|
/* Handle 16 registers per iteration. */
|
|
r0 = r[0] & 63;
|
|
r1 = (r[0] >> 6 | r[1] << 2) & 63;
|
|
r2 = (r[1] >> 4 | r[2] << 4) & 63;
|
|
r3 = (r[2] >> 2) & 63;
|
|
r4 = r[3] & 63;
|
|
r5 = (r[3] >> 6 | r[4] << 2) & 63;
|
|
r6 = (r[4] >> 4 | r[5] << 4) & 63;
|
|
r7 = (r[5] >> 2) & 63;
|
|
r8 = r[6] & 63;
|
|
r9 = (r[6] >> 6 | r[7] << 2) & 63;
|
|
r10 = (r[7] >> 4 | r[8] << 4) & 63;
|
|
r11 = (r[8] >> 2) & 63;
|
|
r12 = r[9] & 63;
|
|
r13 = (r[9] >> 6 | r[10] << 2) & 63;
|
|
r14 = (r[10] >> 4 | r[11] << 4) & 63;
|
|
r15 = (r[11] >> 2) & 63;
|
|
|
|
reghisto[r0]++;
|
|
reghisto[r1]++;
|
|
reghisto[r2]++;
|
|
reghisto[r3]++;
|
|
reghisto[r4]++;
|
|
reghisto[r5]++;
|
|
reghisto[r6]++;
|
|
reghisto[r7]++;
|
|
reghisto[r8]++;
|
|
reghisto[r9]++;
|
|
reghisto[r10]++;
|
|
reghisto[r11]++;
|
|
reghisto[r12]++;
|
|
reghisto[r13]++;
|
|
reghisto[r14]++;
|
|
reghisto[r15]++;
|
|
|
|
r += 12;
|
|
}
|
|
} else {
|
|
for(j = 0; j < HLL_REGISTERS; j++) {
|
|
unsigned long reg;
|
|
HLL_DENSE_GET_REGISTER(reg,registers,j);
|
|
reghisto[reg]++;
|
|
}
|
|
}
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
/* ================== Sparse representation implementation ================= */
|
|
|
|
/* Convert the HLL with sparse representation given as input in its dense
|
|
* representation. Both representations are represented by SDS strings, and
|
|
* the input representation is freed as a side effect.
|
|
*
|
|
* The function returns C_OK if the sparse representation was valid,
|
|
* otherwise C_ERR is returned if the representation was corrupted. */
|
|
int hllSparseToDense(robj *o) {
|
|
sds sparse = o->ptr, dense;
|
|
struct hllhdr *hdr, *oldhdr = (struct hllhdr*)sparse;
|
|
int idx = 0, runlen, regval;
|
|
uint8_t *p = (uint8_t*)sparse, *end = p+sdslen(sparse);
|
|
|
|
/* If the representation is already the right one return ASAP. */
|
|
hdr = (struct hllhdr*) sparse;
|
|
if (hdr->encoding == HLL_DENSE) return C_OK;
|
|
|
|
/* Create a string of the right size filled with zero bytes.
|
|
* Note that the cached cardinality is set to 0 as a side effect
|
|
* that is exactly the cardinality of an empty HLL. */
|
|
dense = sdsnewlen(NULL,HLL_DENSE_SIZE);
|
|
hdr = (struct hllhdr*) dense;
|
|
*hdr = *oldhdr; /* This will copy the magic and cached cardinality. */
|
|
hdr->encoding = HLL_DENSE;
|
|
|
|
/* Now read the sparse representation and set non-zero registers
|
|
* accordingly. */
|
|
p += HLL_HDR_SIZE;
|
|
while(p < end) {
|
|
if (HLL_SPARSE_IS_ZERO(p)) {
|
|
runlen = HLL_SPARSE_ZERO_LEN(p);
|
|
idx += runlen;
|
|
p++;
|
|
} else if (HLL_SPARSE_IS_XZERO(p)) {
|
|
runlen = HLL_SPARSE_XZERO_LEN(p);
|
|
idx += runlen;
|
|
p += 2;
|
|
} else {
|
|
runlen = HLL_SPARSE_VAL_LEN(p);
|
|
regval = HLL_SPARSE_VAL_VALUE(p);
|
|
if ((runlen + idx) > HLL_REGISTERS) break; /* Overflow. */
|
|
while(runlen--) {
|
|
HLL_DENSE_SET_REGISTER(hdr->registers,idx,regval);
|
|
idx++;
|
|
}
|
|
p++;
|
|
}
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
/* If the sparse representation was valid, we expect to find idx
|
|
* set to HLL_REGISTERS. */
|
|
if (idx != HLL_REGISTERS) {
|
|
sdsfree(dense);
|
|
return C_ERR;
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
/* Free the old representation and set the new one. */
|
|
sdsfree(o->ptr);
|
|
o->ptr = dense;
|
|
return C_OK;
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
/* Low level function to set the sparse HLL register at 'index' to the
|
|
* specified value if the current value is smaller than 'count'.
|
|
*
|
|
* The object 'o' is the String object holding the HLL. The function requires
|
|
* a reference to the object in order to be able to enlarge the string if
|
|
* needed.
|
|
*
|
|
* On success, the function returns 1 if the cardinality changed, or 0
|
|
* if the register for this element was not updated.
|
|
* On error (if the representation is invalid) -1 is returned.
