use strict; use warnings; use Benchmark qw( cmpthese timethese ); our $VERSION = '1.00'; my $wanttime = $ARGV[1] || 5; use JSON qw( -support_by_pp -no_export ); # for JSON::PP::Boolean inheritance use JSON::PP (); use JSON::XS (); use utf8; my $pp = JSON::PP->new->utf8; my $xs = JSON::XS->new->utf8; local $/; my $json = <>; my $perl = JSON::XS::decode_json $json; my $result; printf( "JSON::PP %s\n", JSON::PP->VERSION ); printf( "JSON::XS %s\n", JSON::XS->VERSION ); print "-----------------------------------\n"; print "->decode()\n"; print "-----------------------------------\n"; $result = timethese( -$wanttime, { 'JSON::PP' => sub { $pp->decode( $json ) }, 'JSON::XS' => sub { $xs->decode( $json ) }, }, 'none' ); cmpthese( $result ); print "-----------------------------------\n"; __END__ =pod =head1 SYNOPSYS bench_decode.pl json-file # or bench_decode.pl json-file minimum-time =head1 DESCRIPTION L and L decoding benchmark. =head1 AUTHOR makamaka =head1 LISENCE This library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself. =cut