2011-05-16 11:17:57 +00:00
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#+TITLE: libpsyc Performance Benchmarks
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2015-08-14 08:45:55 +00:00
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#+HTML: <style type="text/css"> body { padding: 44px; } </style>
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2011-05-16 11:17:57 +00:00
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In this document we present the results of performance benchmarks
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2011-05-24 19:49:38 +00:00
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of libpsyc compared to json-c, libjson-glib, rapidxml and libxml2.
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2011-05-16 11:17:57 +00:00
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2011-05-23 07:14:45 +00:00
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* PSYC, JSON, XML Syntax Benchmarks
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First we look at the mere performance of the PSYC syntax
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compared to equivalent XML and JSON encodings. We'll
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look at actual XMPP messaging later.
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** User Profile
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In this test we'll compare the efficiency of the three
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syntaxes at serializing a typical user data base
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storage information. Let's start with XML:
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#+INCLUDE: packets/user_profile.xml src xml
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In JSON this could look like this:
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#+INCLUDE: packets/user_profile.json src js
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2011-05-24 19:49:38 +00:00
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Here's a way to model this in PSYC (verbose mode):
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2011-05-23 07:14:45 +00:00
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#+INCLUDE: packets/user_profile.psyc src psyc
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** A message with JSON-unfriendly characters
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This message contains some characters which are
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2011-05-24 18:13:16 +00:00
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impractical to encode in JSON. We should probably
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put a lot more inside to actually see an impact
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2011-05-24 19:49:38 +00:00
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on performance. *TODO*
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2011-05-23 07:14:45 +00:00
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#+INCLUDE: packets/json-unfriendly.xml src xml
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#+INCLUDE: packets/json-unfriendly.json src js
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#+INCLUDE: packets/json-unfriendly.psyc src psyc
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** A message with XML-unfriendly characters
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Same test with characters which aren't practical
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in the XML syntax, yet we should put more of
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them inside. *TODO*
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2011-05-23 07:14:45 +00:00
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#+INCLUDE: packets/xml-unfriendly.xml src xml
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2011-05-23 14:08:26 +00:00
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#+INCLUDE: packets/xml-unfriendly.json src js
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#+INCLUDE: packets/xml-unfriendly.psyc src psyc
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2011-05-23 07:14:45 +00:00
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** A message with PSYC-unfriendly strings
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PSYC prefixes data with length as soon as it
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exceeds certain sizes or contains certain strings.
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In the case of short messages this is less
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efficient than scanning the values without lengths.
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Also, lengths are harder to edit by hand.
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#+INCLUDE: packets/psyc-unfriendly.xml src xml
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#+INCLUDE: packets/psyc-unfriendly.json src js
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#+INCLUDE: packets/psyc-unfriendly.psyc src psyc
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** Packets containing binary data
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We'll use a generator of random binary data to
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see how well the formats behave with different
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sizes of data. We'll consider 7000 as a possible
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size of an icon, 70000 for an avatar, 700000
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for a photograph, 7000000 for a piece of music,
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70000000 for a large project and
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700000000 for the contents of a CD.
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2011-05-16 11:17:57 +00:00
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2011-05-23 07:14:45 +00:00
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* PSYC vs XMPP Protocol Benchmarks
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These tests use typical messages from the XMPP ("stanzas" in
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2011-05-24 19:49:38 +00:00
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Jabber lingo) and compare them with equivalent JSON encodings
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and PSYC formats.
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2011-05-16 11:17:57 +00:00
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** A presence packet
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Since presence packets are by far the dominant messaging content
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in the XMPP network, we'll start with one of them.
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Here's an example from paragraph 4.4.2 of RFC 6121.
