User's Guide to gperf
3.0.4
The GNU Perfect Hash Function Generator
Edition 3.0.4, 1 February 2009
Douglas C. Schmidt
Bruno Haible
Table of Contents
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1.0 Preamble
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1.2 END OF TERMS AND CONDITIONS
1.3 How to Apply These Terms to Your New Programs
If you develop a new program, and you want it to be of the greatest
possible use to the public, the best way to achieve this is to make it
free software which everyone can redistribute and change under these
terms.
To do so, attach the following notices to the program. It is safest
to attach them to the start of each source file to most effectively
state the exclusion of warranty; and each file should have at least
the “copyright” line and a pointer to where the full notice is found.
one line to give the program's name and a brief idea of what it does.
Copyright (C) year name of author
This program is free software: you can redistribute it and/or modify
it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
the Free Software Foundation, either version 3 of the License, or (at
your option) any later version.
This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but
WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU
General Public License for more details.
You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
along with this program. If not, see http://www.gnu.org/licenses/.
Also add information on how to contact you by electronic and paper mail.
If the program does terminal interaction, make it output a short
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program Copyright (C) year name of author
This program comes with ABSOLUTELY NO WARRANTY; for details type ‘show w’.
This is free software, and you are welcome to redistribute it
under certain conditions; type ‘show c’ for details.
The hypothetical commands ‘show w’ and ‘show c’ should show
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You should also get your employer (if you work as a programmer) or school,
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For more information on this, and how to apply and follow the GNU GPL, see
http://www.gnu.org/licenses/.
The GNU General Public License does not permit incorporating your
program into proprietary programs. If your program is a subroutine
library, you may consider it more useful to permit linking proprietary
applications with the library. If this is what you want to do, use
the GNU Lesser General Public License instead of this License. But
first, please read http://www.gnu.org/philosophy/why-not-lgpl.html.
-
The GNU
gperf
perfect hash function generator utility was
written in GNU C++ by Douglas C. Schmidt. The general
idea for the perfect hash function generator was inspired by Keith
Bostic's algorithm written in C, and distributed to net.sources around
1984. The current program is a heavily modified, enhanced, and extended
implementation of Keith's basic idea, created at the University of
California, Irvine. Bugs, patches, and suggestions should be reported
to <bug-gnu-gperf@gnu.org>
.
-
Special thanks is extended to Michael Tiemann and Doug Lea, for
providing a useful compiler, and for giving me a forum to exhibit my
creation.
In addition, Adam de Boor and Nels Olson provided many tips and insights
that greatly helped improve the quality and functionality of
gperf
.
-
Bruno Haible enhanced and optimized the search algorithm. He also rewrote
the input routines and the output routines for better reliability, and
added a testsuite.
gperf
is a perfect hash function generator written in C++. It
transforms an n element user-specified keyword set W into a
perfect hash function F. F uniquely maps keywords in
W onto the range 0..k, where k >= n-1. If k
= n-1 then F is a minimal perfect hash function.
gperf
generates a 0..k element static lookup table and a
pair of C functions. These functions determine whether a given
character string s occurs in W, using at most one probe into
the lookup table.
gperf
currently generates the reserved keyword recognizer for
lexical analyzers in several production and research compilers and
language processing tools, including GNU C, GNU C++, GNU Java, GNU Pascal,
GNU Modula 3, and GNU indent. Complete C++ source code for gperf
is
available from http://ftp.gnu.org/pub/gnu/gperf/
.
A paper describing gperf
's design and implementation in greater
detail is available in the Second USENIX C++ Conference proceedings
or from http://www.cs.wustl.edu/~schmidt/resume.html
.
A static search structure is an Abstract Data Type with certain
fundamental operations, e.g., initialize, insert,
and retrieve. Conceptually, all insertions occur before any
retrievals. In practice, gperf
generates a static array
containing search set keywords and any associated attributes specified
by the user. Thus, there is essentially no execution-time cost for the
insertions. It is a useful data structure for representing static
search sets. Static search sets occur frequently in software system
applications. Typical static search sets include compiler reserved
words, assembler instruction opcodes, and built-in shell interpreter
commands. Search set members, called keywords, are inserted into
the structure only once, usually during program initialization, and are
not generally modified at run-time.
Numerous static search structure implementations exist, e.g.,
arrays, linked lists, binary search trees, digital search tries, and
hash tables. Different approaches offer trade-offs between space
utilization and search time efficiency. For example, an n element
sorted array is space efficient, though the average-case time
complexity for retrieval operations using binary search is
proportional to log n. Conversely, hash table implementations
often locate a table entry in constant time, but typically impose
additional memory overhead and exhibit poor worst case performance.
Minimal perfect hash functions provide an optimal solution for a
particular class of static search sets. A minimal perfect hash
function is defined by two properties:
-
It allows keyword recognition in a static search set using at most
one probe into the hash table. This represents the “perfect”
property.
-
The actual memory allocated to store the keywords is precisely large
enough for the keyword set, and no larger. This is the
“minimal” property.
For most applications it is far easier to generate perfect hash
functions than minimal perfect hash functions. Moreover,
non-minimal perfect hash functions frequently execute faster than
minimal ones in practice. This phenomena occurs since searching a
sparse keyword table increases the probability of locating a “null”
entry, thereby reducing string comparisons. gperf
's default
behavior generates near-minimal perfect hash functions for
keyword sets. However, gperf
provides many options that permit
user control over the degree of minimality and perfection.
Static search sets often exhibit relative stability over time. For
example, Ada's 63 reserved words have remained constant for nearly a
decade. It is therefore frequently worthwhile to expend concerted
effort building an optimal search structure once, if it
subsequently receives heavy use multiple times. gperf
removes
the drudgery associated with constructing time- and space-efficient
search structures by hand. It has proven a useful and practical tool
for serious programming projects. Output from gperf
is currently
used in several production and research compilers, including GNU C, GNU
C++, GNU Java, GNU Pascal, and GNU Modula 3. The latter two compilers are
not yet part of the official GNU distribution. Each compiler utilizes
gperf
to automatically generate static search structures that
efficiently identify their respective reserved keywords.
The perfect hash function generator gperf
reads a set of
“keywords” from an input file (or from the standard input by
default). It attempts to derive a perfect hashing function that
recognizes a member of the static keyword set with at most a
single probe into the lookup table. If gperf
succeeds in
generating such a function it produces a pair of C source code routines
that perform hashing and table lookup recognition. All generated C code
is directed to the standard output. Command-line options described
below allow you to modify the input and output format to gperf
.
By default, gperf
attempts to produce time-efficient code, with
less emphasis on efficient space utilization. However, several options
exist that permit trading-off execution time for storage space and vice
versa. In particular, expanding the generated table size produces a
sparse search structure, generally yielding faster searches.
Conversely, you can direct gperf
to utilize a C switch
statement scheme that minimizes data space storage size. Furthermore,
using a C switch
may actually speed up the keyword retrieval time
somewhat. Actual results depend on your C compiler, of course.
In general, gperf
assigns values to the bytes it is using
for hashing until some set of values gives each keyword a unique value.
A helpful heuristic is that the larger the hash value range, the easier
it is for gperf
to find and generate a perfect hash function.
Experimentation is the key to getting the most from gperf
.
You can control the input file format by varying certain command-line
arguments, in particular the ‘-t’ option. The input's appearance
is similar to GNU utilities flex
and bison
(or UNIX
utilities lex
and yacc
). Here's an outline of the general
format:
declarations
%%
keywords
%%
functions
Unlike flex
or bison
, the declarations section and
the functions section are optional. The following sections describe the
input format for each section.
It is possible to omit the declaration section entirely, if the ‘-t’
option is not given. In this case the input file begins directly with the
first keyword line, e.g.:
january
february
march
april
...
The keyword input file optionally contains a section for including
arbitrary C declarations and definitions, gperf
declarations that
act like command-line options, as well as for providing a user-supplied
struct
.
If the ‘-t’ option (or, equivalently, the ‘%struct-type’ declaration)
is enabled, you must provide a C struct
as the last
component in the declaration section from the input file. The first
field in this struct must be of type char *
or const char *
if the ‘-P’ option is not given, or of type int
if the option
‘-P’ (or, equivalently, the ‘%pic’ declaration) is enabled.
This first field must be called ‘name’, although it is possible to modify
its name with the ‘-K’ option (or, equivalently, the
‘%define slot-name’ declaration) described below.
Here is a simple example, using months of the year and their attributes as
input:
struct month { char *name; int number; int days; int leap_days; };
%%
january, 1, 31, 31
february, 2, 28, 29
march, 3, 31, 31
april, 4, 30, 30
may, 5, 31, 31
june, 6, 30, 30
july, 7, 31, 31
august, 8, 31, 31
september, 9, 30, 30
october, 10, 31, 31
november, 11, 30, 30
december, 12, 31, 31
Separating the struct
declaration from the list of keywords and
other fields are a pair of consecutive percent signs, ‘%%’,
appearing left justified in the first column, as in the UNIX utility
lex
.
If the struct
has already been declared in an include file, it can
be mentioned in an abbreviated form, like this:
struct month;
%%
january, 1, 31, 31
...
The declaration section can contain gperf
declarations. They
influence the way gperf
works, like command line options do.
In fact, every such declaration is equivalent to a command line option.
There are three forms of declarations:
-
Declarations without argument, like ‘%compare-lengths’.
-
Declarations with an argument, like ‘%switch=count’.
-
Declarations of names of entities in the output file, like
‘%define lookup-function-name name’.
When a declaration is given both in the input file and as a command line
option, the command-line option's value prevails.
The following gperf
declarations are available.
- ‘%delimiters=delimiter-list’
-
Allows you to provide a string containing delimiters used to
separate keywords from their attributes. The default is ",". This
option is essential if you want to use keywords that have embedded
commas or newlines.
- ‘%struct-type’
-
Allows you to include a
struct
type declaration for generated
code; see above for an example.
