Book Image

High-Performance Programming in C# and .NET

By : Jason Alls
Book Image

High-Performance Programming in C# and .NET

By: Jason Alls

Overview of this book

Writing high-performance code while building an application is crucial, and over the years, Microsoft has focused on delivering various performance-related improvements within the .NET ecosystem. This book will help you understand the aspects involved in designing responsive, resilient, and high-performance applications with the new version of C# and .NET. You will start by understanding the foundation of high-performance code and the latest performance-related improvements in C# 10.0 and .NET 6. Next, you’ll learn how to use tracing and diagnostics to track down performance issues and the cause of memory leaks. The chapters that follow then show you how to enhance the performance of your networked applications and various ways to improve directory tasks, file tasks, and more. Later, you’ll go on to improve data querying performance and write responsive user interfaces. You’ll also discover how you can use cloud providers such as Microsoft Azure to build scalable distributed solutions. Finally, you’ll explore various ways to process code synchronously, asynchronously, and in parallel to reduce the time it takes to process a series of tasks. By the end of this C# programming book, you’ll have the confidence you need to build highly resilient, high-performance applications that meet your customer's demands.
Table of Contents (22 chapters)
1
Part 1: High-Performance Code Foundation
7
Part 2: Writing High-Performance Code
16
Part 3: Threading and Concurrency

Benchmarking data insertion methods

In this section, we will be following on from the work we did in Chapter 10, Setting Up Our Database Project, by writing methods that will benchmark the performance of insert methods using ADO.NET, Entity Framework Core, and Dapper.NET. So, if you have not read Chapter 10, or looked at the source code, now would be a good time to do that.

The benchmarks written in this chapter will be run and the results will be analyzed in the last section. To save space due to chapter and page constraints, I will be leaving out references to using statements. Therefore, you will need to use Visual Studio's quick tips for adding missing using statements. Follow these steps to write our insertion method benchmarks:

  1. Add the BenchmarkDotNet NuGet package.
  2. Open the BenchmarkTests class and modify it as follows:
    [MemoryDiagnoser]
    [Orderer(SummaryOrderPolicy.Declared)]
    [RankColumn]
    public class BenchmarkTests
    {
        [GlobalSetup]...