1hsearch(3)                 Library Functions Manual                 hsearch(3)
2
3
4

NAME

6       hcreate, hdestroy, hsearch, hcreate_r, hdestroy_r, hsearch_r - hash ta‐
7       ble management
8

LIBRARY

10       Standard C library (libc, -lc)
11

SYNOPSIS

13       #include <search.h>
14
15       int hcreate(size_t nel);
16       void hdestroy(void);
17
18       ENTRY *hsearch(ENTRY item, ACTION action);
19
20       #define _GNU_SOURCE         /* See feature_test_macros(7) */
21       #include <search.h>
22
23       int hcreate_r(size_t nel, struct hsearch_data *htab);
24       void hdestroy_r(struct hsearch_data *htab);
25
26       int hsearch_r(ENTRY item, ACTION action, ENTRY **retval,
27                     struct hsearch_data *htab);
28

DESCRIPTION

30       The three functions hcreate(),  hsearch(),  and  hdestroy()  allow  the
31       caller to create and manage a hash search table containing entries con‐
32       sisting of a key (a string) and associated  data.   Using  these  func‐
33       tions, only one hash table can be used at a time.
34
35       The  three  functions  hcreate_r(), hsearch_r(), hdestroy_r() are reen‐
36       trant versions that allow a program to use more than  one  hash  search
37       table at the same time.  The last argument, htab, points to a structure
38       that describes the table on which the function is to operate.  The pro‐
39       grammer  should treat this structure as opaque (i.e., do not attempt to
40       directly access or modify the fields in this structure).
41
42       First a hash table must be created using hcreate().  The  argument  nel
43       specifies  the  maximum  number of entries in the table.  (This maximum
44       cannot be changed later, so choose it wisely.)  The implementation  may
45       adjust  this  value  upward to improve the performance of the resulting
46       hash table.
47
48       The hcreate_r() function performs the same task as hcreate(),  but  for
49       the  table  described by the structure *htab.  The structure pointed to
50       by htab must be zeroed before the first call to hcreate_r().
51
52       The function hdestroy() frees the memory occupied  by  the  hash  table
53       that  was  created  by hcreate().  After calling hdestroy(), a new hash
54       table can be created using hcreate().  The hdestroy_r()  function  per‐
55       forms the analogous task for a hash table described by *htab, which was
56       previously created using hcreate_r().
57
58       The hsearch() function searches the hash table for  an  item  with  the
59       same  key as item (where "the same" is determined using strcmp(3)), and
60       if successful returns a pointer to it.
61
62       The argument item is of type ENTRY, which is defined in  <search.h>  as
63       follows:
64
65           typedef struct entry {
66               char *key;
67               void *data;
68           } ENTRY;
69
70       The  field  key  points to a null-terminated string which is the search
71       key.  The field data points to data that is associated with that key.
72
73       The argument action determines what hsearch() does after an  unsuccess‐
74       ful  search.   This  argument must either have the value ENTER, meaning
75       insert a copy of item (and return a pointer to the new hash table entry
76       as the function result), or the value FIND, meaning that NULL should be
77       returned.  (If action is FIND, then data is ignored.)
78
79       The hsearch_r() function is like hsearch() but operates on the hash ta‐
80       ble   described  by  *htab.   The  hsearch_r()  function  differs  from
81       hsearch() in that a pointer to the found item is returned  in  *retval,
82       rather than as the function result.
83

RETURN VALUE

85       hcreate()  and hcreate_r() return nonzero on success.  They return 0 on
86       error, with errno set to indicate the error.
87
88       On success, hsearch() returns a pointer to an entry in the hash  table.
89       hsearch()  returns  NULL  on error, that is, if action is ENTER and the
90       hash table is full, or action is FIND and item cannot be found  in  the
91       hash  table.   hsearch_r()  returns nonzero on success, and 0 on error.
92       In the event of an error, these two functions set errno to indicate the
93       error.
94

ERRORS

96       hcreate_r() and hdestroy_r() can fail for the following reasons:
97
98       EINVAL htab is NULL.
99
100       hsearch() and hsearch_r() can fail for the following reasons:
101
102       ENOMEM action  was ENTER, key was not found in the table, and there was
103              no room in the table to add a new entry.
104
105       ESRCH  action was FIND, and key was not found in the table.
106
107       POSIX.1 specifies only the ENOMEM error.
108

