Judy array
In computer science and software engineering, a Judy array is a data structure that has high performance, low memory usage and implements an associative array. Unlike normal arrays, Judy arrays may be sparse, that is, they may have large ranges of unassigned indices. They can be used for storing and looking up values using integer or string keys. The key benefits of using a Judy array is its scalability, high performance, memory efficiency and ease of use.[1]
Judy arrays are both speed- and memory-efficient [clarification needed], with no tuning or configuration required and therefore they can sometime replace common in-memory dictionary implementations (like red-black trees or hash tables) and work better with very large data sets[dubious – discuss][citation needed].
Roughly speaking, Judy arrays are highly optimised 256-ary radix trees.[2] Judy arrays use over 20 different compression techniques on trie nodes to reduce memory usage.
The Judy array was invented by Douglas Baskins and named after his sister.[3]
Benefits
Memory allocation
Judy arrays are dynamic and can grow or shrink as elements are added to, or removed from, the array. The maximum size of a Judy array is bounded by machine memory.[4] The memory used by Judy arrays is nearly proportional to the number of elements (population) in the Judy array.
Speed
Judy arrays are designed to keep the number of processor cache-line fills as low as possible, and the algorithm is internally complex in an attempt to satisfy this goal as often as possible. Due to these cache optimizations, Judy arrays are fast, sometimes even faster than a hash table, especially for very big datasets. Despite Judy arrays being a type of trie, they consume much less memory than hash tables. Also because a Judy array is a trie, it is possible to do an ordered sequential traversal of keys, which is not possible in hash tables.
Drawbacks
Judy arrays are extremely complicated. The smallest implementations are thousands of lines of code[5]. In addition, Judy arrays are optimized for machines with 64 byte cache lines, making them essentially unportable without a significant rewrite.[6]
References
- ^ http://packages.debian.org/wheezy/libjudy-dev
- ^ Alan Silverstein, "Judy IV Shop Manual", 2002
- ^ http://judy.sourceforge.net/
- ^ Advances in databases: concepts, systems and applications : By Kotagiri Ramamohanarao
- ^ http://judy.sourceforge.net/
- ^ http://www.nothings.org/computer/judy/