- ‘%ignore-case’
-
Consider upper and lower case ASCII characters as equivalent. The string
comparison will use a case insignificant character comparison. Note that
locale dependent case mappings are ignored.
- ‘%language=language-name’
-
Instructs
gperf
to generate code in the language specified by the
option's argument. Languages handled are currently:
- ‘KR-C’
-
Old-style K&R C. This language is understood by old-style C compilers and
ANSI C compilers, but ANSI C compilers may flag warnings (or even errors)
because of lacking ‘const’.
- ‘C’
-
Common C. This language is understood by ANSI C compilers, and also by
old-style C compilers, provided that you
#define const
to empty
for compilers which don't know about this keyword.
- ‘ANSI-C’
-
ANSI C. This language is understood by ANSI C (C89, ISO C90) compilers,
ISO C99 compilers, and C++ compilers.
- ‘C++’
-
C++. This language is understood by C++ compilers.
The default is C.
- ‘%define slot-name name’
-
This declaration is only useful when option ‘-t’ (or, equivalently, the
‘%struct-type’ declaration) has been given.
By default, the program assumes the structure component identifier for
the keyword is ‘name’. This option allows an arbitrary choice of
identifier for this component, although it still must occur as the first
field in your supplied
struct
.
- ‘%define initializer-suffix initializers’
-
This declaration is only useful when option ‘-t’ (or, equivalently, the
‘%struct-type’ declaration) has been given.
It permits to specify initializers for the structure members following
slot-name in empty hash table entries. The list of initializers
should start with a comma. By default, the emitted code will
zero-initialize structure members following slot-name.
- ‘%define hash-function-name name’
-
Allows you to specify the name for the generated hash function. Default
name is ‘hash’. This option permits the use of two hash tables in
the same file.
- ‘%define lookup-function-name name’
-
Allows you to specify the name for the generated lookup function.
Default name is ‘in_word_set’. This option permits multiple
generated hash functions to be used in the same application.
- ‘%define class-name name’
-
This option is only useful when option ‘-L C++’ (or, equivalently,
the ‘%language=C++’ declaration) has been given. It
allows you to specify the name of generated C++ class. Default name is
Perfect_Hash
.
- ‘%7bit’
-
This option specifies that all strings that will be passed as arguments
to the generated hash function and the generated lookup function will
solely consist of 7-bit ASCII characters (bytes in the range 0..127).
(Note that the ANSI C functions
isalnum
and isgraph
do
not guarantee that a byte is in this range. Only an explicit
test like ‘c >= 'A' && c <= 'Z'’ guarantees this.)
- ‘%compare-lengths’
-
Compare keyword lengths before trying a string comparison. This option
is mandatory for binary comparisons (see section 4.3 Use of NUL bytes). It also might
cut down on the number of string comparisons made during the lookup, since
keywords with different lengths are never compared via
strcmp
.
However, using ‘%compare-lengths’ might greatly increase the size of the
generated C code if the lookup table range is large (which implies that
the switch option ‘-S’ or ‘%switch’ is not enabled), since the length
table contains as many elements as there are entries in the lookup table.
- ‘%compare-strncmp’
-
Generates C code that uses the
strncmp
function to perform
string comparisons. The default action is to use strcmp
.
- ‘%readonly-tables’
-
Makes the contents of all generated lookup tables constant, i.e.,
“readonly”. Many compilers can generate more efficient code for this
by putting the tables in readonly memory.
- ‘%enum’
-
Define constant values using an enum local to the lookup function rather
than with #defines. This also means that different lookup functions can
reside in the same file. Thanks to James Clark
<jjc@ai.mit.edu>
.
- ‘%includes’
-
Include the necessary system include file,
<string.h>
, at the
beginning of the code. By default, this is not done; the user must
include this header file himself to allow compilation of the code.
- ‘%global-table’
-
Generate the static table of keywords as a static global variable,
rather than hiding it inside of the lookup function (which is the
default behavior).
- ‘%pic’
-
Optimize the generated table for inclusion in shared libraries. This
reduces the startup time of programs using a shared library containing
the generated code. If the ‘%struct-type’ declaration (or,
equivalently, the option ‘-t’) is also given, the first field of the
user-defined struct must be of type ‘int’, not ‘char *’, because
it will contain offsets into the string pool instead of actual strings.
To convert such an offset to a string, you can use the expression
‘stringpool + o’, where o is the offset. The string pool
name can be changed through the ‘%define string-pool-name’ declaration.
- ‘%define string-pool-name name’
-
Allows you to specify the name of the generated string pool created by
the declaration ‘%pic’ (or, equivalently, the option ‘-P’).
The default name is ‘stringpool’. This declaration permits the use of
two hash tables in the same file, with ‘%pic’ and even when the
‘%global-table’ declaration (or, equivalently, the option ‘-G’)
is given.
- ‘%null-strings’
-
Use NULL strings instead of empty strings for empty keyword table entries.
This reduces the startup time of programs using a shared library containing
the generated code (but not as much as the declaration ‘%pic’), at the
expense of one more test-and-branch instruction at run time.
