I'm curious as to how the hashbrown crate can have up to 2x performance on certain operations, even though it looks like the standard library's HashMap is just a wrapper for hashbrown.
I understand that a wrapper could add a small overhead, but 50% of the original performance is a bit silly, especially considering all of the functions in the wrapper are #[inline], so there should be no overhead in calling most functions.
#[inline]
Does anyone know the reason for this?
hashbrown uses aHash by default, which is much faster than std's SipHash-1-3
aHash
SipHash-1-3
hashbrown uses
aHash
by default, which is much faster than std'sSipHash-1-3