/* * Copyright (C) 2011 The Guava Authors * * Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License"); you may not use this file except * in compliance with the License. You may obtain a copy of the License at * * http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0 * * Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software distributed under the License * is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS, WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express * or implied. See the License for the specific language governing permissions and limitations under * the License. */ package com.google.common.hash; import java.nio.charset.Charset; import com.google.common.annotations.Beta; import com.google.common.primitives.Ints; /** * A hash function is a collision-averse pure function that maps an arbitrary * block of data to a number called a hash code. * *
* Unpacking this definition: * *
* Summarizing the last two points: "equal yield equal always; unequal * yield unequal often." This is the most important characteristic of all * hash functions. * *
* A high-quality hash function strives for some subset of the following * virtues: * *
* The primary way to provide the data that your hash function should act on is * via a {@link Hasher}. Obtain a new hasher from the hash function using * {@link #newHasher}, "push" the relevant data into it using methods like * {@link Hasher#putBytes(byte[])}, and finally ask for the {@code HashCode} * when finished using {@link Hasher#hash}. (See an {@linkplain #newHasher * example} of this.) * *
* If all you want to hash is a single byte array, string or {@code long} value, * there are convenient shortcut methods defined directly on * {@link HashFunction} to make this easier. * *
* Hasher accepts primitive data types, but can also accept any Object of type
* {@code
* T} provided that you implement a {@link Funnel Funnel
* Compatibility note: Throughout this API, multibyte values are always
* interpreted in little-endian order. That is, hashing the byte array
* {@code {0x01, 0x02, 0x03, 0x04}} is equivalent to hashing the {@code int}
* value {@code
* 0x04030201}. If this isn't what you need, methods such as
* {@link Integer#reverseBytes} and {@link Ints#toByteArray} will help.
*
*
* Java's baked-in concept of hash codes is constrained to 32 bits, and provides
* no separation between hash algorithms and the data they act on, so alternate
* hash algorithms can't be easily substituted. Also, implementations of
* {@code hashCode} tend to be poor-quality, in part because they end up
* depending on other existing poor-quality {@code hashCode}
* implementations, including those in many JDK classes.
*
*
* {@code Object.hashCode} implementations tend to be very fast, but have weak
* collision prevention and no expectation of bit dispersion. This leaves
* them perfectly suitable for use in hash tables, because extra collisions
* cause only a slight performance hit, while poor bit dispersion is easily
* corrected using a secondary hash function (which all reasonable hash table
* implementations in Java use). For the many uses of hash functions beyond data
* structures, however, {@code Object.hashCode} almost always falls short --
* hence this library.
*
* @author Kevin Bourrillion
* @since 11.0
*/
@Beta
public interface HashFunction {
/**
* Begins a new hash code computation by returning an initialized, stateful
* {@code
* Hasher} instance that is ready to receive data. Example:
*
* Relationship to {@link Object#hashCode}
*
*
* {
* @code
*
* HashFunction hf = Hashing.md5();
* HashCode hc = hf.newHasher().putLong(id).putBoolean(isActive).hash();
* }
*
*/
Hasher newHasher();
/**
* Begins a new hash code computation as {@link #newHasher()}, but provides a
* hint of the expected size of the input (in bytes). This is only important for
* non-streaming hash functions (hash functions that need to buffer their whole
* input before processing any of it).
*/
Hasher newHasher(int expectedInputSize);
/**
* Shortcut for {@code newHasher().putInt(input).hash()}; returns the hash code
* for the given {@code int} value, interpreted in little-endian byte order. The
* implementation might perform better than its longhand equivalent, but
* should not perform worse.
*
* @since 12.0
*/
HashCode hashInt(int input);
/**
* Shortcut for {@code newHasher().putLong(input).hash()}; returns the hash code
* for the given {@code long} value, interpreted in little-endian byte order.
* The implementation might perform better than its longhand equivalent,
* but should not perform worse.
*/
HashCode hashLong(long input);
/**
* Shortcut for {@code newHasher().putBytes(input).hash()}. The implementation
* might perform better than its longhand equivalent, but should not
* perform worse.
*/
HashCode hashBytes(byte[] input);
/**
* Shortcut for {@code newHasher().putBytes(input, off, len).hash()}. The
* implementation might perform better than its longhand equivalent, but
* should not perform worse.
*
* @throws IndexOutOfBoundsException if {@code off < 0} or
* {@code off + len > bytes.length} or
* {@code len < 0}
*/
HashCode hashBytes(byte[] input, int off, int len);
/**
* Shortcut for {@code newHasher().putUnencodedChars(input).hash()}. The
* implementation might perform better than its longhand equivalent, but
* should not perform worse. Note that no character encoding is performed; the
* low byte and high byte of each {@code char} are hashed directly (in that
* order).
*
* @since 15.0 (since 11.0 as hashString(CharSequence)).
*/
HashCode hashUnencodedChars(CharSequence input);
/**
* Shortcut for {@code newHasher().putString(input, charset).hash()}. Characters
* are encoded using the given {@link Charset}. The implementation might
* perform better than its longhand equivalent, but should not perform worse.
*/
HashCode hashString(CharSequence input, Charset charset);
/**
* Shortcut for {@code newHasher().putObject(instance, funnel).hash()}. The
* implementation might perform better than its longhand equivalent, but
* should not perform worse.
*
* @since 14.0
*/