- ‘%define word-array-name name’
-
Allows you to specify the name for the generated array containing the
hash table. Default name is ‘wordlist’. This option permits the
use of two hash tables in the same file, even when the option ‘-G’
(or, equivalently, the ‘%global-table’ declaration) is given.
- ‘%define length-table-name name’
-
Allows you to specify the name for the generated array containing the
length table. Default name is ‘lengthtable’. This option permits the
use of two length tables in the same file, even when the option ‘-G’
(or, equivalently, the ‘%global-table’ declaration) is given.
- ‘%switch=count’
-
Causes the generated C code to use a
switch
statement scheme,
rather than an array lookup table. This can lead to a reduction in both
time and space requirements for some input files. The argument to this
option determines how many switch
statements are generated. A
value of 1 generates 1 switch
containing all the elements, a
value of 2 generates 2 tables with 1/2 the elements in each
switch
, etc. This is useful since many C compilers cannot
correctly generate code for large switch
statements. This option
was inspired in part by Keith Bostic's original C program.
- ‘%omit-struct-type’
-
Prevents the transfer of the type declaration to the output file. Use
this option if the type is already defined elsewhere.
Using a syntax similar to GNU utilities flex
and bison
, it
is possible to directly include C source text and comments verbatim into
the generated output file. This is accomplished by enclosing the region
inside left-justified surrounding ‘%{’, ‘%}’ pairs. Here is
an input fragment based on the previous example that illustrates this
feature:
%{
#include <assert.h>
/* This section of code is inserted directly into the output. */
int return_month_days (struct month *months, int is_leap_year);
%}
struct month { char *name; int number; int days; int leap_days; };
%%
january, 1, 31, 31
february, 2, 28, 29
march, 3, 31, 31
...
The second input file format section contains lines of keywords and any
associated attributes you might supply. A line beginning with ‘#’
in the first column is considered a comment. Everything following the
‘#’ is ignored, up to and including the following newline. A line
beginning with ‘%’ in the first column is an option declaration and
must not occur within the keywords section.
The first field of each non-comment line is always the keyword itself. It
can be given in two ways: as a simple name, i.e., without surrounding
string quotation marks, or as a string enclosed in double-quotes, in
C syntax, possibly with backslash escapes like \"
or \234
or \xa8
. In either case, it must start right at the beginning
of the line, without leading whitespace.
In this context, a “field” is considered to extend up to, but
not include, the first blank, comma, or newline. Here is a simple
example taken from a partial list of C reserved words:
# These are a few C reserved words, see the c.gperf file
# for a complete list of ANSI C reserved words.
unsigned
sizeof
switch
signed
if
default
for
while
return
Note that unlike flex
or bison
the first ‘%%’ marker
may be elided if the declaration section is empty.
Additional fields may optionally follow the leading keyword. Fields
should be separated by commas, and terminate at the end of line. What
these fields mean is entirely up to you; they are used to initialize the
elements of the user-defined struct
provided by you in the
declaration section. If the ‘-t’ option (or, equivalently, the
‘%struct-type’ declaration) is not enabled
these fields are simply ignored. All previous examples except the last
one contain keyword attributes.
The optional third section also corresponds closely with conventions
found in flex
and bison
. All text in this section,
starting at the final ‘%%’ and extending to the end of the input
file, is included verbatim into the generated output file. Naturally,
it is your responsibility to ensure that the code contained in this
section is valid C.
If you want to invoke GNU indent
on a gperf
input file,
you will see that GNU indent
doesn't understand the ‘%%’,
‘%{’ and ‘%}’ directives that control gperf
's
interpretation of the input file. Therefore you have to insert some
directives for GNU indent
. More precisely, assuming the most
general input file structure
declarations part 1
%{
verbatim code
%}
declarations part 2
%%
keywords
%%
functions
you would insert ‘*INDENT-OFF*’ and ‘*INDENT-ON*’ comments
as follows:
/* *INDENT-OFF* */
declarations part 1
%{
/* *INDENT-ON* */
verbatim code
/* *INDENT-OFF* */
%}
declarations part 2
%%
keywords
%%
/* *INDENT-ON* */
functions
Several options control how the generated C code appears on the standard
output. Two C functions are generated. They are called hash
and
in_word_set
, although you may modify their names with a command-line
option. Both functions require two arguments, a string, char *
str, and a length parameter, int
len. Their default
function prototypes are as follows:
- Function: unsigned int hash (const char * str, unsigned int len)
-
By default, the generated
hash
function returns an integer value
created by adding len to several user-specified str byte
positions indexed into an associated values table stored in a
local static array. The associated values table is constructed
internally by gperf
and later output as a static local C array
called ‘hash_table’. The relevant selected positions (i.e. indices
into str) are specified via the ‘-k’ option when running
gperf
, as detailed in the Options section below (see section 5 Invoking gperf
).
- Function: in_word_set (const char * str, unsigned int len)
-
If str is in the keyword set, returns a pointer to that
keyword. More exactly, if the option ‘-t’ (or, equivalently, the
‘%struct-type’ declaration) was given, it returns
a pointer to the matching keyword's structure. Otherwise it returns
NULL
.
