, , ,

Best Practices to Improve ASP.Net Web Application Performance. Part - 2

Recommended Read Part - 1

3) Disable View State of a Page if possible


View state is a fancy name for ASP.NET storing some state data in a hidden input field inside the generated page.
When the page is posted back to the server, the server can parse, validate, and apply this view state data back to the page's tree of controls.
View state is a very powerful capability since it allows state to be persisted with the client and it requires no cookies or server memory to save this state. Many ASP.NET server controls use view state to persist settings made during interactions with elements on the page, for example, saving the current page that is being displayed when paging through data.

How it affects performance:
  • There are a number of drawbacks to the use of view state, however.
  • It increases the total payload of the page both when served and when requested. There is also an additional overhead incurred when serializing or deserializing view state data that is posted back to the server.
  • View state increases the memory allocations on the server. Several server controls, the most well known of which is the DataGrid, tend to make excessive use of view state, even in cases where it is not needed.
Solution:
Pages that do not have any server postback events can have the view state turned off.
The default behavior of the ViewState property is enabled, but if you don't need it, you can turn it off at the control or page level. Within a control, simply set the EnableViewState property to false, or set it globally within the page using this setting:
<%@ Page EnableViewState="false" %>
If you turn view state off for a page or control, make sure you thoroughly test your pages to verify that they continue to function correctly.

4) Set debug=false in web.config
When you create the application, by default this attribute is set to "true" which is very useful while developing.
However, when you are deploying your application, always set it to "false".
How it affects performance:
Setting it to "true" requires the pdb information to be inserted into the file and this results in a comparatively larger file and hence processing will be slow.
Solution:
Therefore, always set debug="false" before deployment.

5) Avoid Response.Redirect
Response.Redirect () method simply tells the browser to visit another page.
How it affects performance:
Redirects are also very chatty. They should only be used when you are transferring people to another physical web server.
Solution:
For any transfers within your server, use .transfer! You will save a lot of needless HTTP requests. Instead of telling the browser to redirect, it simply changes the "focus" on the Web server and transfers the request. This means you don't get quite as many HTTP requests coming through, which therefore eases the pressure on your Web server and makes
your applications run faster.
Tradeoffs:
  • ".transfer" process can work on only those sites running on the server. Only Response.Redirect can do that.
  • Server.Transfer maintains the original URL in the browser. This can really help streamline data entry techniques,
    although it may make for confusion when debugging
Note: To reduce CLR Exceptions count, Use Response.Redirect (".aspx", false) instead of response.redirect (".aspx").

Continue reading part 3
Share:

No comments: