
Introduction
This code was originally written for a project called
SharpConnect
- a C# client of the DirectConnect protocol.
Several updates have been posted, this is the fourth update. This newest version now includes:
- optional getting the whole TTH tree instead of just the TTH root value.
- use of threads for better CPU usage.
- tree compression for better memory usage.
If you are looking for the best time processing performance use ThexOptimized, if you like to keep your CPU usage low try ThexThread. The oldest version (Thex.cs) is also included into the zip file but that is just to keep track on the updates.
Problems on the way
Threads colliding in the FileStream.Read stage which throw an
exception that was caused from two or more threads reading the file at the same time. Solution: I tried fixing it up with Monitor which made it
thread-safe but slower and overloaded the CPU. Finally, a FileStream was added for each thread which required a rewrite of the threads code.
I also decide to update the way data is pulled into memory - the new method is to read data in big blocks instead of reading it leaf (1024K) by leaf which improve the file I/O reads number dramatically).
Usage tips
- You should have a look at the
Block_Size value to adjust performance.
- If you use
ThexThreaded you should try and test ThreadCount value for your own needs. I recommend 4-6 threads for stable CPU usage, 1-3 threads for faster results
Background
Tiger Tree Hash is constructed from two parts, the
Tiger Hash Algorithm and
Merkle Tree.
The original Tiger Hash code was taken from
Tiger.Net
which is written in Visual Basic.NET.
Using the code
GetTTH_Value returns the root TTH value in byte[] array.
GetTTH_Tree returns a byte[][][] array of the full tree.
Tip: you can have a look at LevelCount for checking how "deep" is the TTH tree.
ThexOptimized TTH = new ThexOptimized();
Console.WriteLine(Base32.ToBase32String(TTH.GetTTH(@"c:\joy.txt"));
ThexThreaded TTH = new ThexThreaded();
Console.WriteLine(Base32.ToBase32String(TTH.GetTTH_Value(@"c:\joy.txt"));
History
- First version only calculated an algorithm for getting TTH values very slowly.
- Second version was based on byte arrays instead of
ArrayList and compressed the block to make the byte arrays smaller which got the values faster and was called ThexOptimized
- Third version is based on threads that were supposed to make the code much faster but then turned out to be almost the same. However, CPU usage is much better.
- Fixed 0 byte file calculation (thanks Flow84).
- Improved GUI (added option to chose ThexCS method and time calculation).
- the code of the project was converted to Visual Studio 2005