If the option ‘-c’ (or, equivalently, the ‘%compare-strncmp’
declaration) is not used, str must be a NUL terminated
string of exactly length len. If ‘-c’ (or, equivalently, the
‘%compare-strncmp’ declaration) is used, str must
simply be an array of len bytes and does not need to be NUL
terminated.
The code generated for these two functions is affected by the following
options:
- ‘-t’
-
- ‘--struct-type’
-
Make use of the user-defined
struct
.
- ‘-S total-switch-statements’
-
- ‘--switch=total-switch-statements’
-
Generate 1 or more C
switch
statement rather than use a large,
(and potentially sparse) static array. Although the exact time and
space savings of this approach vary according to your C compiler's
degree of optimization, this method often results in smaller and faster
code.
If the ‘-t’ and ‘-S’ options (or, equivalently, the
‘%struct-type’ and ‘%switch’ declarations) are omitted, the default
action
is to generate a char *
array containing the keywords, together with
additional empty strings used for padding the array. By experimenting
with the various input and output options, and timing the resulting C
code, you can determine the best option choices for different keyword
set characteristics.
By default, the code generated by gperf
operates on zero
terminated strings, the usual representation of strings in C. This means
that the keywords in the input file must not contain NUL bytes,
and the str argument passed to hash
or in_word_set
must be NUL terminated and have exactly length len.
If option ‘-c’ (or, equivalently, the ‘%compare-strncmp’
declaration) is used, then the str argument does not need
to be NUL terminated. The code generated by gperf
will only
access the first len, not len+1, bytes starting at str.
However, the keywords in the input file still must not contain NUL
bytes.
If option ‘-l’ (or, equivalently, the ‘%compare-lengths’
declaration) is used, then the hash table performs binary
comparison. The keywords in the input file may contain NUL bytes,
written in string syntax as \000
or \x00
, and the code
generated by gperf
will treat NUL like any other byte.
Also, in this case the ‘-c’ option (or, equivalently, the
‘%compare-strncmp’ declaration) is ignored.
gperf
is under GPL, but that does not cause the output produced
by gperf
to be under GPL. The reason is that the output contains
only small pieces of text that come directly from gperf
's source
code -- only about 7 lines long, too small for being significant --, and
therefore the output is not a “work based on gperf
” (in the
sense of the GPL version 3).
On the other hand, the output produced by gperf
contains
essentially all of the input file. Therefore the output is a
“derivative work” of the input (in the sense of U.S. copyright law);
and its copyright status depends on the copyright of the input. For most
software licenses, the result is that the the output is under the same
license, with the same copyright holder, as the input that was passed to
gperf
.
There are many options to gperf
. They were added to make
the program more convenient for use with real applications. “On-line”
help is readily available via the ‘--help’ option. Here is the
complete list of options.
- ‘--output-file=file’
-
Allows you to specify the name of the file to which the output is written to.
The results are written to standard output if no output file is specified
or if it is ‘-’.
These options are also available as declarations in the input file
(see section 4.1.1.2 Gperf Declarations).
- ‘-e keyword-delimiter-list’
-
- ‘--delimiters=keyword-delimiter-list’
-
Allows you to provide a string containing delimiters used to
separate keywords from their attributes. The default is ",". This
option is essential if you want to use keywords that have embedded
commas or newlines. One useful trick is to use -e'TAB', where TAB is
the literal tab character.
- ‘-t’
-
- ‘--struct-type’
-
Allows you to include a
struct
type declaration for generated
code. Any text before a pair of consecutive ‘%%’ is considered
part of the type declaration. Keywords and additional fields may follow
this, one group of fields per line. A set of examples for generating
perfect hash tables and functions for Ada, C, C++, Pascal, Modula 2,
Modula 3 and JavaScript reserved words are distributed with this release.
- ‘--ignore-case’
-
Consider upper and lower case ASCII characters as equivalent. The string
comparison will use a case insignificant character comparison. Note that
locale dependent case mappings are ignored. This option is therefore not
suitable if a properly internationalized or locale aware case mapping
should be used. (For example, in a Turkish locale, the upper case equivalent
of the lowercase ASCII letter ‘i’ is the non-ASCII character
‘capital i with dot above’.) For this case, it is better to apply
an uppercase or lowercase conversion on the string before passing it to
the
gperf
generated function.
These options are also available as declarations in the input file
(see section 4.1.1.2 Gperf Declarations).
- ‘-L generated-language-name’
-
- ‘--language=generated-language-name’
-
Instructs
gperf
to generate code in the language specified by the
option's argument. Languages handled are currently:
- ‘KR-C’
-
Old-style K&R C. This language is understood by old-style C compilers and
ANSI C compilers, but ANSI C compilers may flag warnings (or even errors)
because of lacking ‘const’.
- ‘C’
-
Common C. This language is understood by ANSI C compilers, and also by
old-style C compilers, provided that you
#define const
to empty
for compilers which don't know about this keyword.
- ‘ANSI-C’
-
ANSI C. This language is understood by ANSI C compilers and C++ compilers.