|
|
*
|
|
* As a side effect the function may promote the HLL representation from
|
|
* sparse to dense: this happens when a register requires to be set to a value
|
|
* not representable with the sparse representation, or when the resulting
|
|
* size would be greater than server.hll_sparse_max_bytes. */
|
|
int hllSparseSet(robj *o, long index, uint8_t count) {
|
|
struct hllhdr *hdr;
|
|
uint8_t oldcount, *sparse, *end, *p, *prev, *next;
|
|
long first, span;
|
|
long is_zero = 0, is_xzero = 0, is_val = 0, runlen = 0;
|
|
|
|
/* If the count is too big to be representable by the sparse representation
|
|
* switch to dense representation. */
|
|
if (count > HLL_SPARSE_VAL_MAX_VALUE) goto promote;
|
|
|
|
/* When updating a sparse representation, sometimes we may need to
|
|
* enlarge the buffer for up to 3 bytes in the worst case (XZERO split
|
|
* into XZERO-VAL-XZERO). Make sure there is enough space right now
|
|
* so that the pointers we take during the execution of the function
|
|
* will be valid all the time. */
|
|
o->ptr = sdsMakeRoomFor(o->ptr,3);
|
|
|
|
/* Step 1: we need to locate the opcode we need to modify to check
|
|
* if a value update is actually needed. */
|
|
sparse = p = ((uint8_t*)o->ptr) + HLL_HDR_SIZE;
|
|
end = p + sdslen(o->ptr) - HLL_HDR_SIZE;
|
|
|
|
first = 0;
|
|
prev = NULL; /* Points to previous opcode at the end of the loop. */
|
|
next = NULL; /* Points to the next opcode at the end of the loop. */
|
|
span = 0;
|
|
while(p < end) {
|
|
long oplen;
|
|
|
|
/* Set span to the number of registers covered by this opcode.
|
|
*
|
|
* This is the most performance critical loop of the sparse
|
|
* representation. Sorting the conditionals from the most to the
|
|
* least frequent opcode in many-bytes sparse HLLs is faster. */
|
|
oplen = 1;
|
|
if (HLL_SPARSE_IS_ZERO(p)) {
|
|
span = HLL_SPARSE_ZERO_LEN(p);
|
|
} else if (HLL_SPARSE_IS_VAL(p)) {
|
|
span = HLL_SPARSE_VAL_LEN(p);
|
|
} else { /* XZERO. */
|
|
span = HLL_SPARSE_XZERO_LEN(p);
|
|
oplen = 2;
|
|
}
|
|
/* Break if this opcode covers the register as 'index'. */
|
|
if (index <= first+span-1) break;
|
|
prev = p;
|
|
p += oplen;
|
|
first += span;
|
|
}
|
|
if (span == 0 || p >= end) return -1; /* Invalid format. */
|
|
|
|
next = HLL_SPARSE_IS_XZERO(p) ? p+2 : p+1;
|
|
if (next >= end) next = NULL;
|
|
|
|
/* Cache current opcode type to avoid using the macro again and
|
|
* again for something that will not change.
|
|
* Also cache the run-length of the opcode. */
|
|
if (HLL_SPARSE_IS_ZERO(p)) {
|
|
is_zero = 1;
|
|
runlen = HLL_SPARSE_ZERO_LEN(p);
|
|
} else if (HLL_SPARSE_IS_XZERO(p)) {
|
|
is_xzero = 1;
|
|
runlen = HLL_SPARSE_XZERO_LEN(p);
|
|
} else {
|
|
is_val = 1;
|
|
runlen = HLL_SPARSE_VAL_LEN(p);
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
/* Step 2: After the loop:
|
|
*
|
|
* 'first' stores to the index of the first register covered
|
|
* by the current opcode, which is pointed by 'p'.
|
|
*
|
|
* 'next' ad 'prev' store respectively the next and previous opcode,
|
|
* or NULL if the opcode at 'p' is respectively the last or first.
|
|
*
|
|
* 'span' is set to the number of registers covered by the current
|
|
* opcode.
|
|
*
|
|
* There are different cases in order to update the data structure
|
|
* in place without generating it from scratch:
|
|
*
|
|
* A) If it is a VAL opcode already set to a value >= our 'count'
|
|
* no update is needed, regardless of the VAL run-length field.
|
|
* In this case PFADD returns 0 since no changes are performed.
|
|
*
|
|
* B) If it is a VAL opcode with len = 1 (representing only our
|
|
* register) and the value is less than 'count', we just update it
|
|
* since this is a trivial case. */
|
|
if (is_val) {
|
|
oldcount = HLL_SPARSE_VAL_VALUE(p);
|
|
/* Case A. */
|
|
if (oldcount >= count) return 0;
|
|
|
|
/* Case B. */
|
|
if (runlen == 1) {
|
|
HLL_SPARSE_VAL_SET(p,count,1);
|
|
goto updated;
|
|
}
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
/* C) Another trivial to handle case is a ZERO opcode with a len of 1.
|
|
* We can just replace it with a VAL opcode with our value and len of 1. */
|
|
if (is_zero && runlen == 1) {
|
|
HLL_SPARSE_VAL_SET(p,count,1);
|
|
goto updated;
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
/* D) General case.
|
|
*
|
|
* The other cases are more complex: our register requires to be updated
|
|
* and is either currently represented by a VAL opcode with len > 1,
|
|
* by a ZERO opcode with len > 1, or by an XZERO opcode.
|
|
*
|
|
* In those cases the original opcode must be split into multiple
|
|
* opcodes. The worst case is an XZERO split in the middle resuling into
|
|
* XZERO - VAL - XZERO, so the resulting sequence max length is
|
|
* 5 bytes.
