I chose 300 for two reasons: it's a reasonable guess at what the OP might mean by 'some hundreds', and even the slowest configuration technique I tried meets the time criteria the OP gave for a configuration file of that size.
The slurp solution wasn't intended as a reliable way to handle configuration information, but as an indicative upper limit for a Perl solution to the problem. It's interesting to note however that fastconfig uses the same file format and has the same potential issues as the slurp solution.
In reply to Re^3: fastest file processing Config file format
by GrandFather
in thread fastest file processing Config file format
by Davewhite
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