Several packages are only used while running the e2e suite. These packages are less important to update, as the they can not influence the final executable that is part of the Ceph-CSI container-image. By moving these dependencies out of the main Ceph-CSI go.mod, it is easier to identify if a reported CVE affects Ceph-CSI, or only the testing (like most of the Kubernetes CVEs). Signed-off-by: Niels de Vos <ndevos@ibm.com> |
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.. | ||
LICENSE.txt | ||
README.md | ||
testall.sh | ||
xxhash_amd64.s | ||
xxhash_arm64.s | ||
xxhash_asm.go | ||
xxhash_other.go | ||
xxhash_safe.go | ||
xxhash_unsafe.go | ||
xxhash.go |
xxhash
xxhash is a Go implementation of the 64-bit xxHash algorithm, XXH64. This is a high-quality hashing algorithm that is much faster than anything in the Go standard library.
This package provides a straightforward API:
func Sum64(b []byte) uint64
func Sum64String(s string) uint64
type Digest struct{ ... }
func New() *Digest
The Digest
type implements hash.Hash64. Its key methods are:
func (*Digest) Write([]byte) (int, error)
func (*Digest) WriteString(string) (int, error)
func (*Digest) Sum64() uint64
The package is written with optimized pure Go and also contains even faster
assembly implementations for amd64 and arm64. If desired, the purego
build tag
opts into using the Go code even on those architectures.
Compatibility
This package is in a module and the latest code is in version 2 of the module. You need a version of Go with at least "minimal module compatibility" to use github.com/cespare/xxhash/v2:
- 1.9.7+ for Go 1.9
- 1.10.3+ for Go 1.10
- Go 1.11 or later
I recommend using the latest release of Go.
Benchmarks
Here are some quick benchmarks comparing the pure-Go and assembly implementations of Sum64.
input size | purego | asm |
---|---|---|
4 B | 1.3 GB/s | 1.2 GB/s |
16 B | 2.9 GB/s | 3.5 GB/s |
100 B | 6.9 GB/s | 8.1 GB/s |
4 KB | 11.7 GB/s | 16.7 GB/s |
10 MB | 12.0 GB/s | 17.3 GB/s |
These numbers were generated on Ubuntu 20.04 with an Intel Xeon Platinum 8252C CPU using the following commands under Go 1.19.2:
benchstat <(go test -tags purego -benchtime 500ms -count 15 -bench 'Sum64$')
benchstat <(go test -benchtime 500ms -count 15 -bench 'Sum64$')