php binary stream parsing performance
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I have binary file composed by several (+10k) records of 6 bytes each:
As example record a have a byte string like this ÿvDV
Ascii : 152 + 118 + 68 + 86 + 27 + 15
Binary: 000100000101101100000010010100110000000000000000
From the string I have to extract a list of "some" bits in some specific position and then to cast their value to integer:
1001100001110110 0100010001010110 0001101100001111
-- |-------| -- |-------| |------||------|
| | | | | |
| | | | | +------> 0001111 => $bin = 1 5
| | | | +--------------> 00011011 => $site = 27
| | | +-----------------------> 001010110 => $x = 86
| | +----------------------------------> 01 => $dp = 1
| +-----------------------------------------> 001110110 => $y = 118
+----------------------------------------------------> 10 => $tr = 2
Is there a faster approach than this one?
$binary = file_get_contents("/path/to/binary/file.dat");
$startbyte = 0; //I'm reading 55nth byte
while($startbyte <= strlen($binary))
$record = unpack("n3", substr($binary, $startbyte, 6));
$info = array(
'tr' => ($record[1] & 0xC000) >> 14,
'y' => ($record[1] & 0x01FF),
'dp' => ($record[2] & 0xC000) >> 14,
'x' => ($record[2] & 0x01FF),
'site' => (int) (($record[3] & 0x3F00) >> 8),
'bin' => (int) ($record[3] & 0x003F) + 1)
);
$startbyte += 6;
In your experience, there would be a faster approach?
php optimization binary unpack bytestream
|
show 12 more comments
I have binary file composed by several (+10k) records of 6 bytes each:
As example record a have a byte string like this ÿvDV
Ascii : 152 + 118 + 68 + 86 + 27 + 15
Binary: 000100000101101100000010010100110000000000000000
From the string I have to extract a list of "some" bits in some specific position and then to cast their value to integer:
1001100001110110 0100010001010110 0001101100001111
-- |-------| -- |-------| |------||------|
| | | | | |
| | | | | +------> 0001111 => $bin = 1 5
| | | | +--------------> 00011011 => $site = 27
| | | +-----------------------> 001010110 => $x = 86
| | +----------------------------------> 01 => $dp = 1
| +-----------------------------------------> 001110110 => $y = 118
+----------------------------------------------------> 10 => $tr = 2
Is there a faster approach than this one?
$binary = file_get_contents("/path/to/binary/file.dat");
$startbyte = 0; //I'm reading 55nth byte
while($startbyte <= strlen($binary))
$record = unpack("n3", substr($binary, $startbyte, 6));
$info = array(
'tr' => ($record[1] & 0xC000) >> 14,
'y' => ($record[1] & 0x01FF),
'dp' => ($record[2] & 0xC000) >> 14,
'x' => ($record[2] & 0x01FF),
'site' => (int) (($record[3] & 0x3F00) >> 8),
'bin' => (int) ($record[3] & 0x003F) + 1)
);
$startbyte += 6;
In your experience, there would be a faster approach?
php optimization binary unpack bytestream
1
I'm voting to close this question as off-topic because this question better suits codereview I think?
– RiggsFolly
Nov 15 '18 at 16:13
1
@RiggsFolly Maybe you're right but maybe more eyeballs is better for this situation. Theoptimization
tag does exist here and OP clearly showed a good understanding of the code at hand. The only thing I would ask for is maybe some sample data (20+ records?) and the current benchmark.
– MonkeyZeus
Nov 15 '18 at 16:17
1
I don't see any room for improvement in this code at all. You should profile what is happening when the code is run. Eg: are you capping out on CPU, IO, or memory? Also why does this need to run in less than one second? You may benefit for re-thinking you approach and where/how this bit of code fits into the larger application.
– Sammitch
Nov 15 '18 at 17:40
1
I agree with @Sammitch in regards to profiling the code; additionally, I trust their judgement in regard to having no room for improvement because I am not familiar withunpack()
. If anything I would choose to slightly slow down the code by reading the file one record at a time instead of usingfile_get_contents()
to avoid fatal memory exhaustion errors.
– MonkeyZeus
Nov 15 '18 at 17:52
1
@MonkeyZeus hah I missed that one. I actually feel like changing it to$fh = fopen(...); while( $record = fread($fh, 6) ) ...
would also be a slight performance improvement given PHP's solid IO internals. Though definitely not enough to shave 40% off the run time.
– Sammitch
Nov 15 '18 at 18:55
|
show 12 more comments
I have binary file composed by several (+10k) records of 6 bytes each:
As example record a have a byte string like this ÿvDV
Ascii : 152 + 118 + 68 + 86 + 27 + 15
Binary: 000100000101101100000010010100110000000000000000
From the string I have to extract a list of "some" bits in some specific position and then to cast their value to integer:
1001100001110110 0100010001010110 0001101100001111
-- |-------| -- |-------| |------||------|
| | | | | |
| | | | | +------> 0001111 => $bin = 1 5
| | | | +--------------> 00011011 => $site = 27
| | | +-----------------------> 001010110 => $x = 86
| | +----------------------------------> 01 => $dp = 1
| +-----------------------------------------> 001110110 => $y = 118
+----------------------------------------------------> 10 => $tr = 2
Is there a faster approach than this one?