|
|
*
|
|
* We perform the split writing the new sequence into the 'new' buffer
|
|
* with 'newlen' as length. Later the new sequence is inserted in place
|
|
* of the old one, possibly moving what is on the right a few bytes
|
|
* if the new sequence is longer than the older one. */
|
|
uint8_t seq[5], *n = seq;
|
|
int last = first+span-1; /* Last register covered by the sequence. */
|
|
int len;
|
|
|
|
if (is_zero || is_xzero) {
|
|
/* Handle splitting of ZERO / XZERO. */
|
|
if (index != first) {
|
|
len = index-first;
|
|
if (len > HLL_SPARSE_ZERO_MAX_LEN) {
|
|
HLL_SPARSE_XZERO_SET(n,len);
|
|
n += 2;
|
|
} else {
|
|
HLL_SPARSE_ZERO_SET(n,len);
|
|
n++;
|
|
}
|
|
}
|
|
HLL_SPARSE_VAL_SET(n,count,1);
|
|
n++;
|
|
if (index != last) {
|
|
len = last-index;
|
|
if (len > HLL_SPARSE_ZERO_MAX_LEN) {
|
|
HLL_SPARSE_XZERO_SET(n,len);
|
|
n += 2;
|
|
} else {
|
|
HLL_SPARSE_ZERO_SET(n,len);
|
|
n++;
|
|
}
|
|
}
|
|
} else {
|
|
/* Handle splitting of VAL. */
|
|
int curval = HLL_SPARSE_VAL_VALUE(p);
|
|
|
|
if (index != first) {
|
|
len = index-first;
|
|
HLL_SPARSE_VAL_SET(n,curval,len);
|
|
n++;
|
|
}
|
|
HLL_SPARSE_VAL_SET(n,count,1);
|
|
n++;
|
|
if (index != last) {
|
|
len = last-index;
|
|
HLL_SPARSE_VAL_SET(n,curval,len);
|
|
n++;
|
|
}
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
/* Step 3: substitute the new sequence with the old one.
|
|
*
|
|
* Note that we already allocated space on the sds string
|
|
* calling sdsMakeRoomFor(). */
|
|
int seqlen = n-seq;
|
|
int oldlen = is_xzero ? 2 : 1;
|
|
int deltalen = seqlen-oldlen;
|
|
|
|
if (deltalen > 0 &&
|
|
sdslen(o->ptr)+deltalen > server.hll_sparse_max_bytes) goto promote;
|
|
if (deltalen && next) memmove(next+deltalen,next,end-next);
|
|
sdsIncrLen(o->ptr,deltalen);
|
|
memcpy(p,seq,seqlen);
|
|
end += deltalen;
|
|
|
|
updated:
|
|
/* Step 4: Merge adjacent values if possible.
|
|
*
|
|
* The representation was updated, however the resulting representation
|
|
* may not be optimal: adjacent VAL opcodes can sometimes be merged into
|
|
* a single one. */
|
|
p = prev ? prev : sparse;
|
|
int scanlen = 5; /* Scan up to 5 upcodes starting from prev. */
|
|
while (p < end && scanlen--) {
|
|
if (HLL_SPARSE_IS_XZERO(p)) {
|
|
p += 2;
|
|
continue;
|
|
} else if (HLL_SPARSE_IS_ZERO(p)) {
|
|
p++;
|
|
continue;
|
|
}
|
|
/* We need two adjacent VAL opcodes to try a merge, having
|
|
* the same value, and a len that fits the VAL opcode max len. */
|
|
if (p+1 < end && HLL_SPARSE_IS_VAL(p+1)) {
|
|
int v1 = HLL_SPARSE_VAL_VALUE(p);
|
|
int v2 = HLL_SPARSE_VAL_VALUE(p+1);
|
|
if (v1 == v2) {
|
|
int len = HLL_SPARSE_VAL_LEN(p)+HLL_SPARSE_VAL_LEN(p+1);
|
|
if (len <= HLL_SPARSE_VAL_MAX_LEN) {
|
|
HLL_SPARSE_VAL_SET(p+1,v1,len);
|
|
memmove(p,p+1,end-p);
|
|
sdsIncrLen(o->ptr,-1);
|
|
end--;
|
|
/* After a merge we reiterate without incrementing 'p'
|
|
* in order to try to merge the just merged value with
|
|
* a value on its right. */
|
|
continue;
|
|
}
|
|
}
|
|
}
|
|
p++;
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
/* Invalidate the cached cardinality. */
|
|
hdr = o->ptr;
|
|
HLL_INVALIDATE_CACHE(hdr);
|
|
return 1;
|
|
|
|
promote: /* Promote to dense representation. */
|
|
if (hllSparseToDense(o) == C_ERR) return -1; /* Corrupted HLL. */
|
|
hdr = o->ptr;
|
|
|
|
/* We need to call hllDenseAdd() to perform the operation after the
|
|
* conversion. However the result must be 1, since if we need to
|
|
* convert from sparse to dense a register requires to be updated.
|
|
*
|
|
* Note that this in turn means that PFADD will make sure the command
|
|
* is propagated to slaves / AOF, so if there is a sparse -> dense
|
|
* conversion, it will be performed in all the slaves as well. */
|
|
int dense_retval = hllDenseSet(hdr->registers,index,count);
|
|
serverAssert(dense_retval == 1);
|
|
return dense_retval;
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
/* "Add" the element in the sparse hyperloglog data structure.
|
|
* Actually nothing is added, but the max 0 pattern counter of the subset
|
|
* the element belongs to is incremented if needed.
|
|
*
|
|
* This function is actually a wrapper for hllSparseSet(), it only performs
|
|
* the hashshing of the elmenet to obtain the index and zeros run length. */
|
|
int hllSparseAdd(robj *o, unsigned char *ele, size_t elesize) {
|
|
long index;
|
|
uint8_t count = hllPatLen(ele,elesize,&index);
|
|
/* Update the register if this element produced a longer run of zeroes. */
|
|
return hllSparseSet(o,index,count);
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
/* Compute the register histogram in the sparse representation. */
|
|
void hllSparseRegHisto(uint8_t *sparse, int sparselen, int *invalid, int* reghisto) {
|
|
int idx = 0, runlen, regval;
|
|
uint8_t *end = sparse+sparselen, *p = sparse;
|
|
|
|
while(p < end) {
|
|
if (HLL_SPARSE_IS_ZERO(p)) {
|
|
runlen = HLL_SPARSE_ZERO_LEN(p);
|
|
idx += runlen;
|
|
reghisto[0] += runlen;
|
|
p++;
|
|
} else if (HLL_SPARSE_IS_XZERO(p)) {
|
|
runlen = HLL_SPARSE_XZERO_LEN(p);
|
|
idx += runlen;
|
|
reghisto[0] += runlen;
|
|
p += 2;
|
|
} else {
|
|
runlen = HLL_SPARSE_VAL_LEN(p);
|
|
regval = HLL_SPARSE_VAL_VALUE(p);
|
|
idx += runlen;
|
|
reghisto[regval] += runlen;
|
|
p++;
|
|
}
|
|
}
|
|
if (idx != HLL_REGISTERS && invalid) *invalid = 1;
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
/* ========================= HyperLogLog Count ==============================
|
|
* This is the core of the algorithm where the approximated count is computed.
