How fast are SharedPreferences
? Is there a way to put them in memory for reading? I have a small amount of data that a ListView
has to query to display each cell, and I'm worried that a call to flash memory will be too slow. I'm not worried about write speed, as writes will happen infrequently. I'm considering just using a JSON object to persist the data instead of SharedPreferences
. Any thoughts?
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SharedPreferences is essentially a xml-file residing in the app "sandbox" storage. It can be accessed and viewed through ADB.– hakanostromOct 2, 2013 at 23:21
5 Answers
Is there a way to put them in memory for reading?
They are in memory, after the first reference. The first time you retrieve a specific SharedPreferences
(e.g., PreferenceManager.getDefaultSharedPreferences()
), the data is loaded from disk, and kept around.
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2you say, the whole saved data in
SharedPreferences
will be loaded once you get instance ofPreferenceManager.getDefaultSharedPreferences()
??? Oct 2, 2013 at 23:28 -
8@MoshErsan: Yes. The
SharedPreferences
is held in a staticHashMap
ofSharedPreferences
inContextImpl
. It will remain there until the process is terminated. SeesSharedPrefs
in github.com/android/platform_frameworks_base/blob/master/core/… Oct 2, 2013 at 23:37 -
1
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2@MoshErsan: Among other things, it ensures that all components of your app, asking for the same
SharedPreferences
, get the actual sameSharedPreferences
instance, and so they cannot get out of sync with each other. Oct 2, 2013 at 23:47 -
5
My advice is to test your performance first, and then start worrying about speed. In general, you'll be happier with an app that prioritizes maintainability as well as speed. When engineers start out to achieve performance before they get the app stable, the result is an app that runs a bit faster but has lots of bugs.
According to this link, getSharedPreferences
is not that much heavy because it opens file only when you call getSharedPreferences
first time:
// There are 1000 String values in preferences
SharedPreferences first = context.getSharedPreferences("com.example.app", Context.MODE_PRIVATE);
// call time = 4 milliseconds
SharedPreferences second = context.getSharedPreferences("com.example.app", Context.MODE_PRIVATE);
// call time = 0 milliseconds
SharedPreferences third = context.getSharedPreferences("com.example.app", Context.MODE_PRIVATE);
// call time = 0 milliseconds
But using get
methods will take some time for the first time you call it:
first.getString("key", null)
// call time = 147 milliseconds
first.getString("key", null)
// call time = 0 milliseconds
second.getString("key", null)
// call time = 0 milliseconds
third.getString("key", null)
// call time = 0 milliseconds
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So it looks like a "lazy“ implementation the loading happens on first get.– SlionMay 28, 2021 at 11:02
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1
Another benchmark for those interested in larger files. The snippet below run on a 2013(?) Samsung SMT-350 tablet (1.2 GHz Quad-Core, Qualcomm) revealed:
- About 80 seconds to create 10000 7k strings
- About 3.5 seconds to 'open' (getSharedPreferences) the 70mb file
- About 1/10ms to read any 7k string once the SP was open
Note: the file creation crashed at 5500, but continued without problem. I am NOT recommending the use of 70MB SPs, this was for an unlikely edge case test, and 100x over-test.
G.logTime("MAKE HUGE FILE", true);
String sevenKString = App.getAsset(this, "sample_map.txt");
SharedPreferences.Editor spf = getSharedPreferences("TEST", Context.MODE_PRIVATE).edit();
G.logTime("SP OPEN", false);
for (Integer i = 0; i < 10000; i++) {
spf.putString(i.toString(), sevenKString);
spf.apply();
G.logTime("SP ADD " + i.toString() + " (" + (7 * i) + ")", false);
}
G.logTime("SP OPEN", true);
SharedPreferences sp = getSharedPreferences("TEST", Context.MODE_PRIVATE);
for (Integer i = 1; i < 10000; i += 10) {
file = sp.getString(i.toString(), null);
G.logTime("SP READ = " + i.toString(), false);
}
I have a small amount of data that a ListView has to query to display each cell
Can't you make a Singleton, a common class and read it from there from second time? I would do that.
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3There is no need to increase shared global state via Singletons. Android already has solutions for global state management via
SharedPreferences
andBundles
. It is enough. You should eliminate global state as much as you can– user1744056Nov 12, 2015 at 11:42