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https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/CASSANDRA-4175?page=com.atlassian.jira.plugin.system.issuetabpanels:comment-tabpanel&focusedCommentId=13258030#comment-13258030
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Jonathan Ellis commented on CASSANDRA-4175:
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Hashcode just isn't designed to be collision-resistant; it prioritizes speed.  
Even with a better (from the standpoint of collisions) general-purpose hash 
like Murmur, 32bits is just too small.  The smallest cryptographic hash I know 
of is md5, and ballooning to 128bits puts a serious crimp in the potential 
savings here.
                
> Reduce memory (and disk) space requirements with a column name/id map
> ---------------------------------------------------------------------
>
>                 Key: CASSANDRA-4175
>                 URL: https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/CASSANDRA-4175
>             Project: Cassandra
>          Issue Type: Improvement
>            Reporter: Jonathan Ellis
>             Fix For: 1.2
>
>
> We spend a lot of memory on column names, both transiently (during reads) and 
> more permanently (in the row cache).  Compression mitigates this on disk but 
> not on the heap.
> The overhead is significant for typical small column values, e.g., ints.
> Even though we intern once we get to the memtable, this affects writes too 
> via very high allocation rates in the young generation, hence more GC 
> activity.
> Now that CQL3 provides us some guarantees that column names must be defined 
> before they are inserted, we could create a map of (say) 32-bit int column 
> id, to names, and use that internally right up until we return a resultset to 
> the client.

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