|
|
* The function uses the lower level hllDenseRegHisto() and hllSparseRegHisto()
|
|
* functions as helpers to compute histogram of register values part of the
|
|
* computation, which is representation-specific, while all the rest is common. */
|
|
|
|
/* Implements the register histogram calculation for uint8_t data type
|
|
* which is only used internally as speedup for PFCOUNT with multiple keys. */
|
|
void hllRawRegHisto(uint8_t *registers, int* reghisto) {
|
|
uint64_t *word = (uint64_t*) registers;
|
|
uint8_t *bytes;
|
|
int j;
|
|
|
|
for (j = 0; j < HLL_REGISTERS/8; j++) {
|
|
if (*word == 0) {
|
|
reghisto[0] += 8;
|
|
} else {
|
|
bytes = (uint8_t*) word;
|
|
reghisto[bytes[0]]++;
|
|
reghisto[bytes[1]]++;
|
|
reghisto[bytes[2]]++;
|
|
reghisto[bytes[3]]++;
|
|
reghisto[bytes[4]]++;
|
|
reghisto[bytes[5]]++;
|
|
reghisto[bytes[6]]++;
|
|
reghisto[bytes[7]]++;
|
|
}
|
|
word++;
|
|
}
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
/* Helper function sigma as defined in
|
|
* "New cardinality estimation algorithms for HyperLogLog sketches"
|
|
* Otmar Ertl, arXiv:1702.01284 */
|
|
double hllSigma(double x) {
|
|
if (x == 1.) return INFINITY;
|
|
double zPrime;
|
|
double y = 1;
|
|
double z = x;
|
|
do {
|
|
x *= x;
|
|
zPrime = z;
|
|
z += x * y;
|
|
y += y;
|
|
} while(zPrime != z);
|
|
return z;
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
/* Helper function tau as defined in
|
|
* "New cardinality estimation algorithms for HyperLogLog sketches"
|
|
* Otmar Ertl, arXiv:1702.01284 */
|
|
double hllTau(double x) {
|
|
if (x == 0. || x == 1.) return 0.;
|
|
double zPrime;
|
|
double y = 1.0;
|
|
double z = 1 - x;
|
|
do {
|
|
x = sqrt(x);
|
|
zPrime = z;
|
|
y *= 0.5;
|
|
z -= pow(1 - x, 2)*y;
|
|
} while(zPrime != z);
|
|
return z / 3;
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
/* Return the approximated cardinality of the set based on the harmonic
|
|
* mean of the registers values. 'hdr' points to the start of the SDS
|
|
* representing the String object holding the HLL representation.
|
|
*
|
|
* If the sparse representation of the HLL object is not valid, the integer
|
|
* pointed by 'invalid' is set to non-zero, otherwise it is left untouched.
|
|
*
|
|
* hllCount() supports a special internal-only encoding of HLL_RAW, that
|
|
* is, hdr->registers will point to an uint8_t array of HLL_REGISTERS element.
|
|
* This is useful in order to speedup PFCOUNT when called against multiple
|
|
* keys (no need to work with 6-bit integers encoding). */
|
|
uint64_t hllCount(struct hllhdr *hdr, int *invalid) {
|
|
double m = HLL_REGISTERS;
|
|
double E;
|
|
int j;
|
|
/* Note that reghisto size could be just HLL_Q+2, becuase HLL_Q+1 is
|
|
* the maximum frequency of the "000...1" sequence the hash function is
|
|
* able to return. However it is slow to check for sanity of the
|
|
* input: instead we history array at a safe size: overflows will
|
|
* just write data to wrong, but correctly allocated, places. */
|
|
int reghisto[64] = {0};
|
|
|
|
/* Compute register histogram */
|
|
if (hdr->encoding == HLL_DENSE) {
|
|
hllDenseRegHisto(hdr->registers,reghisto);
|
|
} else if (hdr->encoding == HLL_SPARSE) {
|
|
hllSparseRegHisto(hdr->registers,
|
|
sdslen((sds)hdr)-HLL_HDR_SIZE,invalid,reghisto);
|
|
} else if (hdr->encoding == HLL_RAW) {
|
|
hllRawRegHisto(hdr->registers,reghisto);
|
|
} else {
|
|
serverPanic("Unknown HyperLogLog encoding in hllCount()");
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
/* Estimate cardinality form register histogram. See:
|
|
* "New cardinality estimation algorithms for HyperLogLog sketches"
|
|
* Otmar Ertl, arXiv:1702.01284 */
|
|
double z = m * hllTau((m-reghisto[HLL_Q+1])/(double)m);
|
|
for (j = HLL_Q; j >= 1; --j) {
|
|
z += reghisto[j];
|
|
z *= 0.5;
|
|
}
|
|
z += m * hllSigma(reghisto[0]/(double)m);
|
|
E = llroundl(HLL_ALPHA_INF*m*m/z);
|
|
|
|
return (uint64_t) E;
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
/* Call hllDenseAdd() or hllSparseAdd() according to the HLL encoding. */
|
|
int hllAdd(robj *o, unsigned char *ele, size_t elesize) {
|
|
struct hllhdr *hdr = o->ptr;
|
|
switch(hdr->encoding) {
|
|
case HLL_DENSE: return hllDenseAdd(hdr->registers,ele,elesize);
|
|
case HLL_SPARSE: return hllSparseAdd(o,ele,elesize);
|
|
default: return -1; /* Invalid representation. */
|
|
}
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
/* Merge by computing MAX(registers[i],hll[i]) the HyperLogLog 'hll'
|
|
* with an array of uint8_t HLL_REGISTERS registers pointed by 'max'.
