How To Retrieve Response Time To Each Request Made In Page
Feb 16, 2010
How can I retrieve the list of all the request I made it to server with respect to time required to process time for it.In my page I am using some web services. I want to retrieve list of all the web services I am using and time required to process this request.
I am having problem in session time out in Asp.net with Ajax Call.Once the session times out,when a control calls asynchrous this is notredirecting to login page.(I am using forms Authentication)In the same page if i try to redirect(in Preinit) to login page if session expired..the login page appears with the previous page(because of the ajax call).Please let me know the way to redirect to the login page when the session time out and when a ajax call is made.
I have an ASP.NET website that worked fine using and debugging in VS2008. I went through the upgrade process opening the solution in VS2010. I can run the site, but as I make changes in the app_code folder classes, they don't seem to commpile and warn me of compile-time errors. As soon as I get to a point that calls the class, the errors show up. Sounds JIT I guess, but this isn't how it was working in 08. Is there an option that was changed in the upgrade process? This is a large project, I really don't want to break something and not find out until some obscure page is opened.
Is it at all possible to inject a request into IIS for a page, have IIS and ASP.Net handle it as normal, but get the response as html handed back to me programmatically?
Yes, I know that I could connect to port 80 using WebRequest and WebResponse, but that becomes difficult if you are accessing the IIS server from the same physical machine (loopback security controls et al).
Basically, I want to inject the request (eg for [URL]) between the points at which IIS would normally talk to the browser, and the point at which it would route it to the correct ASP.Net application, and get a response back from IIS between the points at which ASP.Net/IIS applies the httpfilters and hands the html back to the browser.
I'm predominantly working with IIS7 so if there is a solution that works just for IIS7 then thats not an issue.
I am trying to add some JQuery animations before and after every postback request is made inside my UpdatePanel. What I have so far is something like this:
<script type="text/javascript"> $(document).ready(function () { Sys.WebForms.PageRequestManager.getInstance().add_endRequest(EndRequestHandler); Sys.WebForms.PageRequestManager.getInstance().add_beginRequest(BeginRequestHandler); function EndRequestHandler(sender, args) { if (args.get_error() == undefined) { // End Request (1) } } function BeginRequestHandler(sender, args) { // Start Request (2) } $('.MyButtons').live('click', function () { // Before request (3) }); }); </script> <asp:UpdatePanel runat="server"> <ContentTemplate> <asp:Button runat="server" CssClass="MyButtons"/> </ContentTemplate> </asp:UpdatePanel>
Let say I want to put some animation code at (3) that will be executed and then proceed with BeginRequestHandler function. How should I do that? Because right now the whole process executes 3,2,1 and I dn't know how to add that delay between steps 3 and 2. In other words I want to execute step 2 manually at step 3. Don't really want to use hidden buttons to do that.
I have noticed two time-related problems with my website:
[1] Slowness of loading the graphics for each page in the browser; [2] Receiving a "Runtime Error" page in the browser when I do take action on the site (e.g. navigate to another page) within approx. 30 seconds.
Are these problems related to limitations of my web host?
I'm load testing an asp.net app.The load test is simulating 500 user doing searchs on the site and browsing the results. I'm observing that the more I reduce the session timeout limit (in web.config) the better the page response time.exemple, with a timeout at 10 minutes, I got an average response time of 8.35 seconds. With a timout at 3 minutes, the average response time for the same page is 3,98 seconds.The session in stored "InProc".
commonly on say PHP or other web frameworks getting the total response time is easy, just start the timer at the top of the file and stop it at the end. In ASP.Net there is the whole Page Lifecycle bit though so I'm not sure how to do this. I would like for this response time recording to take place in a master page and the response time show up in the footer of pages. What would be the best way of doing this? Is there something built in to ASP.Net for it? Is it even possible to include the OnRender time?
I am making gridviews at run time; it works fine, except they are made going verticly down the page; I need them to line up horizontally on the page side by side.
I have some serious performance Issues with Windows controls loading first time on IE Browser then subsequent request's. When ever i open Browser first time , mywebsite takes 7 seconds to load, but on subsequent request without closing browser it loads with-in 2 seconds.I Knew IIS on first time it re-compiles the process and for subsequent request's it wont perform and it cahches .I'm looking for better options to improve performance, when ever first time reqest's comes to web server.
On IIS 7 Server,I was using both Dynamic and Static compression enabled.Also,On application pool ,I set "ShutDown Time(Limit)" and "Startup Time(Limit") to 90 (seconds).Here is web.config i disable below to improve performance issues.
whenever I replace a master page on my site the pages load after a few hours(1-2) and only after that the site returned to work as normal.. I dont use VS "open web site" from the web method, instead I download the page I want to change (using flashfxp for instance), make my changes and upload it back. I do this process because every now and then the VS stuck/not responding/think long time. he master pages I change are used by few thousand of pages in the site, my thought is that whenever I change a master all the site get rebuild and therefor the long loading time..
I need to I can make the web request to a webservice which take a XML argument. And is expected to return a Binary response. I am able to make the request but while recieving the response back I am unable to get the response in binary. When I read the response using streamreader see the header and some attached "HEBRISH" words probably binary but unable to sepreate it out. Please help in seprating out the binary the response data.
I'm developing a client of a webservice in C# with VS.NET 2008.And I would like view the xml response of my request to the web service. which i have call . Is it posible?
where i need to understand the Raw XML Request and Response send thru when an web service API is called.We are using a Third part web service i.e. we have reference a third party wsdl file in our application and using its APIs defined.For Authentication purpose we are using web service extension in Framework 2.0
I have a button that calls a click event to download a picture. In my click event I have some code to change my display as the Save dialog pops up. The issue I am having is that when the dialog comes up it stops the previous line of code from executing. How can I check to see that my code has executed before calling the function?
I am using an SMS Gateway to make my application receive SMSs. For this, the SMS Gateway sends a request to one of the pages in my application with the message as a querystring parameter. eg.[URL]. Now after my page gets invoked, I need to send an OK response to the SMS Gateway so that it doesn't keep retrying to send the same message to my application again and again. I cannot figure out how to send the OK response.
In pageload, if you do Response.Cookies.Add(..., immediately in the next line, you can access that cookie via Request.Cookies(... I know that under the covers, the cookie is added to Request.Cookies by .net, but the original request never had that cookie.
If what I'm saying is correct, why is it this way? Shouldn't the cookie be available in the following request? Shouldn't the immediate access to Request.Cookies(... be null?
I am trying to the following to return xml response from an http request
Code: Try Dim id As String = Request.QueryString("id") Dim xmlOut As String = "" cn.ConnectionString = "Data Source=192.168.1.2;Initial Catalog=db;Persist Security Info=True;User ID=sa;Password=pass" dad = New SqlDataAdapter("select * from tbl where id = '" & id & "'", cn) ds.Clear()
[Code] ...
Is there some other way to do this without having to resort to writing the xml to a temp file on C drive and reading it again to display the output ?