Optimal Non-Oblivious Open Addressing
Abstract
A hash table is said to be open-addressed (or non-obliviously open-addressed) if it stores elements (and free slots) in an array with no additional metadata. Intuitively, open-addressed hash tables must incur a space-time tradeoff: The higher the load factor at which the hash table operates, the longer insertions/deletions/queries should take. In this paper, we show that no such tradeoff exists: It is possible to construct an open-addressed hash table that supports constant-time operations even when the hash table is entirely full. In fact, it is even possible to construct a version of this data structure that: (1) is dynamically resized so that the number of slots in memory that it uses, at any given moment, is the same as the number of elements it contains; (2) supports -time operations, not just in expectation, but with high probability; and (3) requires external access to just hash functions that are each just -wise independent. Our results complement a recent lower bound by Bender, Kuszmaul, and Zhou showing that oblivious open-addressed hash tables must incur -time operations. The hash tables in this paper are non-oblivious, which is why they are able to bypass the previous lower bound.
Cite
@article{arxiv.2503.13628,
title = {Optimal Non-Oblivious Open Addressing},
author = {Michael A. Bender and William Kuszmaul and Renfei Zhou},
journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:2503.13628},
year = {2025}
}
Comments
28 pages, 5 figures, in STOC 2025