Provided by: libdata-streamserializer-perl_0.07-1build8_amd64
NAME
Data::StreamSerializer - non-blocking serializer.
SYNOPSIS
use Data::StreamSerializer; my $sr = new Data::StreamSerializer('You data'); while(defined(my $part = $sr->next)) { print $socket $part; }
DESCRIPTION
Sometimes You need to serialize a lot of data. If You use 'Dumper' it can take You for much time. If Your code is executed in event machine it can be inadmissible. So using the module You can serialize Your data progressively and do something between serialization itearions. This module works slower than Data::Dumper, but it can serialize object progressively and You can do something else between serialization iterations. Recognized types. HASH ARRAY REF Regexp SCALAR
METHODS
new Constructor. All arguments will be serialized. next Returns next part of serialized string or undef if all data were serialized. block_size Block size for one iteration. Too small value allows You to spend less time for each iteration, but in this case total serialization time will grow. Nod bad choice to set the value between 200 - 2000 bytes (default value is 512). See BENCHMARKS to make a decision. recursion_depth If serialized object has recursive references, they will be replaced by empty objects. But if this value is higher than 1 recursion will be reserialized until the value is reached. Example: my $t = { a => 'b' }; $t->{c} = $t; This example will be serialized into string: {"c",{"c",{},"a","b"},"a","b"} and if You increment recursion_depth, this example will be serialized into string: {"c",{"c",{"c",{},"a","b"},"a","b"},"a","b"} etc. recursion_detected Returns TRUE if a recursion was detected. is_eof Returns TRUE if eof is reached. If it is TRUE the following next will return undef.
SEE ALSO
Data::StreamDeserializer.
BENCHMARKS
You can try a few scripts in benchmark/ directory. There are a few test arrays in this directory. Here are a few test results of my system. Array which contains 100 hashes: $ perl benchmark/vs_dumper.pl -n 1000 -b 512 benchmark/tests/01_100x10 38296 bytes were read First serializing by eval... done First serializing by Data::StreamSerializer... done Starting 1000 iterations for Dumper... done (40.376 seconds) Starting 1000 iterations for Data::StreamSerializer... done (137.960 seconds) Dumper statistic: 1000 iterations were done maximum serialization time: 0.0867 seconds minimum serialization time: 0.0396 seconds average serialization time: 0.0404 seconds Data::StreamSerializer statistic: 1000 iterations were done 58000 SUBiterations were done maximum serialization time: 0.1585 seconds minimum serialization time: 0.1356 seconds average serialization time: 0.1380 seconds average subiteration time: 0.00238 seconds Array which contains 1000 hashes: $ perl benchmark/vs_dumper.pl -n 1000 -b 512 benchmark/tests/02_1000x10 355623 bytes were read First serializing by eval... done First serializing by Data::StreamSerializer... done Starting 1000 iterations for Dumper... done (405.334 seconds) Starting 1000 iterations for Data::StreamSerializer... done (1407.899 seconds) Dumper statistic: 1000 iterations were done maximum serialization time: 0.4564 seconds minimum serialization time: 0.4018 seconds average serialization time: 0.4053 seconds Data::StreamSerializer statistic: 1000 iterations were done 520000 SUBiterations were done maximum serialization time: 2.0050 seconds minimum serialization time: 1.3862 seconds average serialization time: 1.4079 seconds average subiteration time: 0.00271 seconds You can see that in any cases one iteration gets the same time.
AUTHOR
Dmitry E. Oboukhov, <unera@debian.org>
COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE
Copyright (C) 2011 by Dmitry E. Oboukhov This library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself, either Perl version 5.10.1 or, at your option, any later version of Perl 5 you may have available.
VCS
The project is placed in my git repo. See here: <http://git.uvw.ru/?p=data-stream-serializer;a=summary>