|
|
*
|
|
* The hll object must be already validated via isHLLObjectOrReply()
|
|
* or in some other way.
|
|
*
|
|
* If the HyperLogLog is sparse and is found to be invalid, C_ERR
|
|
* is returned, otherwise the function always succeeds. */
|
|
int hllMerge(uint8_t *max, robj *hll) {
|
|
struct hllhdr *hdr = hll->ptr;
|
|
int i;
|
|
|
|
if (hdr->encoding == HLL_DENSE) {
|
|
uint8_t val;
|
|
|
|
for (i = 0; i < HLL_REGISTERS; i++) {
|
|
HLL_DENSE_GET_REGISTER(val,hdr->registers,i);
|
|
if (val > max[i]) max[i] = val;
|
|
}
|
|
} else {
|
|
uint8_t *p = hll->ptr, *end = p + sdslen(hll->ptr);
|
|
long runlen, regval;
|
|
|
|
p += HLL_HDR_SIZE;
|
|
i = 0;
|
|
while(p < end) {
|
|
if (HLL_SPARSE_IS_ZERO(p)) {
|
|
runlen = HLL_SPARSE_ZERO_LEN(p);
|
|
i += runlen;
|
|
p++;
|
|
} else if (HLL_SPARSE_IS_XZERO(p)) {
|
|
runlen = HLL_SPARSE_XZERO_LEN(p);
|
|
i += runlen;
|
|
p += 2;
|
|
} else {
|
|
runlen = HLL_SPARSE_VAL_LEN(p);
|
|
regval = HLL_SPARSE_VAL_VALUE(p);
|
|
if ((runlen + i) > HLL_REGISTERS) break; /* Overflow. */
|
|
while(runlen--) {
|
|
if (regval > max[i]) max[i] = regval;
|
|
i++;
|
|
}
|
|
p++;
|
|
}
|
|
}
|
|
if (i != HLL_REGISTERS) return C_ERR;
|
|
}
|
|
return C_OK;
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
/* ========================== HyperLogLog commands ========================== */
|
|
|
|
/* Create an HLL object. We always create the HLL using sparse encoding.
|
|
* This will be upgraded to the dense representation as needed. */
|
|
robj *createHLLObject(void) {
|
|
robj *o;
|
|
struct hllhdr *hdr;
|
|
sds s;
|
|
uint8_t *p;
|
|
int sparselen = HLL_HDR_SIZE +
|
|
(((HLL_REGISTERS+(HLL_SPARSE_XZERO_MAX_LEN-1)) /
|
|
HLL_SPARSE_XZERO_MAX_LEN)*2);
|
|
int aux;
|
|
|
|
/* Populate the sparse representation with as many XZERO opcodes as
|
|
* needed to represent all the registers. */
|
|
aux = HLL_REGISTERS;
|
|
s = sdsnewlen(NULL,sparselen);
|
|
p = (uint8_t*)s + HLL_HDR_SIZE;
|
|
while(aux) {
|
|
int xzero = HLL_SPARSE_XZERO_MAX_LEN;
|
|
if (xzero > aux) xzero = aux;
|
|
HLL_SPARSE_XZERO_SET(p,xzero);
|
|
p += 2;
|
|
aux -= xzero;
|
|
}
|
|
serverAssert((p-(uint8_t*)s) == sparselen);
|
|
|
|
/* Create the actual object. */
|
|
o = createObject(OBJ_STRING,s);
|
|
hdr = o->ptr;
|
|
memcpy(hdr->magic,"HYLL",4);
|
|
hdr->encoding = HLL_SPARSE;
|
|
return o;
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
/* Check if the object is a String with a valid HLL representation.
|
|
* Return C_OK if this is true, otherwise reply to the client
|
|
* with an error and return C_ERR. */
|
|
int isHLLObjectOrReply(client *c, robj *o) {
|
|
struct hllhdr *hdr;
|
|
|
|
/* Key exists, check type */
|
|
if (checkType(c,o,OBJ_STRING))
|
|
return C_ERR; /* Error already sent. */
|
|
|
|
if (!sdsEncodedObject(o)) goto invalid;
|
|
if (stringObjectLen(o) < sizeof(*hdr)) goto invalid;
|
|
hdr = o->ptr;
|
|
|
|
/* Magic should be "HYLL". */
|
|
if (hdr->magic[0] != 'H' || hdr->magic[1] != 'Y' ||
|
|
hdr->magic[2] != 'L' || hdr->magic[3] != 'L') goto invalid;
|
|
|
|
if (hdr->encoding > HLL_MAX_ENCODING) goto invalid;
|
|
|
|
/* Dense representation string length should match exactly. */
|
|
if (hdr->encoding == HLL_DENSE &&
|
|
stringObjectLen(o) != HLL_DENSE_SIZE) goto invalid;
|
|
|
|
/* All tests passed. */
|
|
return C_OK;
|
|
|
|
invalid:
|
|
addReplySds(c,
|
|
sdsnew("-WRONGTYPE Key is not a valid "
|
|
"HyperLogLog string value.\r\n"));
|
|
return C_ERR;
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
/* PFADD var ele ele ele ... ele => :0 or :1 */
|
|
void pfaddCommand(client *c) {
|
|
robj *o = lookupKeyWrite(c->db,c->argv[1]);
|
|
struct hllhdr *hdr;
|
|
int updated = 0, j;
|
|
|
|
if (o == NULL) {
|
|
/* Create the key with a string value of the exact length to
|
|
* hold our HLL data structure. sdsnewlen() when NULL is passed
|
|
* is guaranteed to return bytes initialized to zero. */
|
|
o = createHLLObject();
|
|
dbAdd(c->db,c->argv[1],o);
|
|
updated++;
|
|
} else {
|
|
if (isHLLObjectOrReply(c,o) != C_OK) return;
|
|
o = dbUnshareStringValue(c->db,c->argv[1],o);
|
|
}
|
|
/* Perform the low level ADD operation for every element. */
|
|
for (j = 2; j < c->argc; j++) {
|
|
int retval = hllAdd(o, (unsigned char*)c->argv[j]->ptr,
|
|
sdslen(c->argv[j]->ptr));
|
|
switch(retval) {
|
|
case 1:
|
|
updated++;
|
|
break;
|
|
case -1:
|
|
addReplySds(c,sdsnew(invalid_hll_err));
|
|
return;
|
|
}
|
|
}
|
|
hdr = o->ptr;
|
|
if (updated) {
|
|
signalModifiedKey(c->db,c->argv[1]);
|
|
notifyKeyspaceEvent(NOTIFY_STRING,"pfadd",c->argv[1],c->db->id);
|
|
server.dirty++;
|
|
HLL_INVALIDATE_CACHE(hdr);
|
|
}
|
|
addReply(c, updated ? shared.cone : shared.czero);
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
/* PFCOUNT var -> approximated cardinality of set. */
|
|
void pfcountCommand(client *c) {
|
|
robj *o;
|
|
struct hllhdr *hdr;
|
|
uint64_t card;
|
|
|
|
/* Case 1: multi-key keys, cardinality of the union.
