vote up 0 vote down star

What are XML Accelerators and how do they work?

Is anyone using them in a production environment for systems that performs heavy XML processing? If yes, then how have you benefited in using them?

flag

29% accept rate

2 Answers

vote up 1 vote down check

Generally they implement in dedicated hardware XML services, including:

  • validation (DTD or XSD)
  • transformation (XSLT)
  • parsing (in particular, for SOAP messages)

Knowing the XML coming into your software is already clean and in your canonical format can often make a large difference in performance.

Some companies that do this are

Some companies, however, believe that properly optimized software is sufficient. See for example

And others have gone down the "soft appliance" route, such as Intel with its purchase here

Personally, I think that properly implemented software doesn't need acceleration. Parsers, transformation engines, and validators have come a long way in the last couple of years. Witness Xerces C++, DataDirect XQuery, Saxon 9.1 and MarkLogic's MarkMail application as examples.

link|flag
vote up 0 vote down

You're potentially approaching a problem from the wrong angle. Do you have a desire to increase performance of some system? If so then by all means performance analyse the system to highlight where the bottlenecks are. Unless you've already been through this process several times then I'd be surprised if XML processing is currently your #1 bottleneck.

link|flag

Your Answer

Get an OpenID
or

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