Welcome to OGeek Q&A Community for programmer and developer-Open, Learning and Share
Welcome To Ask or Share your Answers For Others

Categories

0 votes
432 views
in Technique[技术] by (71.8m points)

performance - How to load data quickly into R?

I have some R scripts, where I have to load several dataframe in R as quickly as possible. This is quite important as reading the data is the slowest part of the procedure. E.g.: plotting from different dataframes. I get the data in sav (SPSS) format, but I could transform it to any format as suggested. Merging the dataframes is not an option unfortunately.

What could be the fastest way to load the data? I was thinking of the following:

  • transform from sav to binary R object (Rdata) in the first time, and later always load this, as it seems a lot quicker than read.spss.
  • transform from sav to csv files and reading data from those with given parameters discussed in this topic,
  • or is it worth setting up a MySQL backend on localhost and load data from that? Could it be faster? If so, can I also save any custom attr values of the variables (e.g. variable.labels from Spss imported files)? Or this should be done in a separate table?

Any other thoughts are welcome. Thank you for every suggestion in advance!


I made a little experiment below based on the answers you have given, and also added (24/01/2011) a quite "hackish" but really speedy solution loading only a few variables/columns from a special binary file. The latter seems to be the fastest method I can imagine now, that is why I made up (05/03/2011: ver. 0.3) a small package named saves to deal with this feature. The package is under "heavy" development, any recommendation is welcome!

I will soon post a vignette with accurate benchmark results with the help of microbenchmark package.

See Question&Answers more detail:os

与恶龙缠斗过久,自身亦成为恶龙;凝视深渊过久,深渊将回以凝视…
Welcome To Ask or Share your Answers For Others

1 Reply

0 votes
by (71.8m points)

Thank you all for the tips and answers, I did some summary and experiment based on that.

See a little test with a public database (ESS 2008 in Hungary) below. The database have 1508 cases and 508 variables, so it could be a mid-sized data. That might be a good example to do the test on (for me), but of course special needs would require an experiment with adequate data.

Reading the data from SPSS sav file without any modification:

> system.time(data <- read.spss('ESS_HUN_4.sav'))
   user  system elapsed 
  2.214   0.030   2.376 

Loading with a converted binary object:

> save('data',file='ESS_HUN_4.Rdata')
> system.time(data.Rdata <- load('ESS_HUN_4.Rdata'))
   user  system elapsed 
   0.28    0.00    0.28 

Trying with csv:

> write.table(data, file="ESS_HUN_4.csv")
> system.time(data.csv <- read.csv('ESS_HUN_4.csv'))
   user  system elapsed 
  1.730   0.010   1.824 

Trying with "fine-tuned" csv loading:

> system.time(data.csv <- read.table('ESS_HUN_4.csv', comment.char="", stringsAsFactors=FALSE, sep=","))
   user  system elapsed 
  1.296   0.014   1.362 

Also with package sqldf, which seems to load csv files a lot faster:

> library(sqldf)
> f <- file("ESS_HUN_4.csv")
>  system.time(bigdf <- sqldf("select * from f", dbname = tempfile(), file.format = list(header = T, row.names = F, sep="")))
   user  system elapsed 
  0.939   0.106   1.071 

And also loading the data from a MySQL database running on localhost:

> library(RMySQL) 
> con <- dbConnect(MySQL(), user='root', dbname='test', host='localhost', password='')
> dbWriteTable(con, "data", as.data.frame(data), overwrite = TRUE)
> system.time(data <- dbReadTable(con, 'data'))
   user  system elapsed 
  0.583   0.026   1.055 
> query <-('SELECT * FROM data')
> system.time(data.sql <- dbGetQuery(con, query))
   user  system elapsed 
  0.270   0.020   0.473 

Here, I think we should add the two system.time reported, as connecting to the data also counts in our case. Please comment, if I misunderstood something.

But let us see if querying only some variables, as eg. while plotting we do not need all the dataframe in most cases, and querying only two variables is enough to create a nice plot of them:

> query <-('SELECT c1, c19 FROM data')
> system.time(data.sql <- dbGetQuery(con, query))
   user  system elapsed 
  0.030   0.000   0.112 

Which seems really great! Of course just after loading the table with dbReadTable

Summary: nothing to beat reading the whole data from binary file, but reading only a few columns (or other filtered data) from the same database table might be also weighted in some special cases.

Test environment: HP 6715b laptop (AMD X2 2Ghz, 4 Gb DDR2) with a low-end SSD.


UPDATE (24/01/2011): I added a rather hackish, but quite "creative" way of loading only a few columns of a binary object - which looks a lot faster then any method examined above.

Be aware: the code will look really bad, but still very effective :)

First, I save all columns of a data.frame into different binary objects via the following loop:

attach(data)
for (i in 1:length(data)) {
    save(list=names(data)[i],file=paste('ESS_HUN_4-', names(data)[i], '.Rdata', sep=''))
}
detach(data)

And then I load two columns of the data:

> system.time(load('ESS_HUN_4-c19.Rdata')) + 
>     system.time(load('ESS_HUN_4-c1.Rdata')) + 
>     system.time(data.c1_c19 <- cbind(c1, c19))
    user  system elapsed 
    0.003   0.000   0.002 

Which looks like a "superfast" method! :) Note: it was loaded 100 times faster than the fastest (loading the whole binary object) method above.

I have made up a very tiny package (named: saves), look in github for more details if interested.


UPDATE (06/03/2011): a new version of my little package (saves) was uploaded to CRAN, in which it is possible to save and load variables even faster - if only the user needs only a subset of the available variables in a data frame or list. See the vignette in the package sources for details or the one on my homepage, and let me introduce also a nice boxplot of some benchmark done:

Comparison of different data frame/list loading mechanism by speed

This boxplot shows the benefit of using saves package to load only a subset of variables against load and read.table or read.csv from base, read.spss from foreign or sqldf or RMySQL packages.


与恶龙缠斗过久,自身亦成为恶龙;凝视深渊过久,深渊将回以凝视…
OGeek|极客中国-欢迎来到极客的世界,一个免费开放的程序员编程交流平台!开放,进步,分享!让技术改变生活,让极客改变未来! Welcome to OGeek Q&A Community for programmer and developer-Open, Learning and Share
Click Here to Ask a Question

...