4

Hi I have an xml file with approximately 12,000 records in it. I have the code written and it works fine it just takes awhile to parse the xml file and return the content. Is there any way to speed this process up any?

My Code:

<?php 
$dom = new DOMDocument(); 
$dom->load('comics.xml'); 
foreach ($dom->getElementsByTagName('record') as $entry) 
{   
$title = $entry->getElementsByTagName('title')->item(0)->textContent;   
echo $title;   

} 
?>

XML File (Just 1 demo in there cant link em all lol):

<?xml version='1.0' encoding='utf-8'?>
<calibredb>
  <record>
    <id>1</id>
    <uuid>991639a0-7cf6-4a34-a863-4aab8ac2921d</uuid>
    <publisher>Marvel Comics</publisher>
    <size>6109716</size>
    <title sort="Iron Man v1 101">Iron Man v1 101</title>
    <authors sort="Unknown">
      <author>Unknown</author>
    </authors>
    <timestamp>2012-04-15T18:49:22-07:00</timestamp>
    <pubdate>2012-04-15T18:49:22-07:00</pubdate>
    <cover>M:/Comics/Unknown/Iron Man v1 101 (1)/cover.jpg</cover>
    <formats>
      <format>M:/Comics/Unknown/Iron Man v1 101 (1)/Iron Man v1 101 - Unknown.zip</format>
    </formats>
  </record>
  </calibredb>
3
  • Step 1, find out what's actually being slow. Keyword: profiling.
    – salathe
    Jul 30, 2012 at 22:56
  • could you try with xpath and compare results? I think it could be faster, but I have never tested it before.
    – mrok
    Jul 30, 2012 at 22:56
  • Use the XML Parser. It takes data into chunks and you need to parse it manually (on event basis), but it's much more efficient then DOMDocument or SimpleXML (no internal tree is built and stuck into memory)
    – dan-lee
    Jul 30, 2012 at 22:59

3 Answers 3

2

DOM approach is good for small data sets, because all the XML structure is parsed and put in the memory.

In your situation, you should use SAX approach when parsing large XML files, because the XML file is read line-by-line, not everything at a time.

Google has some examples: https://www.google.lv/search?q=php+SAX+XML

1

The answer depends a lot on the data. Some possible solutions would be to move the data into a relational database like MySQL, or normalize the data into a format like CSV that is easier to parse, takes up less room, and can be read line by line.

2
  • yeah i was hoping i could avoid storing info in a database but it looks like that will probably be my best solution. Jul 30, 2012 at 23:23
  • @rackemup420 did you look at my answer?\ Jul 30, 2012 at 23:57
0

I'm not specifically familiar with the PHP implementation, however using the following approach in C++ using Xerces I've seen huge performance improvements for your scenario.

Instead of requesting all the elements by name and waiting for an entire NodeList to be returned, I found it was much faster to just get the first child node under the root node and then get the NextSibling node. Using each sibling as the new node, you keep getting the NextSibling until there are none left.

Hopefully this provides a performance improvement in PHP similar to how it did in C++.

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