75

What are the advantages and disadvantages of storing JSON data in MySQL database vs. serialized array?

1
  • This question should be re-opened. Although there is some risk of it being "opinion based", the question does not ask for opinion, it clearly asks for advantages and disadvantages. The top answers are also not opinion based, they clearly support the facts with evidence.
    – AutoBaker
    Mar 3, 2023 at 10:54

11 Answers 11

100
  1. JSON encode() & decode()
    • PHP Version >= 5.0.0
      • Nesting Limit of 20.
    • PHP Version >= 5.2.3
      • Nesting Limit of 128.
    • PHP Version >= 5.3.0
      • Nesting Limit of 512.
    • Small footprint vs PHP's serialize'd string.
  2. serialize() & unserialize()
    • PHP Version >= 4.0.0
      • Methods are not lost on PHP Datatype Object.
      • __wakeup() magic method called on any object being unserialize. (VERY POWERFUL)
      • It has been noted that it is some times best the base64 encode strings put into the database, and base64 decode strings taken out of the database with this function, as there are some issues with the handling of some white space characters.

The choice is yours.

3
  • 18
    Upvoted for __wakeup() .
    – altermativ
    Nov 12, 2009 at 11:18
  • I am storing Twitter-returned JSON so I needed the base64_encode to get around the escaping of funky characters.
    – Eric Cope
    Aug 13, 2011 at 22:02
  • Quite important thing about serialize - that it preserves correct serialized Object type wordpress.stackexchange.com/a/61094/91844 Feb 23, 2019 at 17:33
89

Pro JSON:

  • The JSON data can be used by many different languages, not just PHP
  • JSON data is human readable and writable.
  • It takes up less space
  • It is faster to encode JSON than to serialize

Pro Serialized Array:

  • It is faster do unserialize than to JSON decode

As the comments indicate, JSON takes up less space than a serialize array. I also checked whether JSON or Serializing is faster, and surprisingly, it is faster to JSON encode than to Serialize. It is faster to unserialize than to JSON decode though.

This is the script I used to test:

<?php 
function runTime(){
      $mtime = microtime(); 
      $mtime = explode(' ', $mtime); 
      $mtime = $mtime[1] + $mtime[0]; 
      return $mtime; 
}
?> 
<pre>
<?php
$start = runTime();

$ser;

for($i=0; $i<1000; $i++){
    $a = array(a => 1, x => 10);
    $ser = serialize($a);
}
$total = runTime() - $start;
echo "Serializing 1000 times took \t$total seconds";
?>

<?php
$start = runTime();

$json;

for($i=0; $i<1000; $i++){
    $a = array(a => 1, x => 10);
    $json = json_encode($a);
}
$total = runTime() - $start;
echo "JSON encoding 1000 times took \t$total seconds";
?>

<?php
$start = runTime();

$ser;

for($i=0; $i<1000; $i++){
    $a = unserialize($ser);
}
$total = runTime() - $start;
echo "Unserializing 1000 times took \t$total seconds";
?>

<?php
$start = runTime();

$json;

for($i=0; $i<1000; $i++){
    $a = json_decode($json);
}
$total = runTime() - $start;
echo "JSON decoding 1000 times took \t$total seconds";
?>
</pre>
4
  • +6 for wrong answer? JSON: {"x":1,"b":"e"} Serliaze: a:2:{s:1:"x";i:1;s:1:"b";s:1:"e";} So JSON takes up less space...
    – Thinker
    Aug 20, 2009 at 18:34
  • Thank you Thinker, I thought the PHP serializer serialize it to some kind of bytecode, definitely not a string. I'm rather disappointed now.
    – Marius
    Aug 21, 2009 at 2:06
  • 3
    PHP serialized format includes the lengh of the elements (strings and arrays), so that's why it's slower than json to write (json does not store that) but quicker to read (when you know what you expect when reading a file, there are less conditional logic to implement, for example to import a string of 2000 chars it's enough to read the next 2000 chars without checking each time if the current char indicates the end of the string like it's done for json_decode)
    – E Ciotti
    Oct 25, 2012 at 21:30
  • Note: MySQL 5.7.8+ Includes native support for JSON
    – dreftymac
    Apr 10, 2017 at 19:54
31

Portability: Winner JSON. JSON is supported on a wider variety of platforms, while PHP de-serialization is only supported (as far as I know) by PHP. While it's possible to parse either format in any language, JSON has more pre-built libraries.

