The Zeek code base has very inconsistent #includes. Many sources
included a few headers, and those headers included other headers, and
in the end, nearly everything is included everywhere, so missing
#includes were never noticed. Another side effect was a lot of header
bloat which slows down the build.
First step to fix it: in each source file, its own header should be
included first to verify that each header's includes are correct, and
none is missing.
After adding the missing #includes, I replaced lots of #includes
inside headers with class forward declarations. In most headers,
object pointers are never referenced, so declaring the function
prototypes with forward-declared classes is just fine.
This patch speeds up the build by 19%, because each compilation unit
gets smaller. Here are the "time" numbers for a fresh build (with a
warm page cache but without ccache):
Before this patch:
3144.94user 161.63system 3:02.87elapsed 1808%CPU (0avgtext+0avgdata 2168608maxresident)k
760inputs+12008400outputs (1511major+57747204minor)pagefaults 0swaps
After this patch:
2565.17user 141.83system 2:25.46elapsed 1860%CPU (0avgtext+0avgdata 1489076maxresident)k
72576inputs+9130920outputs (1667major+49400430minor)pagefaults 0swaps
This commit marks (hopefully) ever one-parameter constructor as explicit.
It also uses override in (hopefully) all circumstances where a virtual
method is overridden.
There are a very few other minor changes - most of them were necessary
to get everything to compile (like one additional constructor). In one
case I changed an implicit operation to an explicit string conversion -
I think the automatically chosen conversion was much more convoluted.
This took longer than I want to admit but not as long as I feared :)
This commit mostly changes the hash function that is used for Internal
hashing of data < 36 bytes from H3 to Siphash. This change is motivated
by the fact that it turns out that H3 apparently does not deliver a very
good source of data uniqueness; running HLL with H3 as a hashing
function results in quite poor results (up to of 75% off in my tests).
In difference, running HLL with Siphash (or HMAC-MD5) changes this
factor to ~2%.
This also fixes a long-standing bug in Hash.h which truncated our hash
values to 32 bit on most machines.
Furthermore, it once again fixes a problem with the Rank function in
HLL.
* origin/topic/robin/conn-ids:
Moving uid from conn_id to connection, and making output determistic if a hash seed is given.
Extending conn_id with a globally unique identifiers.