- ‘C++’
-
C++. This language is understood by C++ compilers.
The default is C.
- ‘-a’
-
This option is supported for compatibility with previous releases of
gperf
. It does not do anything.
- ‘-g’
-
This option is supported for compatibility with previous releases of
gperf
. It does not do anything.
Most of these options are also available as declarations in the input file
(see section 4.1.1.2 Gperf Declarations).
- ‘-K slot-name’
-
- ‘--slot-name=slot-name’
-
This option is only useful when option ‘-t’ (or, equivalently, the
‘%struct-type’ declaration) has been given.
By default, the program assumes the structure component identifier for
the keyword is ‘name’. This option allows an arbitrary choice of
identifier for this component, although it still must occur as the first
field in your supplied
struct
.
- ‘-F initializers’
-
- ‘--initializer-suffix=initializers’
-
This option is only useful when option ‘-t’ (or, equivalently, the
‘%struct-type’ declaration) has been given.
It permits to specify initializers for the structure members following
slot-name in empty hash table entries. The list of initializers
should start with a comma. By default, the emitted code will
zero-initialize structure members following slot-name.
- ‘-H hash-function-name’
-
- ‘--hash-function-name=hash-function-name’
-
Allows you to specify the name for the generated hash function. Default
name is ‘hash’. This option permits the use of two hash tables in
the same file.
- ‘-N lookup-function-name’
-
- ‘--lookup-function-name=lookup-function-name’
-
Allows you to specify the name for the generated lookup function.
Default name is ‘in_word_set’. This option permits multiple
generated hash functions to be used in the same application.
- ‘-Z class-name’
-
- ‘--class-name=class-name’
-
This option is only useful when option ‘-L C++’ (or, equivalently,
the ‘%language=C++’ declaration) has been given. It
allows you to specify the name of generated C++ class. Default name is
Perfect_Hash
.
- ‘-7’
-
- ‘--seven-bit’
-
This option specifies that all strings that will be passed as arguments
to the generated hash function and the generated lookup function will
solely consist of 7-bit ASCII characters (bytes in the range 0..127).
(Note that the ANSI C functions
isalnum
and isgraph
do
not guarantee that a byte is in this range. Only an explicit
test like ‘c >= 'A' && c <= 'Z'’ guarantees this.) This was the
default in versions of gperf
earlier than 2.7; now the default is
to support 8-bit and multibyte characters.
- ‘-l’
-
- ‘--compare-lengths’
-
Compare keyword lengths before trying a string comparison. This option
is mandatory for binary comparisons (see section 4.3 Use of NUL bytes). It also might
cut down on the number of string comparisons made during the lookup, since
keywords with different lengths are never compared via
strcmp
.
However, using ‘-l’ might greatly increase the size of the
generated C code if the lookup table range is large (which implies that
the switch option ‘-S’ or ‘%switch’ is not enabled), since the length
table contains as many elements as there are entries in the lookup table.
- ‘-c’
-
- ‘--compare-strncmp’
-
Generates C code that uses the
strncmp
function to perform
string comparisons. The default action is to use strcmp
.
- ‘-C’
-
- ‘--readonly-tables’
-
Makes the contents of all generated lookup tables constant, i.e.,
“readonly”. Many compilers can generate more efficient code for this
by putting the tables in readonly memory.
- ‘-E’
-
- ‘--enum’
-
Define constant values using an enum local to the lookup function rather
than with #defines. This also means that different lookup functions can
reside in the same file. Thanks to James Clark
<jjc@ai.mit.edu>
.
- ‘-I’
-
- ‘--includes’
-
Include the necessary system include file,
<string.h>
, at the
beginning of the code. By default, this is not done; the user must
include this header file himself to allow compilation of the code.
- ‘-G’
-
- ‘--global-table’
-
Generate the static table of keywords as a static global variable,
rather than hiding it inside of the lookup function (which is the
default behavior).
- ‘-P’
-
- ‘--pic’
-
Optimize the generated table for inclusion in shared libraries. This
reduces the startup time of programs using a shared library containing
the generated code. If the option ‘-t’ (or, equivalently, the
‘%struct-type’ declaration) is also given, the first field of the
user-defined struct must be of type ‘int’, not ‘char *’, because
it will contain offsets into the string pool instead of actual strings.
To convert such an offset to a string, you can use the expression
‘stringpool + o’, where o is the offset. The string pool
name can be changed through the option ‘--string-pool-name’.
- ‘-Q string-pool-name’
-
- ‘--string-pool-name=string-pool-name’
-
Allows you to specify the name of the generated string pool created by
option ‘-P’. The default name is ‘stringpool’. This option
permits the use of two hash tables in the same file, with ‘-P’ and
even when the option ‘-G’ (or, equivalently, the ‘%global-table’
declaration) is given.
- ‘--null-strings’
-
Use NULL strings instead of empty strings for empty keyword table entries.
This reduces the startup time of programs using a shared library containing
the generated code (but not as much as option ‘-P’), at the expense
of one more test-and-branch instruction at run time.
