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gperf - generate a perfect hash function from a key set
gperf [OPTION]... [INPUT-FILE]
GNU 'gperf' generates perfect hash functions.
If a long option shows an argument as mandatory, then it is
mandatory for the equivalent short option also.
--output-file=FILE Write output to specified
file.
The results are written to standard output if no output file is
specified or if it is -.
- -e, --delimiters=DELIMITER-LIST
- Allow user to provide a string containing delimiters used to separate
keywords from their attributes. Default is ",".
- -t, --struct-type
- Allows the user to include a structured type declaration for generated
code. Any text before %% is considered part of the type declaration. Key
words and additional fields may follow this, one group of fields per
line.
- --ignore-case
- Consider upper and lower case ASCII characters as equivalent. Note that
locale dependent case mappings are ignored.
- -L, --language=LANGUAGE-NAME
- Generates code in the specified language. Languages handled are currently
C++, ANSI-C, C, and KR-C. The default is ANSI-C.
- -K, --slot-name=NAME
- Select name of the keyword component in the keyword structure.
- -F, --initializer-suffix=INITIALIZERS
- Initializers for additional components in the keyword structure.
- -H, --hash-function-name=NAME
- Specify name of generated hash function. Default is 'hash'.
- -N, --lookup-function-name=NAME
- Specify name of generated lookup function. Default name is
'in_word_set'.
- -Z, --class-name=NAME
- Specify name of generated C++ class. Default name is 'Perfect_Hash'.
- -7, --seven-bit
- Assume 7-bit characters.
- -l, --compare-lengths
- Compare key lengths before trying a string comparison. This is necessary
if the keywords contain NUL bytes. It also helps cut down on the number of
string comparisons made during the lookup.
- -c, --compare-strncmp
- Generate comparison code using strncmp rather than strcmp.
- -C, --readonly-tables
- Make the contents of generated lookup tables constant, i.e.,
readonly.
- -E, --enum
- Define constant values using an enum local to the lookup function rather
than with defines.
- -I, --includes
- Include the necessary system include file <string.h> at the
beginning 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.
- -Q, --string-pool-name=NAME
- Specify name of string pool generated by option --pic. Default name
is 'stringpool'.
- --null-strings
- Use NULL strings instead of empty strings for empty keyword table
entries.
- --constants-prefix=PREFIX
- Specify prefix for the constants like TOTAL_KEYWORDS.
- -W, --word-array-name=NAME
- Specify name of word list array. Default name is 'wordlist'.
- --length-table-name=NAME
- Specify name of length table array. Default name is 'lengthtable'.
- -S, --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 keyfiles. The COUNT argument 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 table, etc. If COUNT is very large, say 1000000, the
generated C code does a binary search.
- -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.
- -k, --key-positions=KEYS
- Select the key positions used in the hash function. The allowable choices
range between 1-255, inclusive. The positions are separated by commas,
ranges may be used, and key positions may occur in any order. Also, the
meta-character '*' causes the generated hash function to consider ALL key
positions, and $ indicates the "final character" of a key, e.g.,
$,1,2,4,6-10.
- -D, --duplicates
- Handle keywords that hash to duplicate values. This is useful for certain
highly redundant keyword sets.
- -m, --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-asso=N
- Provide an initial value for the associate values array. Default is 0.
Setting this value larger helps inflate the size of the final table.
- -j, --jump=JUMP-VALUE
- Affects the "jump value", i.e., how far to advance the
associated character value upon collisions. Must be an odd number, default
is 5.
- -n, --no-strlen
- Do not include the length of the keyword when computing the hash
function.
- -r, --random
- Utilizes randomness to initialize the associated values table.
- -s, --size-multiple=N
- Affects the size of the generated hash table. The numeric argument N
indicates "how many times larger or smaller" the associated
value range should be, in relationship to the number of keys, e.g. a value
of 3 means "allow the maximum associated value to be about 3 times
larger than the number of input keys". Conversely, a value of 1/3
means "make the maximum associated value about 3 times smaller than
the number of input keys". A larger table should decrease the time
required for an unsuccessful search, at the expense of extra table space.
Default value is 1.
- -h, --help
- Print this message.
- -v, --version
- Print the gperf version number.
- -d, --debug
- Enables the debugging option (produces verbose output to the standard
error).
Written by Douglas C. Schmidt and Bruno Haible.
Report bugs to <bug-gperf@gnu.org>.
Copyright © 1989-2017 Free Software Foundation, Inc. License GPLv3+: GNU
GPL version 3 or later <http://gnu.org/licenses/gpl.html>
This is free software: you are free to change and redistribute it. There is NO
WARRANTY, to the extent permitted by law.
The full documentation for gperf is maintained as a Texinfo manual. If
the info and gperf programs are properly installed at your site,
the command
- info gperf
should give you access to the complete manual.
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