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2011-05-17 10:27:07 +00:00
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#+INCLUDE: packets/presence.xml src xml
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2011-05-16 11:17:57 +00:00
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And here's the same information in a JSON rendition:
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2011-05-18 18:51:46 +00:00
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#+INCLUDE: packets/presence.json src js
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2011-05-16 11:17:57 +00:00
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2011-05-24 19:49:38 +00:00
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Here's the equivalent PSYC packet in verbose mode
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2011-05-16 11:17:57 +00:00
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(since it is a multicast, the single recipients do not
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need to be mentioned):
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2011-05-17 10:27:07 +00:00
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#+INCLUDE: packets/presence.psyc src psyc
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2011-05-16 11:17:57 +00:00
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2011-05-24 19:49:38 +00:00
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And this is the same message in PSYC's compact form, but since compact mode
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2011-07-22 08:27:20 +00:00
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hasn't been implemented nor deployed yet, you should only consider this
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for future projects:
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2011-05-16 11:17:57 +00:00
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2011-05-24 19:53:18 +00:00
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#+INCLUDE: packets/presence-c.psyc src psyc
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2011-05-16 11:17:57 +00:00
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** An average chat message
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2011-05-17 10:27:07 +00:00
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#+INCLUDE: packets/chat_msg.xml src xml
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2011-05-18 19:59:00 +00:00
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#+INCLUDE: packets/chat_msg.json src js
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#+INCLUDE: packets/chat_msg.psyc src psyc
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2011-05-16 11:17:57 +00:00
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2012-05-06 13:39:02 +00:00
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# Why PSYC doesn't have an id? Because for most operations they aren't
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# needed: PSYC has automatic packet counting from contexts and circuits.
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# Therefore, the packet already has an id just by being there.
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# Should you want to tag a packet anyway, you can do so by adding a _tag.
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#
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# Update: XMPP doesn't *need* to have an id there, so we can just remove it.
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Little difference: PSYC by default doesn't mention a "resource" in XMPP terms,
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2011-05-18 19:59:00 +00:00
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instead it allows for more addressing schemes than just PSYC.
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2011-05-16 11:17:57 +00:00
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** A new status updated activity
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Example taken from http://onesocialweb.org/spec/1.0/osw-activities.html
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2011-06-11 06:48:38 +00:00
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You could call this XML namespace hell.. :-)
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2011-05-16 11:17:57 +00:00
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2011-05-17 10:27:07 +00:00
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#+INCLUDE: packets/activity.xml src xml
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2011-05-16 11:17:57 +00:00
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http://activitystrea.ms/head/json-activity.html proposes a JSON encoding
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of this. We'll have to add a routing header to it.
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2011-05-17 10:27:07 +00:00
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#+INCLUDE: packets/activity.json src js
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http://about.psyc.eu/Activity suggests a PSYC mapping for activity
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streams. Should a "status post" be considered equivalent to a presence
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description announcement or just a message in the "microblogging" channel?
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We'll use the latter here:
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2011-05-17 10:27:07 +00:00
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#+INCLUDE: packets/activity.psyc src psyc
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2011-05-16 11:17:57 +00:00
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2011-06-11 06:48:38 +00:00
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It's nice about XML namespaces how they can by definition never collide,
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but this degree of engineering perfection causes us a lot of overhead.
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The PSYC approach is to just extend the name of the method - as long as
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people use differing method names, protocol extensions can exist next
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to each other happily. Method name unicity cannot mathematically be ensured,
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but it's enough to append your company name to make it unlikely for anyone
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else on earth to have the same name. How this kind of safety is delivered
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when using the JSON syntax of ActivityStreams is unclear. Apparently it was
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no longer an important design criterion.
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2011-05-17 10:27:07 +00:00
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* Results
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2011-05-23 17:13:51 +00:00
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Parsing time of 1 000 000 packets, in milliseconds.
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2011-05-24 19:24:15 +00:00
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A simple strlen() scan of the respective message is provided for comparison.
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These tests were performed on a 2.53 GHz Intel(R) Core(TM)2 Duo P9500 CPU.
