Book Image

ASP.NET Core 2 High Performance - Second Edition

By : James Singleton
Book Image

ASP.NET Core 2 High Performance - Second Edition

By: James Singleton

Overview of this book

The ASP.NET Core 2 framework is used to develop high-performance and cross-platform web applications. It is built on .NET Core 2 and includes significantly more framework APIs than version 1. This book addresses high-level performance improvement techniques. It starts by showing you how to locate and measure problems and then shows you how to solve some of the most common ones. Next, it shows you how to get started with ASP.NET Core 2 on Windows, Mac, Linux, and with Docker containers. The book illustrates what problems can occur as latency increases when deploying to a cloud infrastructure. It also shows you how to optimize C# code and choose the best data structures for the job. It covers new features in C# 6 and 7, along with parallel programming and distributed architectures. By the end of this book, you will be fixing latency issues and optimizing performance problems, but you will also know how this affects the complexity and maintenance of your application. Finally, we will explore a few highly advanced techniques for further optimization.
Table of Contents (20 chapters)
Title Page
Credits
Foreword
About the Author
About the Reviewer
www.PacktPub.com
Customer Feedback
Preface
3
Setting Up Your Environment
4
Measuring Performance Bottlenecks

The future


A quote often attributed to the physicist Niels Bohr goes as follows:

Prediction is very difficult, especially about the future.

However, we'll have a go at this anyway, starting with the more straightforward bits. The official ASP.NET Core roadmap lists SignalR support shipping with version 2.1. SignalR is being rewritten, as many lessons were learned with large deployments, and improvements were needed.

There is also the continued progress of the .NET Standard specification, created to enhance portability between .NET Core, the .NET Framework, and Mono. For example, .NET Core 2.0 and .NET Framework 4.6.1 both implement .NET Standard 2.0. This means that projects written in either can use libraries that adhere to the .NET Standard 2.0 spec. As .NET Standard 2.0 is now finalized, any increase in the API surface area will use a higher version number. The .NET Standard is analogous to the HTML5 spec, which is implemented to varying degrees by different browsers. You probably won't...