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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 15, 20262026-05-15T00:44:33+00:00 2026-05-15T00:44:33+00:00

I’ve got a large XML file, which takes over 40 seconds to parse with

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I’ve got a large XML file, which takes over 40 seconds to parse with XML::Simple.

I’d like to be able to cache the resulting parsed object so that on the next run I can just retrieve the parsed object and not reparse the whole file.

I’ve looked at using Data::Dumper but the documentation is a bit lacking on how to store and retrieve its output from disk files. Other classes I’ve looked at (e.g. Cache::Cache appear designed for storage of many small objects, not a single large one.

Can anyone recommend a module designed for this?

EDIT. The XML file is ftp://ftp.rfc-editor.org/in-notes/rfc-index.xml, and I went with Storable for speeding up subsequent runs. Changing the XML parser would have required very significant code changes.

On my Mac Pro benchmark figures for reading the entire file with XML::Simple vs Storable are:

      s/iter  test1  test2
test1   47.8     --  -100%
test2  0.148 32185%     --
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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-15T00:44:34+00:00Added an answer on May 15, 2026 at 12:44 am

    Data::Dumper is actually VERY simple. If your object is a hashref $HashRef:

    # Write
    open(FILE, ">your_filename") || die "Can not open: $!";
    print FILE Data::Dumper->Dump([$HashRef],["HashRef"]);
    close(FILE) || die "Error closing file: $!";
    
    # Read
    my $HashRef;
    $HashRef = eval { do "your_filename" };
       # Might need "no strict;" before and "use strict;" after "do"
    die "Error reading: $@" if $@;
    # Now $HashRef is what it was before writing
    

    Another good option is using Storable. From POD:

    use Storable;
    store \%table, 'file';
    $hashref = retrieve('file');
    

    For a very good guide on various options (as well as a better example of Data::Dumper usage) see Chapter 14 “Persistence” of brian d foy’s “Mastering Perl” book

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