|
|
*
|
|
* When multiple keys are specified, PFCOUNT actually computes
|
|
* the cardinality of the merge of the N HLLs specified. */
|
|
if (c->argc > 2) {
|
|
uint8_t max[HLL_HDR_SIZE+HLL_REGISTERS], *registers;
|
|
int j;
|
|
|
|
/* Compute an HLL with M[i] = MAX(M[i]_j). */
|
|
memset(max,0,sizeof(max));
|
|
hdr = (struct hllhdr*) max;
|
|
hdr->encoding = HLL_RAW; /* Special internal-only encoding. */
|
|
registers = max + HLL_HDR_SIZE;
|
|
for (j = 1; j < c->argc; j++) {
|
|
/* Check type and size. */
|
|
robj *o = lookupKeyRead(c->db,c->argv[j]);
|
|
if (o == NULL) continue; /* Assume empty HLL for non existing var.*/
|
|
if (isHLLObjectOrReply(c,o) != C_OK) return;
|
|
|
|
/* Merge with this HLL with our 'max' HLL by setting max[i]
|
|
* to MAX(max[i],hll[i]). */
|
|
if (hllMerge(registers,o) == C_ERR) {
|
|
addReplySds(c,sdsnew(invalid_hll_err));
|
|
return;
|
|
}
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
/* Compute cardinality of the resulting set. */
|
|
addReplyLongLong(c,hllCount(hdr,NULL));
|
|
return;
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
/* Case 2: cardinality of the single HLL.
|
|
*
|
|
* The user specified a single key. Either return the cached value
|
|
* or compute one and update the cache. */
|
|
o = lookupKeyWrite(c->db,c->argv[1]);
|
|
if (o == NULL) {
|
|
/* No key? Cardinality is zero since no element was added, otherwise
|
|
* we would have a key as HLLADD creates it as a side effect. */
|
|
addReply(c,shared.czero);
|
|
} else {
|
|
if (isHLLObjectOrReply(c,o) != C_OK) return;
|
|
o = dbUnshareStringValue(c->db,c->argv[1],o);
|
|
|
|
/* Check if the cached cardinality is valid. */
|
|
hdr = o->ptr;
|
|
if (HLL_VALID_CACHE(hdr)) {
|
|
/* Just return the cached value. */
|
|
card = (uint64_t)hdr->card[0];
|
|
card |= (uint64_t)hdr->card[1] << 8;
|
|
card |= (uint64_t)hdr->card[2] << 16;
|
|
card |= (uint64_t)hdr->card[3] << 24;
|
|
card |= (uint64_t)hdr->card[4] << 32;
|
|
card |= (uint64_t)hdr->card[5] << 40;
|
|
card |= (uint64_t)hdr->card[6] << 48;
|
|
card |= (uint64_t)hdr->card[7] << 56;
|
|
} else {
|
|
int invalid = 0;
|
|
/* Recompute it and update the cached value. */
|
|
card = hllCount(hdr,&invalid);
|
|
if (invalid) {
|
|
addReplySds(c,sdsnew(invalid_hll_err));
|
|
return;
|
|
}
|
|
hdr->card[0] = card & 0xff;
|
|
hdr->card[1] = (card >> 8) & 0xff;
|
|
hdr->card[2] = (card >> 16) & 0xff;
|
|
hdr->card[3] = (card >> 24) & 0xff;
|
|
hdr->card[4] = (card >> 32) & 0xff;
|
|
hdr->card[5] = (card >> 40) & 0xff;
|
|
hdr->card[6] = (card >> 48) & 0xff;
|
|
hdr->card[7] = (card >> 56) & 0xff;
|
|
/* This is not considered a read-only command even if the
|
|
* data structure is not modified, since the cached value
|
|
* may be modified and given that the HLL is a Redis string
|
|
* we need to propagate the change. */
|
|
signalModifiedKey(c->db,c->argv[1]);
|
|
server.dirty++;
|
|
}
|
|
addReplyLongLong(c,card);
|
|
}
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
/* PFMERGE dest src1 src2 src3 ... srcN => OK */
|
|
void pfmergeCommand(client *c) {
|
|
uint8_t max[HLL_REGISTERS];
|
|
struct hllhdr *hdr;
|
|
int j;
|
|
int use_dense = 0; /* Use dense representation as target? */
|
|
|
|
/* Compute an HLL with M[i] = MAX(M[i]_j).
