Modifying jeroenes's modification of davorg's modified benchmark (threw in tye's neat trick for good measure):
Rate join argv hybrid linesep sysread join 5459/s -- -44% -71% -81% -91% argv 9690/s 78% -- -49% -67% -85% hybrid 19084/s 250% 97% -- -34% -70% linesep 29070/s 433% 200% 52% -- -55% sysread 64103/s 1074% 562% 236% 121% --

Nice, dkubb! I think we have a winner. Not only is _sysread() clearly the fastest, but it burns the least CPU*. I like it! Hopefully there are no "catches."

update: _argv() is almost as fast as _linesep() when working with large files. _join() and _hybrid() tend to fall behind.

* Linux 2.4, Celeron-366, Perl 5.6.0


#!/usr/bin/perl -w use strict; use Benchmark qw(cmpthese); my $file = $0; open(IN, $file) or die "$file: $!\n"; cmpthese(50_000, { join => \&_join, linesep => \&_linesep, hybrid => \&_hybrid, sysread => \&_sysread, argv => \&_argv }); close(IN); sub _join { seek(IN, 0, 0); my $content = join '', <IN>; } sub _linesep { seek(IN, 0, 0); my $content = do { local $/; <IN> } } sub _hybrid { seek(IN, 0, 0); my $content = do { local $/; join '', <IN> } } sub _sysread { seek(IN, 0, 0); sysread IN, my $content, -s IN } sub _argv { my $content = do { local(*ARGV, $/); @ARGV = ($file); <> } }

In reply to (because I can) Re (2): Slurp a file by mwp
in thread Slurp a file by Anonymous Monk

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