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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 11, 20262026-05-11T16:24:52+00:00 2026-05-11T16:24:52+00:00

I’m trying to serialize a large collection of objects (20,000) objects within the collection.

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I’m trying to serialize a large collection of objects (20,000) objects within the collection. I’m doing this using the following code:

XmlSerializer xs = new XmlSerializer(deserialized.GetType());
StringWriter sw;
using (sw = new StringWriter())
{
   xs.Serialize(sw, deserialized);   // OutOfMemoryException here
}

string packet = sw.ToString();
return packet;

Is there a better way of doing this, or am I doing something blatantly wrong?

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-11T16:24:52+00:00Added an answer on May 11, 2026 at 4:24 pm

    It looks like it should work, but CF does have unpredictable limitations.

    Is xml a requirement? I can’t remember trying it with 20k records, but another option might be to try using a different serializer – for example, protobuf-net works on CF2. I can’t guarantee it’ll work, but it might be worth a shot.

    (in particular, I’m currently refactoring the code to try to work around some additional “generics” limitations within CF – but unless you have a very complex object model this shouldn’t affect you).


    Example showing usage; note that this example also works OK for XmlSerializer, but protobuf-net uses only 20% of the space (or 10% of the space if you consider that characters are two bytes each in memory):

    using System;
    using System.Collections.Generic;
    using System.IO;
    using System.Xml.Serialization;
    using ProtoBuf;
    
    [Serializable, ProtoContract]
    public class Department
    {
        [ProtoMember(1)]
        public string Name { get; set; }
        [ProtoMember(2)]
        public List<Person> People { get; set; }
    }
    
    [Serializable, ProtoContract]
    public class Person
    {
        [ProtoMember(1)]
        public int Id { get; set; }
        [ProtoMember(2)]
        public string Name { get; set; }
        [ProtoMember(3)]
        public DateTime DateOfBirth { get; set; }
    }
    
    
    static class Program
    {
        [MTAThread]
        static void Main()
        {
            Department dept = new Department { Name = "foo"};
            dept.People = new List<Person>();
            Random rand = new Random(123456);
            for (int i = 0; i < 20000; i++)
            {
                Person person = new Person();
                person.Id = rand.Next(50000);
                person.DateOfBirth = DateTime.Today.AddDays(-rand.Next(2000));
                person.Name = "fixed name";
                dept.People.Add(person);
            }
    
            byte[] raw;
            using (MemoryStream ms = new MemoryStream())
            {
                Serializer.Serialize(ms, dept);
                raw = ms.ToArray(); // 473,399 bytes
            }
    
            XmlSerializer ser = new XmlSerializer(typeof(Department));
            StringWriter sw = new StringWriter();
            ser.Serialize(sw, dept);
            string s = sw.ToString(); // 2,115,693 characters
        }
    }
    

    Let me know if you want more help – I can talk about this subject all day ;-p
    Note that it can work just from the standard xml attributes ([XmlElement(Order=1)]) – I’ve used the more specific [ProtoMember(1)] etc for clarity. This also allows fine-grained control of serialization (zigzag vs twoscompliment, grouped vs length-prefixed, etc).

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