- ‘-W hash-table-array-name’
-
- ‘--word-array-name=hash-table-array-name’
-
Allows you to specify the name for the generated array containing the
hash table. Default name is ‘wordlist’. This option permits the
use of two hash tables in the same file, even when the option ‘-G’
(or, equivalently, the ‘%global-table’ declaration) is given.
- ‘--length-table-name=length-table-array-name’
-
Allows you to specify the name for the generated array containing the
length table. Default name is ‘lengthtable’. This option permits the
use of two length tables in the same file, even when the option ‘-G’
(or, equivalently, the ‘%global-table’ declaration) is given.
- ‘-S total-switch-statements’
-
- ‘--switch=total-switch-statements’
-
Causes the generated C code to use a
switch
statement scheme,
rather than an array lookup table. This can lead to a reduction in both
time and space requirements for some input files. The argument to this
option determines how many switch
statements are generated. A
value of 1 generates 1 switch
containing all the elements, a
value of 2 generates 2 tables with 1/2 the elements in each
switch
, etc. This is useful since many C compilers cannot
correctly generate code for large switch
statements. This option
was inspired in part by Keith Bostic's original C program.
- ‘-T’
-
- ‘--omit-struct-type’
-
Prevents the transfer of the type declaration to the output file. Use
this option if the type is already defined elsewhere.
- ‘-p’
-
This option is supported for compatibility with previous releases of
gperf
. It does not do anything.
- ‘-k selected-byte-positions’
-
- ‘--key-positions=selected-byte-positions’
-
Allows selection of the byte positions used in the keywords'
hash function. The allowable choices range between 1-255, inclusive.
The positions are separated by commas, e.g., ‘-k 9,4,13,14’;
ranges may be used, e.g., ‘-k 2-7’; and positions may occur
in any order. Furthermore, the wildcard '*' causes the generated
hash function to consider all byte positions in each keyword,
whereas '$' instructs the hash function to use the “final byte”
of a keyword (this is the only way to use a byte position greater than
255, incidentally).
For instance, the option ‘-k 1,2,4,6-10,'$'’ generates a hash
function that considers positions 1,2,4,6,7,8,9,10, plus the last
byte in each keyword (which may be at a different position for each
keyword, obviously). Keywords
with length less than the indicated byte positions work properly, since
selected byte positions exceeding the keyword length are simply not
referenced in the hash function.
This option is not normally needed since version 2.8 of
gperf
;
the default byte positions are computed depending on the keyword set,
through a search that minimizes the number of byte positions.
- ‘-D’
-
- ‘--duplicates’
-
Handle keywords whose selected byte sets hash to duplicate values.
Duplicate hash values can occur if a set of keywords has the same names, but
possesses different attributes, or if the selected byte positions are not well
chosen. With the -D option
gperf
treats all these keywords as
part of an equivalence class and generates a perfect hash function with
multiple comparisons for duplicate keywords. It is up to you to completely
disambiguate the keywords by modifying the generated C code. However,
gperf
helps you out by organizing the output.
Using this option usually means that the generated hash function is no
longer perfect. On the other hand, it permits gperf
to work on
keyword sets that it otherwise could not handle.
- ‘-m iterations’
-
- ‘--multiple-iterations=iterations’
-
Perform multiple choices of the ‘-i’ and ‘-j’ values, and
choose the best results. This increases the running time by a factor of
iterations but does a good job minimizing the generated table size.
- ‘-i initial-value’
-
- ‘--initial-asso=initial-value’
-
Provides an initial value for the associate values array. Default
is 0. Increasing the initial value helps inflate the final table size,
possibly leading to more time efficient keyword lookups. Note that this
option is not particularly useful when ‘-S’ (or, equivalently,
‘%switch’) is used. Also,
‘-i’ is overridden when the ‘-r’ option is used.
- ‘-j jump-value’
-
- ‘--jump=jump-value’
-
Affects the “jump value”, i.e., how far to advance the associated
byte value upon collisions. Jump-value is rounded up to an
odd number, the default is 5. If the jump-value is 0
gperf
jumps by random amounts.
- ‘-n’
-
- ‘--no-strlen’
-
Instructs the generator not to include the length of a keyword when
computing its hash value. This may save a few assembly instructions in
the generated lookup table.
- ‘-r’
-
- ‘--random’
-
Utilizes randomness to initialize the associated values table. This
frequently generates solutions faster than using deterministic
initialization (which starts all associated values at 0). Furthermore,
using the randomization option generally increases the size of the
table.
- ‘-s size-multiple’
-
- ‘--size-multiple=size-multiple’
-
Affects the size of the generated hash table. The numeric argument for
this option indicates “how many times larger or smaller” the maximum
associated value range should be, in relationship to the number of keywords.
It can be written as an integer, a floating-point number or a fraction.
For example, a value of 3 means “allow the maximum associated value to be
about 3 times larger than the number of input keywords”.
Conversely, a value of 1/3 means “allow the maximum associated value to
be about 3 times smaller than the number of input keywords”. Values
smaller than 1 are useful for limiting the overall size of the generated hash
table, though the option ‘-m’ is better at this purpose.
