Struct tantivy_fst::map::MapBuilder
source · pub struct MapBuilder<W>(/* private fields */);
Expand description
A builder for creating a map.
This is not your average everyday builder. It has two important qualities that make it a bit unique from what you might expect:
- All keys must be added in lexicographic order. Adding a key out of order will result in an error. Additionally, adding a duplicate key will also result in an error. That is, once a key is associated with a value, that association can never be modified or deleted.
- The representation of a map is streamed to any
io::Write
as it is built. For an in memory representation, this can be aVec<u8>
.
Point (2) is especially important because it means that a map can be
constructed without storing the entire map in memory. Namely, since it
works with any io::Write
, it can be streamed directly to a file.
With that said, the builder does use memory, but memory usage is bounded to a constant size. The amount of memory used trades off with the compression ratio. Currently, the implementation hard codes this trade off which can result in about 5-20MB of heap usage during construction. (N.B. Guaranteeing a maximal compression ratio requires memory proportional to the size of the map, which defeats some of the benefit of streaming it to disk. In practice, a small bounded amount of memory achieves close-to-minimal compression ratios.)
The algorithmic complexity of map construction is O(n)
where n
is the
number of elements added to the map.
Example: build in memory
This shows how to use the builder to construct a map in memory. Note that
Map::from_iter
provides a convenience function that achieves this same
goal without needing to explicitly use MapBuilder
.
use tantivy_fst::{IntoStreamer, Streamer, Map, MapBuilder};
let mut build = MapBuilder::memory();
build.insert("bruce", 1).unwrap();
build.insert("clarence", 2).unwrap();
build.insert("stevie", 3).unwrap();
// You could also call `finish()` here, but since we're building the map in
// memory, there would be no way to get the `Vec<u8>` back.
let bytes = build.into_inner().unwrap();
// At this point, the map has been constructed, but here's how to read it.
let map = Map::from_bytes(bytes).unwrap();
let mut stream = map.into_stream();
let mut kvs = vec![];
while let Some((k, v)) = stream.next() {
kvs.push((k.to_vec(), v));
}
assert_eq!(kvs, vec![
(b"bruce".to_vec(), 1),
(b"clarence".to_vec(), 2),
(b"stevie".to_vec(), 3),
]);
Implementations§
source§impl MapBuilder<Vec<u8>>
impl MapBuilder<Vec<u8>>
source§impl<W: Write> MapBuilder<W>
impl<W: Write> MapBuilder<W>
sourcepub fn new(wtr: W) -> Result<MapBuilder<W>>
pub fn new(wtr: W) -> Result<MapBuilder<W>>
Create a builder that builds a map by writing it to wtr
in a
streaming fashion.
sourcepub fn insert<K: AsRef<[u8]>>(&mut self, key: K, val: u64) -> Result<()>
pub fn insert<K: AsRef<[u8]>>(&mut self, key: K, val: u64) -> Result<()>
Insert a new key-value pair into the map.
Keys must be convertible to byte strings. Values must be a u64
, which
is a restriction of the current implementation of finite state
transducers. (Values may one day be expanded to other types.)
If a key is inserted that is less than or equal to any previous key added, then an error is returned. Similarly, if there was a problem writing to the underlying writer, an error is returned.
sourcepub fn extend_iter<K, I>(&mut self, iter: I) -> Result<()>where
K: AsRef<[u8]>,
I: IntoIterator<Item = (K, u64)>,
pub fn extend_iter<K, I>(&mut self, iter: I) -> Result<()>where K: AsRef<[u8]>, I: IntoIterator<Item = (K, u64)>,
Calls insert on each item in the iterator.
If an error occurred while adding an element, processing is stopped and the error is returned.
If a key is inserted that is less than or equal to any previous key added, then an error is returned. Similarly, if there was a problem writing to the underlying writer, an error is returned.
sourcepub fn extend_stream<'f, I, S>(&mut self, stream: I) -> Result<()>where
I: for<'a> IntoStreamer<'a, Into = S, Item = (&'a [u8], u64)>,
S: 'f + for<'a> Streamer<'a, Item = (&'a [u8], u64)>,
pub fn extend_stream<'f, I, S>(&mut self, stream: I) -> Result<()>where I: for<'a> IntoStreamer<'a, Into = S, Item = (&'a [u8], u64)>, S: 'f + for<'a> Streamer<'a, Item = (&'a [u8], u64)>,
Calls insert on each item in the stream.
Note that unlike extend_iter
, this is not generic on the items in
the stream.
If a key is inserted that is less than or equal to any previous key added, then an error is returned. Similarly, if there was a problem writing to the underlying writer, an error is returned.
sourcepub fn finish(self) -> Result<()>
pub fn finish(self) -> Result<()>
Finishes the construction of the map and flushes the underlying
writer. After completion, the data written to W
may be read using
one of Map
’s constructor methods.
sourcepub fn into_inner(self) -> Result<W>
pub fn into_inner(self) -> Result<W>
Just like finish
, except it returns the underlying writer after
flushing it.
sourcepub fn bytes_written(&self) -> u64
pub fn bytes_written(&self) -> u64
Returns the number of bytes written to the underlying writer