$binary = file_get_contents("/path/to/binary/file.dat");
$startbyte = 0; //I'm reading 55nth byte
while($startbyte <= strlen($binary))
$record = unpack("n3", substr($binary, $startbyte, 6));
$info = array(
'tr' => ($record[1] & 0xC000) >> 14,
'y' => ($record[1] & 0x01FF),
'dp' => ($record[2] & 0xC000) >> 14,
'x' => ($record[2] & 0x01FF),
'site' => (int) (($record[3] & 0x3F00) >> 8),
'bin' => (int) ($record[3] & 0x003F) + 1)
);
$startbyte += 6;
In your experience, there would be a faster approach?
php optimization binary unpack bytestream
I have binary file composed by several (+10k) records of 6 bytes each:
As example record a have a byte string like this ÿvDV
Ascii : 152 + 118 + 68 + 86 + 27 + 15
Binary: 000100000101101100000010010100110000000000000000
From the string I have to extract a list of "some" bits in some specific position and then to cast their value to integer:
1001100001110110 0100010001010110 0001101100001111
-- |-------| -- |-------| |------||------|
| | | | | |
| | | | | +------> 0001111 => $bin = 1 5
| | | | +--------------> 00011011 => $site = 27
| | | +-----------------------> 001010110 => $x = 86
| | +----------------------------------> 01 => $dp = 1
| +-----------------------------------------> 001110110 => $y = 118
+----------------------------------------------------> 10 => $tr = 2
Is there a faster approach than this one?
$binary = file_get_contents("/path/to/binary/file.dat");
$startbyte = 0; //I'm reading 55nth byte
while($startbyte <= strlen($binary))
$record = unpack("n3", substr($binary, $startbyte, 6));
$info = array(
'tr' => ($record[1] & 0xC000) >> 14,
'y' => ($record[1] & 0x01FF),
'dp' => ($record[2] & 0xC000) >> 14,
'x' => ($record[2] & 0x01FF),
'site' => (int) (($record[3] & 0x3F00) >> 8),
'bin' => (int) ($record[3] & 0x003F) + 1)
);
$startbyte += 6;
In your experience, there would be a faster approach?
php optimization binary unpack bytestream
php optimization binary unpack bytestream
edited Nov 15 '18 at 16:43
Stefano Radaelli
asked Nov 15 '18 at 16:07
Stefano RadaelliStefano Radaelli
490728
490728
1
I'm voting to close this question as off-topic because this question better suits codereview I think?
– RiggsFolly
Nov 15 '18 at 16:13
1
@RiggsFolly Maybe you're right but maybe more eyeballs is better for this situation. Theoptimization
tag does exist here and OP clearly showed a good understanding of the code at hand. The only thing I would ask for is maybe some sample data (20+ records?) and the current benchmark.
– MonkeyZeus
Nov 15 '18 at 16:17
1
I don't see any room for improvement in this code at all. You should profile what is happening when the code is run. Eg: are you capping out on CPU, IO, or memory? Also why does this need to run in less than one second? You may benefit for re-thinking you approach and where/how this bit of code fits into the larger application.
– Sammitch
Nov 15 '18 at 17:40
1
I agree with @Sammitch in regards to profiling the code; additionally, I trust their judgement in regard to having no room for improvement because I am not familiar withunpack()
. If anything I would choose to slightly slow down the code by reading the file one record at a time instead of usingfile_get_contents()
to avoid fatal memory exhaustion errors.
– MonkeyZeus
Nov 15 '18 at 17:52
1
@MonkeyZeus hah I missed that one. I actually feel like changing it to$fh = fopen(...); while( $record = fread($fh, 6) ) ...
would also be a slight performance improvement given PHP's solid IO internals. Though definitely not enough to shave 40% off the run time.
– Sammitch
Nov 15 '18 at 18:55
|
show 12 more comments
1
I'm voting to close this question as off-topic because this question better suits codereview I think?
– RiggsFolly
Nov 15 '18 at 16:13
1
@RiggsFolly Maybe you're right but maybe more eyeballs is better for this situation. Theoptimization
tag does exist here and OP clearly showed a good understanding of the code at hand. The only thing I would ask for is maybe some sample data (20+ records?) and the current benchmark.
– MonkeyZeus
Nov 15 '18 at 16:17
1
I don't see any room for improvement in this code at all. You should profile what is happening when the code is run. Eg: are you capping out on CPU, IO, or memory? Also why does this need to run in less than one second? You may benefit for re-thinking you approach and where/how this bit of code fits into the larger application.
