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Full Discussion: Hashtable + shared memory
Top Forums Programming Hashtable + shared memory Post 302484133 by Corona688 on Thursday 30th of December 2010 12:13:51 AM
Old 12-30-2010
You put a hash table in shared memory the same way you put a hash table in other memory -- you write to the memory. What does your existing code look like? Maybe it can be adapted.

Of course, you'll also need a mutex of some sort to prevent writers from messing up the table while readers are trying to use it.
 

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Tie::SubstrHash(3pm)					 Perl Programmers Reference Guide				      Tie::SubstrHash(3pm)

NAME
Tie::SubstrHash - Fixed-table-size, fixed-key-length hashing SYNOPSIS
require Tie::SubstrHash; tie %myhash, 'Tie::SubstrHash', $key_len, $value_len, $table_size; DESCRIPTION
The Tie::SubstrHash package provides a hash-table-like interface to an array of determinate size, with constant key size and record size. Upon tying a new hash to this package, the developer must specify the size of the keys that will be used, the size of the value fields that the keys will index, and the size of the overall table (in terms of key-value pairs, not size in hard memory). These values will not change for the duration of the tied hash. The newly-allocated hash table may now have data stored and retrieved. Efforts to store more than $ta- ble_size elements will result in a fatal error, as will efforts to store a value not exactly $value_len characters in length, or reference through a key not exactly $key_len characters in length. While these constraints may seem excessive, the result is a hash table using much less internal memory than an equivalent freely-allocated hash table. CAVEATS
Because the current implementation uses the table and key sizes for the hashing algorithm, there is no means by which to dynamically change the value of any of the initialization parameters. The hash does not support exists(). perl v5.8.0 2002-06-01 Tie::SubstrHash(3pm)
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