What kind of hash algorithm is used for Hive's built-in HASH() Function

user1152532 picture user1152532 · Jan 17, 2014 · Viewed 23.9k times · Source

What kind of hashing algorithm is used in the built-in HASH() function?

I'm ideally looking for a SHA512/SHA256 hash, similar to what the SHA() function offers within the linkedin datafu UDFs for Pig.

Answer

Nigel Tufnel picture Nigel Tufnel · Jan 17, 2014

HASH function (as of Hive 0.11) uses algorithm similar to java.util.List#hashCode.

Its code looks like this:

int hashCode = 0; // Hive HASH uses 0 as the seed, List#hashCode uses 1. I don't know why.
for (Object item: items) {
   hashCode = hashCode * 31 + (item == null ? 0 : item.hashCode());
}

Basically it's a classic hash algorithm as recommended in the book Effective Java. To quote a great man (and a great book):

The value 31 was chosen because it is an odd prime. If it were even and the multiplication overflowed, information would be lost, as multiplication by 2 is equivalent to shifting. The advantage of using a prime is less clear, but it is traditional. A nice property of 31 is that the multiplication can be replaced by a shift and a subtraction for better performance: 31 * i == (i << 5) - i. Modern VMs do this sort of optimization automatically.

I digress. You can look at the HASH source here.

If you want to use SHAxxx in Hive then you can use Apache DigestUtils class and Hive built-in reflect function (I hope that'll work):

SELECT reflect('org.apache.commons.codec.digest.DigestUtils', 'sha256Hex', 'your_string')