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2011-05-28 18:23:54 +00:00
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| | strlen | libpsyc | json-c | json-glib | libxml sax | libxml | rapidxml |
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|-----------------+--------+---------+--------+-----------+------------+--------+----------|
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| user profile | 55 | 608 | 4715 | 16503 | 7350 | 12377 | 2477 |
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| psyc-unfriendly | 70 | 286 | 2892 | 12567 | 5538 | 8659 | 1896 |
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| json-unfriendly | 49 | 430 | 2328 | 10006 | 5141 | 7875 | 1751 |
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| xml-unfriendly | 37 | 296 | 2156 | 9591 | 5571 | 8769 | 1765 |
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|-----------------+--------+---------+--------+-----------+------------+--------+----------|
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2011-05-24 19:48:35 +00:00
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| / | < | | < | > | < | | > |
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| | <r> | <r> | <r> | <r> | <r> | <r> | <r> |
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Pure syntax comparisons above, protocol performance comparisons below:
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2011-05-28 18:23:54 +00:00
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| | strlen | libpsyc | libpsyc compact | json-c | json-glib | libxml sax | libxml | rapidxml |
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|----------+--------+---------+-----------------+--------+-----------+------------+--------+----------|
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| presence | 30 | 236 | 122 | 2463 | 10016 | 4997 | 7557 | 1719 |
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| chat msg | 40 | 295 | 258 | 2147 | 9526 | 5911 | 8999 | 1850 |
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| activity | 42 | 353 | 279 | 4666 | 16327 | 13357 | 28858 | 4356 |
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|----------+--------+---------+-----------------+--------+-----------+------------+--------+----------|
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| / | < | | > | < | > | < | | > |
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| | | | <c> | | | | | |
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2011-05-24 15:37:00 +00:00
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Parsing large amounts of binary data. For JSON & XML base64 encoding was used.
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Note that the results below include only the parsing time, base64 decoding was
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not performed.
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2011-05-28 18:23:54 +00:00
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| | strlen | libpsyc | json-c | json-glib | libxml sax | libxml | rapidxml |
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2011-05-24 18:41:27 +00:00
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|---------+----------+---------+-----------+------------+------------+-----------+----------|
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| 7K | 978 | 77 | 18609 | 98000 | 11445 | 19299 | 8701 |
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| 70K | 9613 | 77 | 187540 | 1003900 | 96209 | 167738 | 74296 |
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| 700K | 95888 | 77 | 1883500 | 10616000 | 842025 | 1909428 | 729419 |
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| 7M | 1347300 | 78 | 26359000 | 120810000 | 12466610 | 16751363 | 7581169 |
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| 70M | 14414000 | 80 | 357010000 | 1241000000 | 169622110 | 296017820 | 75308906 |
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|---------+----------+---------+-----------+------------+------------+-----------+----------|
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| / | < | > | < | > | < | | > |
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| <r> | | | | | | | |
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2011-05-24 15:37:00 +00:00
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2011-05-24 19:59:09 +00:00
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In each case we compared performance of parsing and re-rendering
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these messages, but consider also that the applicative processing
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of an XML DOM tree is more complicated than just accessing
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certain elements in a JSON data structure or PSYC variable mapping.
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2011-05-24 19:24:15 +00:00
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* Explanations
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2011-05-24 19:24:15 +00:00
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As you can tell the PSYC data format outpaces its rivals in all circumstances.
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Extremely so when delivering binary data as PSYC simply returns the starting
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point and the length of the given buffer while the other parsers have to scan
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for the end of the transmission, but also with many simpler operations, when
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PSYC quickly figures out where the data starts and ends and passes such
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information back to the application while the other formats are forced to
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generate a copy of the data in order to process possibly embedded special
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character sequences. PSYC essentially operates like a binary data protocol
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even though it is actually text-based.
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2011-05-16 11:17:57 +00:00
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* Criticism
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2011-05-23 14:52:44 +00:00
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2011-05-16 11:17:57 +00:00
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Are we comparing apples and oranges? Yes and no, depends on what you
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need. XML is a syntax best suited for complex structured data in
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well-defined formats - especially good for text mark-up. JSON is a syntax
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intended to hold arbitrarily structured data suitable for immediate
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inclusion in Javascript source codes. The PSYC syntax is an evolved
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derivate of RFC 822, the syntax used by HTTP and E-Mail. It is currently
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limited in the kind and depth of data structures that can be represented
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with it, but it is highly efficient in exchange.
