These benchmarks were done on a Macbook Pro. The results are very similar on the iPhone (ZippyJSON is 3x+ faster for all 3 files on both platforms).
Because it is drop-in, simply add the library to your project and replace JSONDecoder
with ZippyJSONDecoder
anywhere you want to use it. The library is feature-complete, so it will support any use cases you have.
- Apple's version first converts the JSON into an
NSDictionary
usingNSJSONSerialization
and then afterwards makes things Swifty. The creation of that intermediate dictionary is expensive. - ZippyJSON is built largely in C++ (but still with a Swift interface wrapped around it). For the initial parsing (you might call it tokenizing), it uses simdjson, a very fast library that makes good use of vectorization. Apple, on the other hand, uses entirely Swift (aside from the use of
NSJSONSerialization
) which is generally slower. - There are many specific optimizations in there as well. For example, date parsing for ISO-8601 dates is 10x faster due to using JJLISO8601DateFormatter instead of Apple's date formatter.
So, it's largely due to Apple trying to be elegant and operate at a higher level.
ZippyJSON uses all the same unit tests that Apple uses for their JSONDecoder, and then some, so it should generally work. However, it is a new release. Feel free to submit a ticket if you find any issues.
There are still many places in the code that are ripe for optimization. Feel free to submit a ticket if you have a specific case where you need more performant JSON parsing, and where ZippyJSON is not already 4x faster than Apple's. JSONEncoder and NSJSONSerialization are also promising for optimzation, please chime in if you need one of these improved.
ZippyJSON is available through CocoaPods. To install it, simply add the following line to your Podfile:
pod 'ZippyJSON'
To install it, add the following to your Cartfile:
github "michaeleisel/ZippyJSON"
Michael Eisel, michael.eisel@gmail.com