I need to serialize moderately complex objects with 1-100's of mixed type properties.

JSON was used originally, then I switched to BSON which is marginally faster.

Encoding 10000 sample objects

JSON:        1807mS
BSON:        1687mS
MessagePack: 2644mS (JS, modified for BinaryF)

I want an order of magnitude increase; it is having a ridiculously bad impact on the rest of the system.

Part of the motivation to move to BSON is the requirement to encode binary data, so JSON is (now) unsuitable. And because it simply skips the binary data present in the objects it is "cheating" in those benchmarks.

Profiled BSON performance hot-spots

  • (unavoidable?) conversion of UTF16 V8 JS strings to UTF8.
  • malloc and string ops inside the BSON library

The BSON encoder is based on the Mongo BSON library.

A native V8 binary serializer might be wonderful, yet as JSON is native and quick to serialize I fear even that might not provide the answer. Perhaps my best bet is to optimize the heck out of the BSON library or write my own plus figure out far more efficient way to pull strings out of V8. One tactic might be to add UTF16 support to BSON.

So I'm here for ideas, and perhaps a sanity check.

Edit

Added MessagePack benchmark. This was modified from the original JS to use BinaryF.

The C++ MessagePack library may offer further improvements, I may benchmark it in isolation to compare directly with the BSON library.

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Maybe you could provide a jsperf.com test case to aid in understanding the type of data you need to store – Gary Green Jun 2 '11 at 19:20
Just standard JS objects: {param1:"name",param2:{paramA:1,paramB:[0x0,0x1,0x2],paramC:<BINARY>}} with up to 100 properties, arbitrarily nested, some of which will be contain byte arrays using CommonJS BinaryF. Without BinaryF and a BSON serializer, it is impossible to make any useful comparisons. – lttlrck Jun 2 '11 at 20:24
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2 Answers

up vote 2 down vote accepted

For serialization / deserialization protobuf is pretty tough to beat. I don't know if you can switch out the transport protocol. But if you can protobuf should definitely be considered.

Take a look at all the answers to Protocol Buffers versus JSON or BSON.

The accepted answer chooses thrift. It is however slower than protobuf. I suspect it was chosen for ease of use (with Java) not speed. These Java benchmarks are very telling.
Of note

  • MongoDB-BSON 45042
  • protobuf 6539
  • protostuff/protobuf 3318

The benchmarks are Java, I'd imagine that you can achieve speeds near the protostuff implementation of protobuf, ie 13.5 times faster. Worst case (if for some reason Java is just better for serialization) you can do no worse the the plain unoptimized protobuf implementation which runs 6.8 times faster.

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Thank you for the benchmarks. The data is user-generated so the PB protocol would need to carry key/value pairs undermining some of its performance benefits, but I expect it would still come out on top by a large margin. It doesn't support UTF16 though so adding that type shouldn;t be difficult. – lttlrck Jun 15 '11 at 14:15
I have stuck with BSON and incrementally optimize is as and when. But I may well return to protobuf at some point. Thanks. – lttlrck Sep 8 '11 at 2:36
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Take a look at MessagePack. It's compatible with JSON. From the docs:

Fast and Compact Serialization

MessagePack is a binary-based efficient object serialization library. It enables to exchange structured objects between many languages like JSON. But unlike JSON, it is very fast and small.

Typical small integer (like flags or error code) is saved only in 1 byte, and typical short string only needs 1 byte except the length of the string itself. [1,2,3] (3 elements array) is serialized in 4 bytes using MessagePack as follows:

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Interesting, +1 – J.C. Inacio Jun 3 '11 at 8:27
Fantastic! Definitely worth testing! I'll give the JS implementation a shot first. – lttlrck Jun 3 '11 at 13:14
MessagePack benchmark added. Did pretty well considering it's pure JS... – lttlrck Jun 3 '11 at 15:27
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