If `generate switch' option ‘-S’ (or, equivalently, ‘%switch’) is
not enabled, the maximum
associated value influences the static array table size, and a larger
table should decrease the time required for an unsuccessful search, at
the expense of extra table space.
The default value is 1, thus the default maximum associated value about
the same size as the number of keywords (for efficiency, the maximum
associated value is always rounded up to a power of 2). The actual
table size may vary somewhat, since this technique is essentially a
heuristic.
- ‘-h’
-
- ‘--help’
-
Prints a short summary on the meaning of each program option. Aborts
further program execution.
- ‘-v’
-
- ‘--version’
-
Prints out the current version number.
- ‘-d’
-
- ‘--debug’
-
Enables the debugging option. This produces verbose diagnostics to
“standard error” when
gperf
is executing. It is useful both for
maintaining the program and for determining whether a given set of
options is actually speeding up the search for a solution. Some useful
information is dumped at the end of the program when the ‘-d’
option is enabled.
The following are some limitations with the current release of
gperf
:
-
The
gperf
utility is tuned to execute quickly, and works quickly
for small to medium size data sets (around 1000 keywords). It is
extremely useful for maintaining perfect hash functions for compiler
keyword sets. Several recent enhancements now enable gperf
to
work efficiently on much larger keyword sets (over 15,000 keywords).
When processing large keyword sets it helps greatly to have over 8 megs
of RAM.
-
The size of the generate static keyword array can get extremely
large if the input keyword file is large or if the keywords are quite
similar. This tends to slow down the compilation of the generated C
code, and greatly inflates the object code size. If this
situation occurs, consider using the ‘-S’ option to reduce data
size, potentially increasing keyword recognition time a negligible
amount. Since many C compilers cannot correctly generate code for
large switch statements it is important to qualify the -S option
with an appropriate numerical argument that controls the number of
switch statements generated.
-
The maximum number of selected byte positions has an
arbitrary limit of 255. This restriction should be removed, and if
anyone considers this a problem write me and let me know so I can remove
the constraint.
It should be “relatively” easy to replace the current perfect hash
function algorithm with a more exhaustive approach; the perfect hash
module is essential independent from other program modules. Additional
worthwhile improvements include:
-
Another useful extension involves modifying the program to generate
“minimal” perfect hash functions (under certain circumstances, the
current version can be rather extravagant in the generated table size).
This is mostly of theoretical interest, since a sparse table
often produces faster lookups, and use of the ‘-S’
switch
option can minimize the data size, at the expense of slightly longer
lookups (note that the gcc compiler generally produces good code for
switch
statements, reducing the need for more complex schemes).
-
In addition to improving the algorithm, it would also be useful to
generate an Ada package as the code output, in addition to the current
C and C++ routines.
[1] Chang, C.C.: A Scheme for Constructing Ordered Minimal Perfect
Hashing Functions Information Sciences 39(1986), 187-195.
[2] Cichelli, Richard J. Author's Response to “On Cichelli's Minimal Perfect Hash
Functions Method” Communications of the ACM, 23, 12(December 1980), 729.
[3] Cichelli, Richard J. Minimal Perfect Hash Functions Made Simple
Communications of the ACM, 23, 1(January 1980), 17-19.
[4] Cook, C. R. and Oldehoeft, R.R. A Letter Oriented Minimal
Perfect Hashing Function SIGPLAN Notices, 17, 9(September 1982), 18-27.
[5] Cormack, G. V. and Horspool, R. N. S. and Kaiserwerth, M.
Practical Perfect Hashing Computer Journal, 28, 1(January 1985), 54-58.
[6] Jaeschke, G. Reciprocal Hashing: A Method for Generating Minimal
Perfect Hashing Functions Communications of the ACM, 24, 12(December
1981), 829-833.
[7] Jaeschke, G. and Osterburg, G. On Cichelli's Minimal Perfect
Hash Functions Method Communications of the ACM, 23, 12(December 1980),
728-729.
[8] Sager, Thomas J. A Polynomial Time Generator for Minimal Perfect
Hash Functions Communications of the ACM, 28, 5(December 1985), 523-532
[9] Schmidt, Douglas C. GPERF: A Perfect Hash Function Generator
Second USENIX C++ Conference Proceedings, April 1990.
[10] Schmidt, Douglas C. GPERF: A Perfect Hash Function Generator
C++ Report, SIGS 10 10 (November/December 1998).
[11] Sebesta, R.W. and Taylor, M.A. Minimal Perfect Hash Functions
for Reserved Word Lists SIGPLAN Notices, 20, 12(September 1985), 47-53.
[12] Sprugnoli, R. Perfect Hashing Functions: A Single Probe
Retrieving Method for Static Sets Communications of the ACM, 20
11(November 1977), 841-850.
[13] Stallman, Richard M. Using and Porting GNU CC Free Software Foundation,
1988.
[14] Stroustrup, Bjarne The C++ Programming Language. Addison-Wesley, 1986.
[15] Tiemann, Michael D. User's Guide to GNU C++ Free Software
Foundation, 1989.
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