Book Image

ASP.NET Core 1.0 High Performance

By : James Singleton, Pawan Awasthi
Book Image

ASP.NET Core 1.0 High Performance

By: James Singleton, Pawan Awasthi

Overview of this book

ASP.NET Core is the new, open source, and cross-platform, web-application framework from Microsoft. It's a stripped down version of ASP.NET that's lightweight and fast. This book will show you how to make your web apps deliver high performance when using it. We'll address many performance improvement techniques from both a general web standpoint and from a C#, ASP.NET Core, and .NET Core perspective. This includes delving into the latest frameworks and demonstrating software design patterns that improve performance. We will highlight common performance pitfalls, which can often occur unnoticed on developer workstations, along with strategies to detect and resolve these issues early. By understanding and addressing challenges upfront, you can avoid nasty surprises when it comes to deployment time. We will introduce performance improvements along with the trade-offs that they entail. We will strike a balance between premature optimization and inefficient code by taking a scientific- and evidence-based approach. We'll remain pragmatic by focusing on the big problems. By reading this book, you'll learn what problems can occur when web applications are deployed at scale and know how to avoid or mitigate these issues. You'll gain experience of how to write high-performance applications without having to learn about issues the hard way. You'll see what's new in ASP.NET Core, why it's been rebuilt from the ground up, and what this means for performance. You will understand how you can now develop on and deploy to Windows, Mac OS X, and Linux using cross-platform tools, such as Visual Studio Code.
Table of Contents (18 chapters)
ASP.NET Core 1.0 High Performance
Credits
Foreword
About the Author
Acknowledgments
About the Reviewer
www.PacktPub.com
Preface
2
Measuring Performance Bottlenecks

Select N+1 problems


You may have heard of Select N+1 problems before. It's a name for a class of performance problems that relate to inefficient querying of a DB. The pathological case is where you query one table for a list of items and then query another table to get the details for each item, one at a time. This is where the name comes from. Instead of the single query required, you perform N queries (one for the details of each item) and the one query to get the list to begin with. Perhaps a better name would be Select 1+N.

You will hopefully not write such bad-performing queries by hand, but an O/RM can easily output very inefficient SQL if used incorrectly. You might also use some sort of business objects abstraction framework, where each object lazily loads itself from the DB. This can become a performance nightmare if you want to put a lot of these objects in a list or calculate some dashboard metrics from a large set.

Note

We will go into detail about SQL and O/RM optimization in Chapter...