The fastest Bloom filter in Rust. No accuracy compromises. Compatible with any hasher.
fastbloom
is a SIMD accelerated Bloom filter implemented in Rust. fastbloom
's default hasher is SipHash-1-3 using randomized keys but can be seeded or configured to use any hasher. fastbloom
is 50-10000% faster than existing Bloom filter implementations.
Due to a different (improved!) algorithm in 0.7.x, BloomFilter
s have incompatible serialization/deserialization with 0.6.x!
# Cargo.toml
[dependencies]
fastbloom = "0.7.1"
Basic usage:
use fastbloom::BloomFilter;
let mut filter = BloomFilter::with_num_bits(1024).expected_items(2);
filter.insert("42");
filter.insert("π¦");
Instantiate with a target false positive rate:
use fastbloom::BloomFilter;
let filter = BloomFilter::with_false_pos(0.001).items(["42", "π¦"]);
assert!(filter.contains("42"));
assert!(filter.contains("π¦"));
Use any hasher:
use fastbloom::BloomFilter;
use ahash::RandomState;
let filter = BloomFilter::with_num_bits(1024)
.hasher(RandomState::default())
.items(["42", "π¦"]);
Bloom filters are space-efficient approximate membership set data structures supported by an underlying bit array to track item membership. To insert/check membership, a number of bits are set/checked at positions based on the item's hash. False positives from a membership check are possible, but false negatives are not. Once constructed, neither the Bloom filter's underlying memory usage nor number of bits per item change. See more.
hash(4) βββββββ¬ββββββ¬ββββββββββββββββ
β β β
0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0
β β β
βββββββββββββ΄ββββββββββββ΄ββββ hash(3) (not in the set)
fastbloom
is several times faster than existing Bloom filters and scales very well with the number of hashes per item. In all cases, fastbloom
maintains competitive false positive rates. fastbloom
is blazingly fast because it uses L1 cache friendly blocks, efficiently derives many index bits from only one real hash per item, employs SIMD acceleration, and leverages other research findings on Bloom filters.
fastbloom
is implemented as a partial blocked Bloom filter. Blocked Bloom filters partition their underlying bit array into sub-array βblocksβ. Bits set and checked from the itemβs hash are constrained to a single block instead of the entire bit array. This allows for better cache-efficiency and the opportunity to leverage SIMD and SWAR operations when generating bits from an itemβs hash. See more on blocked bloom filters. Half of fastbloom
's hash indexes span the entire bit array while others are confined to a single block.
fastbloom
is 50-10000% faster than existing Bloom filters implemented in Rust.
Runtime comparison to other Bloom filter crates (all using SipHash). Note:
- The number hashes for all Bloom filters is derived to optimize accuracy, meaning fewer items in the Bloom filters result in more hashes per item and generally slower performance.
- As number of items (input) increases, the accuracy of the Bloom filter decreases.
Results are amortized over 1000 random strings
These crates use xxhash. fastbloom
is also configured to use xxhash.
Results are amortized over 1000 random strings.
sbbf-rs-safe is hardcoded for 8 index bits per item, explaining the constant and fast performance, but this results in less accuracy as shown in the next section "False Positive Performance".
fastbloom
does not compromise accuracy. Below is a comparison of false positive rates with other Bloom filter crates:
The Bloom filters and a control hash set were populated with a varying number of random 64 bit integers ("Number of Items"). Then 100,000 random 64 bit integers were checked: false positives are numbers that do NOT exist in the control hash set but do report as existing in the Bloom filter.
fastbloom
offers 4 different block sizes: 64, 128, 256, and 512 bits.
use fastbloom::BloomFilter;
let filter = BloomFilter::with_num_bits(1024).block_size_128().expected_items(2);
512 bits is the default. Larger block sizes generally have slower performance but are more accurate, e.g. a Bloom filter with 64 bit blocks is very fast but slightly less accurate.
Results are amortized over 1000 random strings. The Bloom filters used ahash.
fastbloom
attributes its performance to two insights:
- Only one real hash per item is needed, subsequent hashes can be cheaply derived from the real hash using "hash composition"
- Many bit positions can be derived from a few subsequent hashes through SIMD and SWAR-like operations
fastbloom
employs "hash composition" on two 32-bit halves of an original 64-bit hash. Each subsequent hash is derived by combining the original hash value with a different constant using modular arithmetic and bitwise operations. This results in a set of hash functions that are effectively independent and uniformly distributed, even though they are derived from the same original hash function. Computing the composition of two original hashes is faster than re-computing the hash with a different seed. This technique is explained in depth in this paper.
Instead of deriving a single bit position per hash, a hash with ~N 1 bits set can be formed by chaining bitwise AND and OR operations of the subsequent hashes.
For a Bloom filter with a bit vector of size 64 and desired hashes 24, 24 (potentially overlapping) positions in the bit vector are set or checked for each item on insertion or membership check respectively.
Other traditional Bloom filters derive 24 positions based on 24 hashes of the item:
hash0(item) % 64
hash1(item) % 64
- ...
hash23(item) % 64
Instead, fastbloom
uses a "sparse hash", a composed hash with less than 32 expected number of bits set. In this case, a ~20 bit set sparse hash is derived from the item and added to the bit vector with a bitwise OR:
hash0(item) & hash1(item) | hash2(item) & hash3(item)
That's 4 hashes versus 24!
Note:
- Given 64 bits, and 24 hashes, a bit has probability (63/64)^24 to NOT be set, i.e. 0, after 24 hashes. The expected number of bits to be set for an item is 64 - (64 * (63/64)^24) ~= 20.
- A 64 bit
hash0(item)
provides us with roughly 32 set bits with a binomial distribution.hash0(item) & hash1(item)
gives us ~16 set bits,hash0(item) | hash1(item)
gives us ~48 set bits, etc.
In reality, the Bloom filter may have more than 64 bits of storage. In that case, many underlying u64
s in the block are operated on using SIMD intrinsics. The number of hashes is adjusted to be the number of hashes per u64
in the block. Additionally, some bits may be set in the traditional way, across the entire bit vector, to account for any truncating errors from the sparse hash. This also reduces the false positive rate and boosts non-member check speed.
-
rand
- Enabled by default, this has theDefaultHasher
source its random state usingthread_rng()
instead of hardware sources. Getting entropy from a user-space source is considerably faster, but requires additional dependencies to achieve this. Disabling this feature by usingdefault-features = false
makesDefaultHasher
source its entropy usinggetrandom
, which will have a much simpler code footprint at the expense of speed. -
serde
-BloomFilter
s implementSerialize
andDeserialize
when possible.
- Bloom filter - Wikipedia
- Bloom Filter - Brilliant
- Bloom Filter Interactive Demonstration
- Cache-, Hash- and Space-Efficient Bloom Filters
- Less hashing, same performance: Building a better Bloom filter
- A fast alternative to the modulo reduction
Licensed under either of
- Apache License, Version 2.0 (LICENSE-APACHE or http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0)
- MIT license (LICENSE-MIT or http://opensource.org/licenses/MIT)
at your option.
Unless you explicitly state otherwise, any contribution intentionally submitted for inclusion in the work by you, as defined in the Apache-2.0 license, shall be dual licensed as above, without any additional terms or conditions.