|
|
* We store the maximum into the max array of registers. We'll write
|
|
* it to the target variable later. */
|
|
memset(max,0,sizeof(max));
|
|
for (j = 1; j < c->argc; j++) {
|
|
/* Check type and size. */
|
|
robj *o = lookupKeyRead(c->db,c->argv[j]);
|
|
if (o == NULL) continue; /* Assume empty HLL for non existing var. */
|
|
if (isHLLObjectOrReply(c,o) != C_OK) return;
|
|
|
|
/* If at least one involved HLL is dense, use the dense representation
|
|
* as target ASAP to save time and avoid the conversion step. */
|
|
hdr = o->ptr;
|
|
if (hdr->encoding == HLL_DENSE) use_dense = 1;
|
|
|
|
/* Merge with this HLL with our 'max' HLL by setting max[i]
|
|
* to MAX(max[i],hll[i]). */
|
|
if (hllMerge(max,o) == C_ERR) {
|
|
addReplySds(c,sdsnew(invalid_hll_err));
|
|
return;
|
|
}
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
/* Create / unshare the destination key's value if needed. */
|
|
robj *o = lookupKeyWrite(c->db,c->argv[1]);
|
|
if (o == NULL) {
|
|
/* Create the key with a string value of the exact length to
|
|
* hold our HLL data structure. sdsnewlen() when NULL is passed
|
|
* is guaranteed to return bytes initialized to zero. */
|
|
o = createHLLObject();
|
|
dbAdd(c->db,c->argv[1],o);
|
|
} else {
|
|
/* If key exists we are sure it's of the right type/size
|
|
* since we checked when merging the different HLLs, so we
|
|
* don't check again. */
|
|
o = dbUnshareStringValue(c->db,c->argv[1],o);
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
/* Convert the destination object to dense representation if at least
|
|
* one of the inputs was dense. */
|
|
if (use_dense && hllSparseToDense(o) == C_ERR) {
|
|
addReplySds(c,sdsnew(invalid_hll_err));
|
|
return;
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
/* Write the resulting HLL to the destination HLL registers and
|
|
* invalidate the cached value. */
|
|
for (j = 0; j < HLL_REGISTERS; j++) {
|
|
if (max[j] == 0) continue;
|
|
hdr = o->ptr;
|
|
switch(hdr->encoding) {
|
|
case HLL_DENSE: hllDenseSet(hdr->registers,j,max[j]); break;
|
|
case HLL_SPARSE: hllSparseSet(o,j,max[j]); break;
|
|
}
|
|
}
|
|
hdr = o->ptr; /* o->ptr may be different now, as a side effect of
|
|
last hllSparseSet() call. */
|
|
HLL_INVALIDATE_CACHE(hdr);
|
|
|
|
signalModifiedKey(c->db,c->argv[1]);
|
|
/* We generate a PFADD event for PFMERGE for semantical simplicity
|
|
* since in theory this is a mass-add of elements. */
|
|
notifyKeyspaceEvent(NOTIFY_STRING,"pfadd",c->argv[1],c->db->id);
|
|
server.dirty++;
|
|
addReply(c,shared.ok);
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
/* ========================== Testing / Debugging ========================== */
|
|
|
|
/* PFSELFTEST
|
|
* This command performs a self-test of the HLL registers implementation.
|
|
* Something that is not easy to test from within the outside. */
|
|
#define HLL_TEST_CYCLES 1000
|
|
void pfselftestCommand(client *c) {
|
|
unsigned int j, i;
|
|
sds bitcounters = sdsnewlen(NULL,HLL_DENSE_SIZE);
|
|
struct hllhdr *hdr = (struct hllhdr*) bitcounters, *hdr2;
|
|
robj *o = NULL;
|
|
uint8_t bytecounters[HLL_REGISTERS];
|
|
|
|
/* Test 1: access registers.
|
|
* The test is conceived to test that the different counters of our data
|
|
* structure are accessible and that setting their values both result in
|
|
* the correct value to be retained and not affect adjacent values. */
|
|
for (j = 0; j < HLL_TEST_CYCLES; j++) {
|
|
/* Set the HLL counters and an array of unsigned byes of the
|
|
* same size to the same set of random values. */
|
|
for (i = 0; i < HLL_REGISTERS; i++) {
|
|
unsigned int r = rand() & HLL_REGISTER_MAX;
|
|
|
|
bytecounters[i] = r;
|
|
HLL_DENSE_SET_REGISTER(hdr->registers,i,r);
|
|
}
|
|
/* Check that we are able to retrieve the same values. */
|
|
for (i = 0; i < HLL_REGISTERS; i++) {
|
|
unsigned int val;
|
|
|
|
HLL_DENSE_GET_REGISTER(val,hdr->registers,i);
|
|
if (val != bytecounters[i]) {
|
|
addReplyErrorFormat(c,
|
|
"TESTFAILED Register %d should be %d but is %d",
|
|
i, (int) bytecounters[i], (int) val);
|
|
goto cleanup;
|
|
}
|
|
}
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
/* Test 2: approximation error.
|
|
* The test adds unique elements and check that the estimated value
|
|
* is always reasonable bounds.
|
|
*
|
|
* We check that the error is smaller than a few times than the expected
|
|
* standard error, to make it very unlikely for the test to fail because
|
|
* of a "bad" run.
