Crates.io | rsdict |
lib.rs | rsdict |
version | 0.0.8 |
source | src |
created_at | 2020-05-15 23:27:31.036283 |
updated_at | 2024-04-16 01:30:45.130451 |
description | Fast static rank and select data structure |
homepage | https://github.com/sujayakar/rsdict |
repository | https://github.com/sujayakar/rsdict |
max_upload_size | |
id | 242198 |
size | 63,227 |
Rank and select are two useful operations on bitmaps for building more sophisticated data
structures. First, the rank at a given index i
counts the number of set bits left of i
. For
example, a sparse array can be represented as a dense array of the values present and a bitmap
indicating which indices are present. Then, rank provides a function from an index into the sparse
array to an index into the dense one.
Select is the inverse of rank, where select(B, k)
returns the index of the k
th set bit. To make
the two inverses, we use zero-indexing for select (so select(B, 0)
returns the index of the first
bit set in B
) and rank only counts indices strictly to the left of i
. From our previous example,
select
allows going from an index in the dense array to the original sparse array.
This data structure implements these two operations efficiently on top of an append-only bitmap. It's an implementation of Navarro and Providel, "Fast, Small, Simple Rank/Select On Bitmaps", with heavy inspiration from a Go implementation. The underlying bitmap is stored in compressed form, so long runs of zeros and ones do not take up much space. The indices for rank and select add about 28% overhead over the uncompressed bitmap.
For more examples on how to use rank and select to build succinct datastructures, see Navarro's book on Compact Data Structures for an overview.
This library is mostly a port of the Go implementation with a few additional optimizations.
With the nightly-only simd
feature and a CPU with SSSE3 support, the final step of rank is computed
in a few steps without any loops. Turning this feature on improves the rsdict::rank
benchmark by
about 40% on my computer. See rank_acceleration.rs
for more details.
u64
With a CPU that supports popcnt
, computing rank within a small block of 64 bits will use this
instruction to efficiently count the number of bits set. Select uses an adapted version of an an
algorithm from Daniel Lemire's
blog that uses tzcnt
to
quickly skip over runs of trailing zeros.
Encoding and decoding blocks of the compressed bitmap requires computing the binomial coefficient
B(n, k)
where 0 <= k <= n <= 64
. Computing this on-the-fly is too expensive, so we store a
precomputed lookup table of the coefficients. However, we exploit the symmetry of B
in k
to
store only half the values. See build.rs
for more details.
Here's some results from running the benchmark on my 2018 MacBook Pro with -C target-cpu=native
.
rsdict::rank time: [10.330 us 10.488 us 10.678 us]
Found 4 outliers among 100 measurements (4.00%)
4 (4.00%) high mild
jacobson::rank time: [17.958 us 18.335 us 18.740 us]
Found 6 outliers among 100 measurements (6.00%)
1 (1.00%) high mild
5 (5.00%) high severe
rank9::rank time: [6.8907 us 7.0768 us 7.2940 us]
Found 1 outliers among 100 measurements (1.00%)
1 (1.00%) high severe
rsdict::select0 time: [37.124 us 37.505 us 37.991 us]
Found 3 outliers among 100 measurements (3.00%)
3 (3.00%) high severe
rsdict::select1 time: [29.782 us 29.918 us 30.067 us]
Found 7 outliers among 100 measurements (7.00%)
5 (5.00%) high mild
2 (2.00%) high severe
rank9::binsearch::select0
time: [229.64 us 231.54 us 233.87 us]
Found 5 outliers among 100 measurements (5.00%)
2 (2.00%) high mild
3 (3.00%) high severe
rank9::binsearch::select1
time: [253.69 us 255.84 us 258.19 us]
Found 9 outliers among 100 measurements (9.00%)
4 (4.00%) high mild
5 (5.00%) high severe
So for rank queries, this implementation is faster than succinct-rs
's Jacobson and slightly slower
than its Rank9. However for select queries, it's much faster than doing binary search over these
rank structures, so consider using this library if select is an important operation for your algorithm.
We use QuickCheck for testing data structure invariants. In addition, there's basic AFL fuzz integration
to find interesting test cases using program coverage. Install cargo-afl
and run the rsdict_fuzz
binary with the fuzz
feature set.
$ cargo install afl
$ cargo afl build --release --test rsdict_fuzz --features fuzz
# Create some starting bitsets within target/fuzz/in and create an empty directory target/fuzz/out.
$ cargo afl fuzz -i target/fuzz/in -o target/fuzz/out target/release/rsdict_fuzz