@DenysSéguret you've written some Go, right? I was setting up massif-visualizer for valgrind and was surprised a HashMap<u32, &str> seems to allocate 70% of Go's map[uint32]string. Wonder what the final memory usage will end up looking like when I compare larger structs. I suppose there might be something wrong with my basic setup code.
Just to double check, is my understanding correct in that if there are no insertions for a hash table (e.g. storing query parameters) and only look-ups are used, there's no possibility for denial of service? The examples I've seen so far all involve expensive insertions.
@Jason I don't think anything makes denial-of-service impossible, but I think read-only makes it far less likely that the hashtable is the bottleneck that fails. Bear in mind a DoS is just finding and hammering the least-throughput portion of whatever service path is being exploited
@DenysSéguret That's not true actually. Depending who provided the data to the hash-map. If it is user-defined, then hash-dos is possible even from the read-only hash-map as the lookup will become so much worse than O(1)~ and requesting data which requires looking up colliding keys constantly would certainly satisfy the definition of hash-dos.
However if the data is provided by you, and as @E_net4thecurator mentioned it the hash-map is well-balanced (i.e. the lookup will be indeed O(1)~) then a read-only hash-map is most certainly protected from hash-dos. Unless I completely misunderstood what we're talking about.