|
|
*
|
|
* The test is performed with both dense and sparse HLLs at the same
|
|
* time also verifying that the computed cardinality is the same. */
|
|
memset(hdr->registers,0,HLL_DENSE_SIZE-HLL_HDR_SIZE);
|
|
o = createHLLObject();
|
|
double relerr = 1.04/sqrt(HLL_REGISTERS);
|
|
int64_t checkpoint = 1;
|
|
uint64_t seed = (uint64_t)rand() | (uint64_t)rand() << 32;
|
|
uint64_t ele;
|
|
for (j = 1; j <= 10000000; j++) {
|
|
ele = j ^ seed;
|
|
hllDenseAdd(hdr->registers,(unsigned char*)&ele,sizeof(ele));
|
|
hllAdd(o,(unsigned char*)&ele,sizeof(ele));
|
|
|
|
/* Make sure that for small cardinalities we use sparse
|
|
* encoding. */
|
|
if (j == checkpoint && j < server.hll_sparse_max_bytes/2) {
|
|
hdr2 = o->ptr;
|
|
if (hdr2->encoding != HLL_SPARSE) {
|
|
addReplyError(c, "TESTFAILED sparse encoding not used");
|
|
goto cleanup;
|
|
}
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
/* Check that dense and sparse representations agree. */
|
|
if (j == checkpoint && hllCount(hdr,NULL) != hllCount(o->ptr,NULL)) {
|
|
addReplyError(c, "TESTFAILED dense/sparse disagree");
|
|
goto cleanup;
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
/* Check error. */
|
|
if (j == checkpoint) {
|
|
int64_t abserr = checkpoint - (int64_t)hllCount(hdr,NULL);
|
|
uint64_t maxerr = ceil(relerr*6*checkpoint);
|
|
|
|
/* Adjust the max error we expect for cardinality 10
|
|
* since from time to time it is statistically likely to get
|
|
* much higher error due to collision, resulting into a false
|
|
* positive. */
|
|
if (j == 10) maxerr = 1;
|
|
|
|
if (abserr < 0) abserr = -abserr;
|
|
if (abserr > (int64_t)maxerr) {
|
|
addReplyErrorFormat(c,
|
|
"TESTFAILED Too big error. card:%llu abserr:%llu",
|
|
(unsigned long long) checkpoint,
|
|
(unsigned long long) abserr);
|
|
goto cleanup;
|
|
}
|
|
checkpoint *= 10;
|
|
}
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
/* Success! */
|
|
addReply(c,shared.ok);
|
|
|
|
cleanup:
|
|
sdsfree(bitcounters);
|
|
if (o) decrRefCount(o);
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
/* PFDEBUG <subcommand> <key> ... args ...
|
|
* Different debugging related operations about the HLL implementation. */
|
|
void pfdebugCommand(client *c) {
|
|
char *cmd = c->argv[1]->ptr;
|
|
struct hllhdr *hdr;
|
|
robj *o;
|
|
int j;
|
|
|
|
o = lookupKeyWrite(c->db,c->argv[2]);
|
|
if (o == NULL) {
|
|
addReplyError(c,"The specified key does not exist");
|
|
return;
|
|
}
|
|
if (isHLLObjectOrReply(c,o) != C_OK) return;
|
|
o = dbUnshareStringValue(c->db,c->argv[2],o);
|
|
hdr = o->ptr;
|
|
|
|
/* PFDEBUG GETREG <key> */
|
|
if (!strcasecmp(cmd,"getreg")) {
|
|
if (c->argc != 3) goto arityerr;
|
|
|
|
if (hdr->encoding == HLL_SPARSE) {
|
|
if (hllSparseToDense(o) == C_ERR) {
|
|
addReplySds(c,sdsnew(invalid_hll_err));
|
|
return;
|
|
}
|
|
server.dirty++; /* Force propagation on encoding change. */
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
hdr = o->ptr;
|
|
addReplyArrayLen(c,HLL_REGISTERS);
|
|
for (j = 0; j < HLL_REGISTERS; j++) {
|
|
uint8_t val;
|
|
|
|
HLL_DENSE_GET_REGISTER(val,hdr->registers,j);
|
|
addReplyLongLong(c,val);
|
|
}
|
|
}
|
|
/* PFDEBUG DECODE <key> */
|
|
else if (!strcasecmp(cmd,"decode")) {
|
|
if (c->argc != 3) goto arityerr;
|
|
|
|
uint8_t *p = o->ptr, *end = p+sdslen(o->ptr);
|
|
sds decoded = sdsempty();
|
|
|
|
if (hdr->encoding != HLL_SPARSE) {
|
|
addReplyError(c,"HLL encoding is not sparse");
|
|
return;
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
p += HLL_HDR_SIZE;
|
|
while(p < end) {
|
|
int runlen, regval;
|
|
|
|
if (HLL_SPARSE_IS_ZERO(p)) {
|
|
runlen = HLL_SPARSE_ZERO_LEN(p);
|
|
p++;
|
|
decoded = sdscatprintf(decoded,"z:%d ",runlen);
|
|
} else if (HLL_SPARSE_IS_XZERO(p)) {
|
|
runlen = HLL_SPARSE_XZERO_LEN(p);
|
|
p += 2;
|
|
decoded = sdscatprintf(decoded,"Z:%d ",runlen);
|
|
} else {
|
|
runlen = HLL_SPARSE_VAL_LEN(p);
|
|
regval = HLL_SPARSE_VAL_VALUE(p);
|
|
p++;
|
|
decoded = sdscatprintf(decoded,"v:%d,%d ",regval,runlen);
|
|
}
|
|
}
|
|
decoded = sdstrim(decoded," ");
|
|
addReplyBulkCBuffer(c,decoded,sdslen(decoded));
|
|
sdsfree(decoded);
|
|
}
|
|
/* PFDEBUG ENCODING <key> */
|
|
else if (!strcasecmp(cmd,"encoding")) {
|
|
char *encodingstr[2] = {"dense","sparse"};
|
|
if (c->argc != 3) goto arityerr;
|
|
|
|
addReplyStatus(c,encodingstr[hdr->encoding]);
|
|
}
|
|
/* PFDEBUG TODENSE <key> */
|
|
else if (!strcasecmp(cmd,"todense")) {
|
|
int conv = 0;
|
|
if (c->argc != 3) goto arityerr;
|
|
|
|
if (hdr->encoding == HLL_SPARSE) {
|
|
if (hllSparseToDense(o) == C_ERR) {
|
|
addReplySds(c,sdsnew(invalid_hll_err));
|
|
return;
|
|
}
|
|
conv = 1;
|
|
server.dirty++; /* Force propagation on encoding change. */
|
|
}
|
|
addReply(c,conv ? shared.cone : shared.czero);
|
|
} else {
|
|
addReplyErrorFormat(c,"Unknown PFDEBUG subcommand '%s'", cmd);
|
|
}
|
|
return;
|
|
|
|
arityerr:
|
|
addReplyErrorFormat(c,
|
|
"Wrong number of arguments for the '%s' subcommand",cmd);
|
|
}
|
|
|