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In fact we are currently looking into suitable syntax extensions to represent
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generic structures and semantic signatures, but for now PSYC only
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provides for simple typed values and lists of typed values.
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2011-05-24 19:49:38 +00:00
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* Ease of Implementation
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2011-05-23 14:52:44 +00:00
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Another aspect is the availability of these formats for spontaneous
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use. You could generate and parse JSON yourself but you have to be
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careful about escaping. XML can be rendered manually if you know your
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data will not break the syntax, but you shouldn't dare to parse it without
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a bullet proof parser. PSYC is easy to render and parse yourself for
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simple tasks, as long as the body does not contain "\n|\n" and your
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variables do not contain newlines.
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2011-05-24 18:13:16 +00:00
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* Conclusions
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2011-05-24 19:24:15 +00:00
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After all it is up to you to find out which format fulfils your
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requirements the best. We use PSYC for the majority of messaging where
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JSON and XMPP aren't efficient and opaque enough, but we employ XML and
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JSON as payloads within PSYC for data that doesn't fit the PSYC model.
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For some reason all three formats are being used for messaging, although
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only PSYC was actually designed for that purpose.
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2011-05-24 18:13:16 +00:00
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The Internet has developed two major breeds of protocol formats.
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2011-05-24 20:16:54 +00:00
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The binary ones are extremely efficient but in most cases you have
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to recompile all instances each time you change something
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2011-05-24 18:13:16 +00:00
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while the plain-text ones are reaching out for achieving perfection
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in data representation while leaving the path of efficiency. Some
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protocols such as HTTP and SIP are in-between these two schools,
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offering both a text-based extensible syntax (it's actually easier to
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add a header to HTTP than to come up with a namespace for XMPP...)
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and the ability to deliver binary data. But these protocols do not
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come with native data structure support. PSYC is a protocol that
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combines the compactness and efficiency of binary protocols with the
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extensibility of text-based protocols and still provides for enough
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data structuring to rarely require the use of other data formats.
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2011-05-16 11:17:57 +00:00
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* Futures
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2011-05-23 14:52:44 +00:00
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2011-05-16 11:17:57 +00:00
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After a month of development libpsyc is already performing pretty
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well, but we presume various optimizations, like rewriting parts
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in assembler, are possible.
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2011-05-23 14:52:44 +00:00
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* Related Work
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If this didn't help, you can also look into:
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2011-05-23 15:15:01 +00:00
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- Adobe AMF
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- ASN.1
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- BSON
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- Cisco Etch
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- Efficient XML
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- Facebook Thrift
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- Google Protocol Buffers
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2011-05-23 14:52:44 +00:00
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The drawback of these binary formats is, unlike PSYC, JSON and XML
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you can't edit them manually and you can't produce valid messages
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by replacing variables in a simple text template. You depend on
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specialized parsers and renderers to be provided.
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2011-05-25 19:12:19 +00:00
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There's also
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- Bittorrent's bencode
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This format is formally text-based, but not easy to read as it doesn't
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have any visual separators and isn't easy to edit as everything is
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prefixed by lengths even for very short items.
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2011-05-24 20:16:54 +00:00
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* Further Reading
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http://about.psyc.eu/Spec:Syntax provides you with the ABNF grammar
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of the PSYC 1.0 syntax. You may also be interested in PSYC's decentralized
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state mechanism provided by the +/-/= operators.
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2011-06-11 07:19:14 +00:00
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See http://about.psyc.eu/XML and http://about.psyc.eu/JSON for more
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biased information on the respective formats.
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2011-05-17 10:27:07 +00:00
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* Appendix
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** Tools used
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2011-05-24 18:18:05 +00:00
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This document and its benchmarks are distributed with libpsyc.
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See http://about.psyc.eu/libpsyc on how to obtain it.
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2011-05-24 20:59:49 +00:00
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The benchmarks can be run with the following command
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(xmlbench is needed for the xml tests):
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2011-05-24 16:04:00 +00:00
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: make bench
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