Future Proof: Winner JSON. JSON is a "standard", in the sense that Javascript is a standard, and isn't likely to change anytime in the future. The PHP group has made no promises about the future of the serialization format, and while it's unlikely to change in the future, the fact that a single group controls the format means you may end up with future data that's unreadable.

Fidelity: Winner PHP. PHP serialization will allow you to store data with native PHP data types, including objects defined by custom classes. JSON will only allow you to store generic primitive types, lists of primitive types ("arrays") and key/value pair Objects. PHP Serialization may provide some advantages here if you're developing a PHP application.

File Size: JSON has a slight win here, as PHP's current serialization format is more verbose (as it's storing more information).

Performance: Who knows, it depends, profile.

Conclusion: Go with JSON unless you have a compelling reason to use PHP Serialization .

0
7

JSON is more portable, i.e. you can more easily read/write to it from different languages etc. If you used PHP serialized arrays you would only be able to easily use PHP to access it.

2
  • disagree, when using as a microservice, this would not be a problem
    – Yoosuf Mo
    Mar 5, 2018 at 23:21
  • @Yoosuf what do you disagree with? I never said it was a problem.
    – Tom Haigh
    Mar 7, 2018 at 7:48
7

Are you using your datas only with PHP ? If yes : arrays, if no : JSON.

Pro Array

  • sessions used serialization : I think it's faster than json_encode/decode (not quite sure)
  • many functions on arrays in PHP (sorting/merging/...)

Pro JSON

  • JSON is know in other languages and web languages
  • less verbose in database
  • many tools, like XML : JSON SChema
4

There was a lot of such questions on SO.

Preferred method to store PHP arrays (json_encode vs serialize)

In short: JSON is better for simple data, but it doesn't distinguish difference between object and associative array. Serialized data are bigger.

2
  • JSON does distinguish between objects and arrays, {"member1":"value", "member2":["member1", "member2"]}
    – LM.
    Aug 20, 2009 at 16:38
  • 3
    LithMaster, you should learn, what an associative array is. It's not an array as in your example.
    – Thinker
    Aug 20, 2009 at 18:31
3

Use json for for arrays and communication with Javascript or other language. Use serialize for object or any internal PHP work for the current running script.

2

if youre trying to get around quotes and special characters in your JSON.stringify(obj) ,you can do so in PHP using it's database-specific escaping methods.

<?php
mysql_real_escape_string(htmlspecialchars($value))
?>

you can now store this safely and decode it when you read it back out

2

I just had this big problem with php serialize. I stored a lot of data in a single field in which i used unserialize to read.

What happened is that I got some corrupt data in that field. Serialize map the data with codes like 'a','s' and 'N'. If there is corrupt data, the map failed. It will show a php error that the unserialize function is unable to work because of byte code error.

So my point is to avoid serialize. Go with JSON, way safer and you won't bang your head on future majors problems.

For me, no more serialize.

2

JSON beats serialization as most answers already pointed out. I think the biggest advantage is its platform independency. You might have other applications communicate with you database and they might not have anything to do with php.

But both solutions violate database normalization. You database will not even be in first normal form so you cannot take advantage of any database feature like, say, searching. A better approach is to use object relational mapping. There are good libraries out there - consider for example doctrine ORM.

-5

atm, json_encode() works only with UTF-8 encoded data.. therefore, it cannot encode characters such as "ñ", else it returns NULL

1
  • 3
    UTF-8 encoded data can easily represent ñ.
    – ntd
    Jun 2, 2011 at 17:16

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