Is there a simple, hassle-free approach to serialization in Scala/Java that's similar to Python's pickle? Pickle is a dead-simple solution that's reasonably efficient in space and time (i.e. not abysmal) but doesn't care about cross-language accessibility, versioning, etc. and allows for optional customization.

What I'm aware of:

Kryo and protostuff are the closest solutions I've found, but I'm wondering if there's anything else out there (or if there's some way to use these that I should be aware of). Please include usage examples! Ideally also include benchmarks.

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I think it's a bit of an unfair comparison, because Python is naturally much slower than Java. A "fast" serializer in Python is probably significantly slower than a "slow" serializer in Java. – NullUserException Sep 28 '11 at 22:50
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@NullUserExceptionà° _à°  You're right in that it would be nice to have some way to compare Python pickle vs Java serialization. That said, Pickle (cPickle in Python 2.x) is in C, not Python. – Yang Sep 29 '11 at 0:46
From my experience I believe Java serialization is much slower than pickle for comparable tasks (always tricky to compare things across languages). I know for certain it's more bloated than pickle for comparable tasks. Perhaps someone can provide numbers (or maybe I'll eventually find the time to do that)? Also, I think an equally important point between Pickle and Java serialization is that you don't have to rely on everything being marked Serializable. – Yang Sep 29 '11 at 19:12
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For kryo there is also the addon project github.com/magro/kryo-serializers that allows to (de-)serialize objects with no 0-arg constructors if you're using a sun/oracle jvm. – Martin Grotzke Oct 3 '11 at 20:13
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2 Answers

up vote 2 down vote accepted

I actually think you'd be best off with kryo (I'm not aware of alternatives that offer less schema defining other than non-binary protocols). You mention that pickle is not susceptible to the slowdowns and bloat that kryo gets without registering classes, but kryo is still faster and less bloated than pickle even without registering classes. See the following micro-benchmark (obviously take it with a grain of salt, but this is what I could do easily):

Python pickle

import pickle
import time
class Person:
    def __init__(self, name, age):
        self.name = name
        self.age = age
people = [Person("Alex", 20), Person("Barbara", 25), Person("Charles", 30), Person("David", 35), Person("Emily", 40)]
for i in xrange(10000):
    output = pickle.dumps(people, -1)
    if i == 0: print len(output)
start_time = time.time()
for i in xrange(10000):
    output = pickle.dumps(people, -1)
print time.time() - start_time    

Outputs 174 bytes and 1.18-1.23 seconds for me (Python 2.7.1 on 64-bit Linux)

Scala kryo

import com.esotericsoftware.kryo._
import java.io._
class Person(val name: String, val age: Int)
object MyApp extends App {
  val people = Array(new Person("Alex", 20), new Person("Barbara", 25), new Person("Charles", 30), new Person("David", 35), new Person("Emily", 40))
  val kryo = new Kryo
  kryo.setRegistrationOptional(true)
  val buffer = new ObjectBuffer(kryo)
  for (i <- 0 until 10000) {
    val output = new ByteArrayOutputStream
    buffer.writeObject(output, people)
    if (i == 0) println(output.size)
  }
  val startTime = System.nanoTime
  for (i <- 0 until 10000) {
    val output = new ByteArrayOutputStream
    buffer.writeObject(output, people)
  }
  println((System.nanoTime - startTime) / 1e9)
}

Outputs 68 bytes for me and 30-40ms (Kryo 1.04, Scala 2.9.1, Java 1.6.0.26 hotspot JVM on 64-bit Linux). For comparison, it outputs 51 bytes and 18-25ms if I register the classes.

Comparison

Kryo uses about 40% of the space and 3% of the time as Python pickle when not registering classes, and about 30% of the space and 2% of the time when registering classes. And you can always write a custom serializer when you want more control.

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Thanks for the numbers. I can't seem to deserialize the objects, though, which is a severe limitation (updated my question with this). I get "com.esotericsoftware.kryo.SerializationException: Unable to deserialize object of type: Person" caused by "com.esotericsoftware.kryo.SerializationException: Class cannot be created (missing no-arg constructor): Person". – Yang Oct 3 '11 at 19:59
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If you're using a sun/oracle jvm you can use github.com/magro/kryo-serializers for deserializing objects without a 0-arg constructor: just change "new Kryo" to "new KryoReflectionFactorySupport". – Martin Grotzke Oct 3 '11 at 20:17
@MartinGrotzke: You have made me a very happy person today. Impressive work. I see myself pimping around your library already. I really hope it makes its into kryo itself. – Yang Oct 11 '11 at 5:12
@Yang Cool! Looking forward to your pull request :-) – Martin Grotzke Oct 11 '11 at 11:55
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I would recommend SBinary. It uses implicits which are resolved at compile time, so it's very effective and typesafe. It comes with built-in support for many common Scala datatypes. You have to manually write the serialization code for your (case) classes, but it's easy to do.

A usage example for a simple ADT

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What's going on in line 18 to 40 here? github.com/harrah/sbinary/blob/master/core/src/… – Knut Arne Vedaa Sep 29 '11 at 14:40
I've seen SBinary. The point is that you have to write your own serialization code. This is probably the most verbose of all the options I've listed, which is why I decided it didn't make the cut into my list. – Yang Sep 29 '11 at 19:20
@KnutArneVedaa Authors use a preprocessor (FMPP) to generate tuple formats. See the sbt project definition. – paradigmatic Sep 29 '11 at 19:48
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