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Indexmap

A hash table with consistent order and fast iteration; access items by key or sequence index

From indexmap-rs·Updated June 1, 2026·View on GitHub·

A pure-Rust hash table which preserves (in a limited sense) insertion order. The project is written primarily in Rust, distributed under the Apache License 2.0 license, first published in 2016. It has gained significant community traction with 2,369 stars and 187 forks on GitHub. Key topics include: hashtable, rust.

indexmap

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A pure-Rust hash table which preserves (in a limited sense) insertion order.

This crate implements compact map and set data-structures,
where the iteration order of the keys is independent from their hash or
value. It preserves insertion order (except after removals), and it
allows lookup of entries by either hash table key or numerical index.

Note: this crate was originally released under the name ordermap,
but it was renamed to indexmap to better reflect its features.
The ordermap crate now exists
as a wrapper over indexmap with stronger ordering properties.

Background

This was inspired by Python 3.6's new dict implementation (which remembers
the insertion order and is fast to iterate, and is compact in memory).

Some of those features were translated to Rust, and some were not. The result
was indexmap, a hash table that has following properties:

  • Order is independent of hash function and hash values of keys.
  • Fast to iterate.
  • Indexed in compact space.
  • Preserves insertion order as long as you don't call .remove(),
    .swap_remove(), or other methods that explicitly change order.
    The alternate .shift_remove() does preserve relative order.
  • Uses hashbrown for the inner table, just like Rust's libstd HashMap does.

Performance

IndexMap derives a couple of performance facts directly from how it is constructed,
which is roughly:

A raw hash table of key-value indices, and a vector of key-value pairs.

  • Iteration is very fast since it is on the dense key-values.

  • Removal is fast since it moves memory areas only in the table,
    and uses a single swap in the vector.

  • Lookup is fast-ish because the initial 7-bit hash lookup uses SIMD, and indices are
    densely stored. Lookup also is slow-ish since the actual key-value pairs are stored
    separately. (Visible when cpu caches size is limiting.)

  • In practice, IndexMap has been tested out as the hashmap in rustc in PR45282 and
    the performance was roughly on par across the whole workload.

  • If you want the properties of IndexMap, or its strongest performance points
    fits your workload, it might be the best hash table implementation.

Recent Changes

See RELEASES.md.

Contributors

Showing top 12 contributors by commit count.

View all contributors on GitHub →

This article is auto-generated from indexmap-rs/indexmap via the GitHub API.Last fetched: 6/1/2026