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ASP.NET Site Performance Secrets

You're reading from   ASP.NET Site Performance Secrets Simple and proven techniques to quickly speed up your ASP.NET website

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Product type Paperback
Published in Oct 2010
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781849690683
Length 456 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Languages
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Author (1):
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Mattijs Perdeck Mattijs Perdeck
Author Profile Icon Mattijs Perdeck
Mattijs Perdeck
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Table of Contents (19) Chapters Close

ASP.NET Site Performance Secrets
Credits
About the Author
About the Reviewers
1. Preface
1. High Level Diagnosis FREE CHAPTER 2. Reducing Time to First Byte 3. Memory 4. CPU 5. Caching 6. Thread Usage 7. Reducing Long Wait Times 8. Speeding up Database Access 9. Reducing Time to Last Byte 10. Compression 11. Optimizing Forms 12. Reducing Image Load Times 13. Improving JavaScript Loading 14. Load Testing

Measuring the difference compression makes


As you saw, enabling compression means giving up CPU capacity to achieve reduced file sizes. Now that you have enabled compression, you will want to evaluate whether it works for you.

To see the difference in file size, use the Web Developer add-on for Firefox. We saw how to use this earlier on in the Pinpointing bottlenecks section.

To see the difference in CPU usage, stress test your site with compression switched off and then switched on (Chapter 14, Load Testing shows how to do a load test):

  1. 1. With compression switched on, start a load generator that puts a heavy load on your test site. This test isn't meant to simulate the real world, so do not use think times. Make sure that the request headers that are sent by the load generator contain Accept-Encoding: gzip,deflate, forcing the web server to provide compressed responses.

  2. 2. Run perfmon from the command prompt. Expand the CPU bar. You should find that the IIS Worker Process is the heaviest...

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