– Sammitch
Nov 15 '18 at 17:40
1
I agree with @Sammitch in regards to profiling the code; additionally, I trust their judgement in regard to having no room for improvement because I am not familiar withunpack()
. If anything I would choose to slightly slow down the code by reading the file one record at a time instead of usingfile_get_contents()
to avoid fatal memory exhaustion errors.
– MonkeyZeus
Nov 15 '18 at 17:52
1
@MonkeyZeus hah I missed that one. I actually feel like changing it to$fh = fopen(...); while( $record = fread($fh, 6) ) ...
would also be a slight performance improvement given PHP's solid IO internals. Though definitely not enough to shave 40% off the run time.
– Sammitch
Nov 15 '18 at 18:55
1
1
I'm voting to close this question as off-topic because this question better suits codereview I think?
– RiggsFolly
Nov 15 '18 at 16:13
I'm voting to close this question as off-topic because this question better suits codereview I think?
– RiggsFolly
Nov 15 '18 at 16:13
1
1
@RiggsFolly Maybe you're right but maybe more eyeballs is better for this situation. The
optimization
tag does exist here and OP clearly showed a good understanding of the code at hand. The only thing I would ask for is maybe some sample data (20+ records?) and the current benchmark.– MonkeyZeus
Nov 15 '18 at 16:17
@RiggsFolly Maybe you're right but maybe more eyeballs is better for this situation. The
optimization
tag does exist here and OP clearly showed a good understanding of the code at hand. The only thing I would ask for is maybe some sample data (20+ records?) and the current benchmark.– MonkeyZeus
Nov 15 '18 at 16:17
1
1
I don't see any room for improvement in this code at all. You should profile what is happening when the code is run. Eg: are you capping out on CPU, IO, or memory? Also why does this need to run in less than one second? You may benefit for re-thinking you approach and where/how this bit of code fits into the larger application.
– Sammitch
Nov 15 '18 at 17:40
I don't see any room for improvement in this code at all. You should profile what is happening when the code is run. Eg: are you capping out on CPU, IO, or memory? Also why does this need to run in less than one second? You may benefit for re-thinking you approach and where/how this bit of code fits into the larger application.
– Sammitch
Nov 15 '18 at 17:40
1
1
I agree with @Sammitch in regards to profiling the code; additionally, I trust their judgement in regard to having no room for improvement because I am not familiar with
unpack()
. If anything I would choose to slightly slow down the code by reading the file one record at a time instead of using file_get_contents()
to avoid fatal memory exhaustion errors.– MonkeyZeus
Nov 15 '18 at 17:52
I agree with @Sammitch in regards to profiling the code; additionally, I trust their judgement in regard to having no room for improvement because I am not familiar with
unpack()
. If anything I would choose to slightly slow down the code by reading the file one record at a time instead of using file_get_contents()
to avoid fatal memory exhaustion errors.– MonkeyZeus
Nov 15 '18 at 17:52
1
1
@MonkeyZeus hah I missed that one. I actually feel like changing it to
$fh = fopen(...); while( $record = fread($fh, 6) ) ...
would also be a slight performance improvement given PHP's solid IO internals. Though definitely not enough to shave 40% off the run time.– Sammitch
Nov 15 '18 at 18:55
@MonkeyZeus hah I missed that one. I actually feel like changing it to
$fh = fopen(...); while( $record = fread($fh, 6) ) ...
would also be a slight performance improvement given PHP's solid IO internals. Though definitely not enough to shave 40% off the run time.– Sammitch
Nov 15 '18 at 18:55
|
show 12 more comments
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1
I'm voting to close this question as off-topic because this question better suits codereview I think?
– RiggsFolly
Nov 15 '18 at 16:13
1
@RiggsFolly Maybe you're right but maybe more eyeballs is better for this situation. The
optimization
tag does exist here and OP clearly showed a good understanding of the code at hand. The only thing I would ask for is maybe some sample data (20+ records?) and the current benchmark.– MonkeyZeus
Nov 15 '18 at 16:17
1
I don't see any room for improvement in this code at all. You should profile what is happening when the code is run. Eg: are you capping out on CPU, IO, or memory? Also why does this need to run in less than one second? You may benefit for re-thinking you approach and where/how this bit of code fits into the larger application.
– Sammitch
Nov 15 '18 at 17:40
1
I agree with @Sammitch in regards to profiling the code; additionally, I trust their judgement in regard to having no room for improvement because I am not familiar with
unpack()
. If anything I would choose to slightly slow down the code by reading the file one record at a time instead of usingfile_get_contents()
to avoid fatal memory exhaustion errors.– MonkeyZeus
Nov 15 '18 at 17:52
1
@MonkeyZeus hah I missed that one. I actually feel like changing it to
$fh = fopen(...); while( $record = fread($fh, 6) ) ...
would also be a slight performance improvement given PHP's solid IO internals. Though definitely not enough to shave 40% off the run time.– Sammitch
Nov 15 '18 at 18:55