tile38/vendor/github.com/cespare/xxhash/xxhash_test.go

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Fix excessive memory usage for objects with TTLs This commit fixes an issue where Tile38 was using lots of extra memory to track objects that are marked to expire. This was creating problems with applications that set big TTLs. How it worked before: Every collection had a unique hashmap that stores expiration timestamps for every object in that collection. Along with the hashmaps, there's also one big server-wide list that gets appended every time a new SET+EX is performed. From a background routine, this list is looped over at least 10 times per second and is randomly searched for potential candidates that might need expiring. The routine then removes those entries from the list and tests if the objects matching the entries have actually expired. If so, these objects are deleted them from the database. When at least 25% of the 20 candidates are deleted the loop is immediately continued, otherwise the loop backs off with a 100ms pause. Why this was a problem. The list grows one entry for every SET+EX. When TTLs are long, like 24-hours or more, it would take at least that much time before the entry is removed. So for databased that have objects that use TTLs and are updated often this could lead to a very large list. How it was fixed. The list was removed and the hashmap is now search randomly. This required a new hashmap implementation, as the built-in Go map does not provide an operation for randomly geting entries. The chosen implementation is a robinhood-hash because it provides open-addressing, which makes for simple random bucket selections. Issue #502
2019-10-29 21:04:07 +03:00
package xxhash
import (
"bytes"
"encoding/binary"
"fmt"
"strings"
"testing"
)
func TestAll(t *testing.T) {
for _, tt := range []struct {
name string
input string
want uint64
}{
{"empty", "", 0xef46db3751d8e999},
{"a", "a", 0xd24ec4f1a98c6e5b},
{"as", "as", 0x1c330fb2d66be179},
{"asd", "asd", 0x631c37ce72a97393},
{"asdf", "asdf", 0x415872f599cea71e},
{
"len=63",
// Exactly 63 characters, which exercises all code paths.
"Call me Ishmael. Some years ago--never mind how long precisely-",
0x02a2e85470d6fd96,
},
} {
for chunkSize := 1; chunkSize <= len(tt.input); chunkSize++ {
name := fmt.Sprintf("%s,chunkSize=%d", tt.name, chunkSize)
t.Run(name, func(t *testing.T) {
testDigest(t, tt.input, chunkSize, tt.want)
})
}
t.Run(tt.name, func(t *testing.T) { testSum(t, tt.input, tt.want) })
}
}
func testDigest(t *testing.T, input string, chunkSize int, want uint64) {
d := New()
ds := New() // uses WriteString
for i := 0; i < len(input); i += chunkSize {
chunk := input[i:]
if len(chunk) > chunkSize {
chunk = chunk[:chunkSize]
}
n, err := d.Write([]byte(chunk))
if err != nil || n != len(chunk) {
t.Fatalf("Digest.Write: got (%d, %v); want (%d, nil)", n, err, len(chunk))
}
n, err = ds.WriteString(chunk)
if err != nil || n != len(chunk) {
t.Fatalf("Digest.WriteString: got (%d, %v); want (%d, nil)", n, err, len(chunk))
}
}
if got := d.Sum64(); got != want {
t.Fatalf("Digest.Sum64: got 0x%x; want 0x%x", got, want)
}
if got := ds.Sum64(); got != want {
t.Fatalf("Digest.Sum64 (WriteString): got 0x%x; want 0x%x", got, want)
}
var b [8]byte
binary.BigEndian.PutUint64(b[:], want)
if got := d.Sum(nil); !bytes.Equal(got, b[:]) {
t.Fatalf("Sum: got %v; want %v", got, b[:])
}
}
func testSum(t *testing.T, input string, want uint64) {
if got := Sum64([]byte(input)); got != want {
t.Fatalf("Sum64: got 0x%x; want 0x%x", got, want)
}
if got := Sum64String(input); got != want {
t.Fatalf("Sum64String: got 0x%x; want 0x%x", got, want)
}
}
func TestReset(t *testing.T) {
parts := []string{"The quic", "k br", "o", "wn fox jumps", " ov", "er the lazy ", "dog."}
d := New()
for _, part := range parts {
d.Write([]byte(part))
}
h0 := d.Sum64()
d.Reset()
d.Write([]byte(strings.Join(parts, "")))
h1 := d.Sum64()
if h0 != h1 {
t.Errorf("0x%x != 0x%x", h0, h1)
}
}
func TestBinaryMarshaling(t *testing.T) {
d := New()
d.WriteString("abc")
b, err := d.MarshalBinary()
if err != nil {
t.Fatal(err)
}
d = New()
d.WriteString("junk")
if err := d.UnmarshalBinary(b); err != nil {
t.Fatal(err)
}
d.WriteString("def")
if got, want := d.Sum64(), Sum64String("abcdef"); got != want {
t.Fatalf("after MarshalBinary+UnmarshalBinary, got 0x%x; want 0x%x", got, want)
}
d0 := New()
d1 := New()
for i := 0; i < 64; i++ {
b, err := d0.MarshalBinary()
if err != nil {
t.Fatal(err)
}
d0 = new(Digest)
if err := d0.UnmarshalBinary(b); err != nil {
t.Fatal(err)
}
if got, want := d0.Sum64(), d1.Sum64(); got != want {
t.Fatalf("after %d Writes, unmarshaled Digest gave sum 0x%x; want 0x%x", i, got, want)
}
d0.Write([]byte{'a'})
d1.Write([]byte{'a'})
}
}
var sink uint64
func TestAllocs(t *testing.T) {
const shortStr = "abcdefghijklmnop"
// Sum64([]byte(shortString)) shouldn't allocate because the
// intermediate []byte ought not to escape.
// (See https://github.com/cespare/xxhash/pull/2.)
t.Run("Sum64", func(t *testing.T) {
testAllocs(t, func() {
sink = Sum64([]byte(shortStr))
})
})
// Creating and using a Digest shouldn't allocate because its methods
// shouldn't make it escape. (A previous version of New returned a
// hash.Hash64 which forces an allocation.)
t.Run("Digest", func(t *testing.T) {
b := []byte("asdf")
testAllocs(t, func() {
d := New()
d.Write(b)
sink = d.Sum64()
})
})
}
func testAllocs(t *testing.T, fn func()) {
t.Helper()
if allocs := int(testing.AllocsPerRun(10, fn)); allocs > 0 {
t.Fatalf("got %d allocation(s) (want zero)", allocs)
}
}