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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

Data access


Accessing the database is the most expensive part of the processing for most pages. Here you'll see a number of ways to reduce that expense.

Connection pooling

Opening a connection to the database is expensive. Because of this, ASP.NET maintains a pool of open connections. There is a pool per connection string, by Windows identity when integrated security is used, and by whether they are enlisted in a transaction.

When you open a connection, you actually receive a connection from the pool. When you close that connection, it stays open and goes back to the pool, ready for use by another thread.

To make this work efficiently, always use exactly the same connection string for each database you access. If you access one database, have one connection string.

It's easiest to store the connection string in a central location, in web.config:

<configuration>
<connectionStrings>
<add name="ConnectionString" connectionString="....."/>
</connectionStrings>
</configuration...
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