The phm had a FIXED 8 buckets, so a 100-entry map was a ~12-entry linear
scan per lookup — and phm-get walked the bucket twice (contains? then find).
This went mostly unnoticed until the canonical zipmap (batch 2) started
returning phms where kvs->map had built structs for scalar keys, regressing
the map-read bench ~7x (jolt-s3y).
phm-assoc now rehashes into a doubled bucket array when the count passes 2
entries/bucket (done on the fresh copy, so persistence is untouched);
phm-get is single-pass with a presence flag (nil values still distinguish
from missing); key= tries identity/scalar equality before paying for
canonicalization; the bucket count is derived from (length (m :buckets)),
not a constant, so any already-marshaled map keeps working. core-contains?'s
phm branch goes through phm-contains? instead of poking buckets directly.
map-read 48.5 -> 10.9 ms (the residual vs the pre-batch-2 6.7 is the
canonicalizing-representation constant); map-build steady; bench TOTAL 4457
vs 4565 on main back-to-back. New unit case crosses the resize boundary at
500 entries: every key found, nil values present, collection keys canonical,
dissoc + persistence intact. Gate: jpm exit 0, conformance 326x3.