bloom - utility to work with Bloom filters
bloom [global options] command [command options] [arguments...]
This is the main tool to interact with Bloom filters, e.g. to create, fill and
query them.
To create a new Bloom filter with a desired capacity and false positive
probability, you can use `create`:
#will create a gzipped Bloom filter with 100.000 capacity and a 0.1 % false positive probability
bloom --gzip create -p 0.001 -n 100000 test.bloom.gz
To insert values, you can use the insert
command and pipe some input to
it (each line will be treated as one value):
cat values | bloom --gzip insert test.bloom.gz
You can also interactively add values to the filter by specifying the
--interactive option:
bloom --gzip --interactive insert test.bloom.gz
To check if a given value or a list of values is in the filter, you can use
`check`:
cat values | bloom --gzip check test.bloom.gz
This will return a list of all values in the filter.
Sometimes it is useful to attach additional information to a string that we want
to check against the Bloom filter, such as a timestamp or the original line
content. To make passing along this additional information easier within a
shell context, the Bloom tool provides an option for splitting the input
string by a given delimiter and checking the filter against the resulting
field values.
# will check the Bloom filter for the values foo, bar and baz
cat "foo,bar,baz" | bloom -s filter.bloom
# uses a different delimiter (--magic-delimiter--)
cat "foo--ac5ba--bar--ac5ba--baz" | bloom -d "--ac5ba--" -s filter.bloom
# will check the Bloom filter against the second field value only
cat "foo,bar,baz" | bloom -f 1 -s filter.bloom
# will check the Bloom filter against the second and third field values only
cat "foo,bar,baz" | bloom -f 1,2 -s filter.bloom
# will print one line for each field value that matched against the filter
cat "foo,bar,baz" | bloom -e -s filter.bloom
# will print the last field value for each line whose fields matched against the filter
cat "foo,bar,baz" | bloom -e -s --pf -1 filter.bloom
This functionality is especially handy when using CSV data, as it allows you to
filter CSV rows by checking individual columns against the filter without
having to use external tools to split and reassemble the lines.
- * create
- Create a new Bloom filter and store it in the given
file.
- * insert
- Inserts new values into an existing Bloom filter.
- * join, merge
- Joins two Bloom filters into one.
- * check
- Checks values against an existing Bloom filter.
- * set-data
- Sets the data associated with the Bloom filter.
- * get-data
- Prints the data associated with the Bloom filter.
- * show
- Shows various details about a given Bloom filter.
- * help
- Shows a list of commands or help for one
command
- --gzip, --gz
- compress bloom file with gzip
- --interactive, -i
- interactively add values to the filter
- --split, -s
- split the input string
- --each, -e
- print each match of a split string individually
- --delimiter value, -d value
- delimiter to use for splitting (default:
",")
- --fields value, -f value
- fields of split output to use in filter (a single number or
a comma-separated list of numbers, zero-indexed)
- --print-fields value, --pf value
- fields of split output to print for a successful match (a
single number or a comma-separated list of numbers, zero-indexed).
- --help, -h
- show help
- --version, -v
- print the version