ATTRIBUTES

110       For an  explanation  of  the  terms  used  in  this  section,  see  at‐
111       tributes(7).
112
113       ┌─────────────────────────────┬───────────────┬────────────────────────┐
114Interface                    Attribute     Value                  
115       ├─────────────────────────────┼───────────────┼────────────────────────┤
116hcreate(), hsearch(),        │ Thread safety │ MT-Unsafe race:hsearch │
117hdestroy()                   │               │                        │
118       ├─────────────────────────────┼───────────────┼────────────────────────┤
119hcreate_r(), hsearch_r(),    │ Thread safety │ MT-Safe race:htab      │
120hdestroy_r()                 │               │                        │
121       └─────────────────────────────┴───────────────┴────────────────────────┘
122

STANDARDS

124       hcreate()
125       hsearch()
126       hdestroy()
127              POSIX.1-2008.
128
129       hcreate_r()
130       hsearch_r()
131       hdestroy_r()
132              GNU.
133

HISTORY

135       hcreate()
136       hsearch()
137       hdestroy()
138              SVr4, POSIX.1-2001.
139
140       hcreate_r()
141       hsearch_r()
142       hdestroy_r()
143              GNU.
144

NOTES

146       Hash  table  implementations  are usually more efficient when the table
147       contains enough free space to  minimize  collisions.   Typically,  this
148       means that nel should be at least 25% larger than the maximum number of
149       elements that the caller expects to store in the table.
150
151       The hdestroy() and hdestroy_r()  functions  do  not  free  the  buffers
152       pointed to by the key and data elements of the hash table entries.  (It
153       can't do this because  it  doesn't  know  whether  these  buffers  were
154       allocated  dynamically.)   If  these  buffers need to be freed (perhaps
155       because the program is repeatedly creating and destroying hash  tables,
156       rather  than creating a single table whose lifetime matches that of the
157       program), then the program must maintain  bookkeeping  data  structures
158       that allow it to free them.
159

BUGS

161       SVr4  and  POSIX.1-2001  specify  that  action  is significant only for
162       unsuccessful searches, so that an ENTER should not do  anything  for  a
163       successful   search.   In  libc  and  glibc  (before  glibc  2.3),  the
164       implementation violates the specification, updating the  data  for  the
165       given key in this case.
166
167       Individual hash table entries can be added, but not deleted.
168

EXAMPLES

170       The  following  program inserts 24 items into a hash table, then prints
171       some of them.
172
173       #include <search.h>
174       #include <stdio.h>
175       #include <stdlib.h>
176
177       static char *data[] = { "alpha", "bravo", "charlie", "delta",
178            "echo", "foxtrot", "golf", "hotel", "india", "juliet",
179            "kilo", "lima", "mike", "november", "oscar", "papa",
180            "quebec", "romeo", "sierra", "tango", "uniform",
181            "victor", "whisky", "x-ray", "yankee", "zulu"
182       };
183
184       int
185       main(void)
186       {
187           ENTRY e;
188           ENTRY *ep;
189
190           hcreate(30);
191
192           for (size_t i = 0; i < 24; i++) {
193               e.key = data[i];
194               /* data is just an integer, instead of a
195                  pointer to something */
196               e.data = (void *) i;
197               ep = hsearch(e, ENTER);
198               /* there should be no failures */
199               if (ep == NULL) {
200                   fprintf(stderr, "entry failed\n");
201                   exit(EXIT_FAILURE);
202               }
203           }
204
205           for (size_t i = 22; i < 26; i++) {
206               /* print two entries from the table, and
207                  show that two are not in the table */
208               e.key = data[i];
209               ep = hsearch(e, FIND);
210               printf("%9.9s -> %9.9s:%d\n", e.key,
211                      ep ? ep->key : "NULL", ep ? (int)(ep->data) : 0);
212           }
213           hdestroy();
214           exit(EXIT_SUCCESS);
215       }
216

SEE ALSO

218       bsearch(3), lsearch(3), malloc(3), tsearch(3)
219
220
221
222Linux man-pages 6.05              2023-07-20                        hsearch(3)
Impressum