> How hard would it
> be to tailor it to, say, work always with 31 bits?

Hashtbl.hash will return a 31 bit integers on both 32 or 64 architectures:

file: ocaml-3.10.2/byterun/hash.c

CAMLprim value caml_hash_univ_param(value count, value limit, value obj)
{
 [...]

  return Val_long(hash_accu & 0x3FFFFFFF);
  /* The & has two purposes: ensure that the return value is positive
     and give the same result on 32 bit and 64 bit architectures. */
}

# max_int (* the 31 bit one *) = 0x3FFFFFFF ;;
- : bool = true

> 2. and should not change with a platform or compiler version.
If you wish to get a code that won't change for a futur ocaml version, just 
extract the current hash function of ocaml to include it in your own code.
You can do this because the code of the stdlib is LGPL.
____________

currently I have some problems with Hashtbl.hash because it doesn't hash 
values of kind integers, so if (x = y + 1) I get ((hash x) = (hash y) + 1) 
which results in a poor repartition.

Does someone know how to hash an integer ?
Here there are hashing functions for integers:
- http://www.concentric.net/~Ttwang/tech/inthash.htm
- http://burtleburtle.net/bob/hash/integer.html
but they are for 32 bit unsigned integers.
How can I adapt it for 31 bit integers ?

Or would it be a good solution to convert the bits of the integer to a 
bool list and then give it to Hashtbl.hash ?
At least with this solution I haven't ((hash x) = (hash y) + 1) anymore.

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