vote up 4 vote down star
4

I am wondering if anyone has any real world numbers on performance differences between an old sqlite application which has been converted to Core Data in the 3.0 SDK.

I suspect that under the hood Core Data is just using sqlite anyways and that it add's a bit of overhead for the cost of convenience, but i thought i would ask anyways.

flag

68% accept rate
There's no need to "suspect" this. It's very clearly stated in the documentation that you have the option of a SQLite store. – Mike Abdullah Jun 26 at 9:46

2 Answers

vote up 7 vote down check

Core Data is heavily optimized with regards to caching, lazy-loading and memory management.

If you use it (with the SQLite store type), especially in conjunction with NSFetchedResultsController, you should get better performance than you could get with SQLite on your own.

Apple has worked hard to make Core Data perform well on the iPhone. My application switched from SQLite w/ FMDB to Core Data and it is now faster and more stable with less code.

link|flag
I was of the common impression that Core Data would just add overhead to SQLite, but I was shown that everything you describe is true. In fact, I believe the iPhone's address book is now based on Core Data in 3.0. That's a pretty strong vote of confidence. – Brad Larson Jun 26 at 0:46
I believe the iPod app now is as well. – Hunter Jun 26 at 18:17
Great info... thanks – Lounges Jun 26 at 18:44
vote up 1 vote down

Core Data can use sqllite - it is up to the developer to configure - so your suspect correctly. On the Phone I would suggest sqllite is the best idea.

I think one of the biggest benefits you can gain by using Core Data is the lazy loading of data and the faulting to save on memory. So you need to also think about things like this when you are considering performance as the amount of free memory you have will also impact performance.

link|flag

Your Answer

Get an OpenID
or

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.