I am writing a program to measure the latency(response round trip time) for a web service. I need to have this at client side.
My initial plan is to store the time at which request is sent and then calculate the difference in time when we recieve a response from the web service. Is this the correct way to measure latency of web service. This has some overhead because of storing time and all. How can this be done?
Another option is to attach a timestamp with the SOAP request. But the server should return the timestamp. This will not be possible in case of third party web services.
My ASP.NET website while trying to connect to the database for first time after a period of inactivity throws an time out exception.
I understand the connections in the connection pool get terminated after some idle time for some reason (Firewall or Oracle settings) and the pool or app doesn't have a clue about it.
Is there any way to validate the connection beforehand so that the first try doesn't throw an exception? I don't have much control over the DB or Firewall settings. So I have to deal with this is my application.(would prefer if there is any web.config settings)
I am using: ASP.NET 2.0. Oracle server 11g, Microsoft Enterprise Library DAAB to do all my DB operations.
I have a requirement to calculate the Web application idle time. Say the user doesnt use the web application for 15 minutes, then a message needs to be displayed to the user.
I have an IIS 6.0-based C#/ASP.NET web site with a SQL server backend.I want to generate some computationally expensive reports (summaries, search engine indexes, etc...) in idle CPU time. I need the reports to be generated from WITHIN the IIS App Pool so it knows the proper configuration settings and (harder to fix) avoids the nightmarish security restrictions I've been placed under.
Can I start threads inside the AppPool's process that won't tie up the CPU, so it can continue serving requests unfettered? If so, how? What code and libraries?
I imagine it involves ThreadPool and thread priorities, but I couldn't find good coverage of low-pri threads and their interaction with the IIS web server and App pool.
[EDIT] [URL] discusses using a Timer for this but doesn't directly state that the .NET framework will insure that the Timer thread is low-priority. This might be a solution, but is that assured?
[URL]
[EDIT] Interestingly, Stack Overflow itself seems to use IIS background threads for my purpose:
[URL] in the comments, everyone says their (no longer used) technique sucks, but this one in the comments makes sense to me...
Got really strange Firefox issue. Using the Microsoft __doPostBack javascript function in web forms page. Used for tab control, we have got each tab click calling the __doPostBack function. Works ok on my dev machine with all browsers but got a colleague who has an issue if he leaves the page idle for circa 3 -4 minutes. After this delay if he selects a new tab which calls the __doPostBack function the call to theForm.submit(); just hangs and get requested timeout. No .net calls are seen in Firebug. The __doPostBack event is called just theForm.submit() function just doesn't execute. If he does not have this idle time works ok. It is also ok for him on all other browsers.
i made an web application for my client, he is from usa, I deployed application to [URL], at my local system, the project function proper. But what is happening that at main server the session is destroying automatically, before the idle time. I have been figuring out this problem for long but could not solved it. what may be the reason behind this session out. I am using in process session.
How to find the client idle time .i deployed the application in the server .whenever the client access the site then i need to find that client system idle time in asp.net .
I have IIS 7.5 running on windows 7 64 bit machine.
My problem is that in my web application after any page request if the page remains idle for more than 2 mins, it stops responding. For e.g. lets take the following scenario:
1. Initial page request
2. the page stays idle for 2 mins
3. Click a button to save data
4. It takes very long for the aspnet worker process to reach page_load, and firefox shows "connection was reset" message.
I put breakpoint on page_load. It strikes the breakpoint after a long time and also it does not go to the event handler of the button that was clicked.
The web application works perfectly if the page is not kept idle.
in my page i dessigned Updatepanel within that i placed some input controls(textbox, dropdownlist etc) within that updatepanel i placed one button. now the problem is on production if i idle some time after enter some data and press the button then the button click event not fired, then i refresh the page enter the input then press button then its fired, what is the problem? and how to resolve it? (i didnt included any triggers)
I have developed a web application in .net & if the web application is idle for some time & after that if we perform some action on that web page then it doesn't respond.
My web application has hosted on the canada server but my all clients are indians.So, as I am using System.datetime.Now to store all the dates in application.Obviously, it is displaying the canadian time instead of india time.How can i do it?Is there not any gloabl settings that we can do in our web.config file so that it indicates to the server at run time which time zone to execute..?Or any other suitable alternate?
i have to listen my mail server for every 30 min. i have a distribution list and i want to count number of email comes for that distribution list and no of replies goes from the outlook for every 30 minutes. also i need to get the time difference between the replied time with arrived time of the mail. so show me some sample code
I'm using Telerik's RadScheduler Control with WebService Binding.
I've used RadScheduler with Server Side Binding which has an event called "OnTimeSlotCreated" which fires every time when a particular time slot creates so that i can access the time slot and get the control (HtmlTableCell Control) to modify it according to the requirement.
But now i'm binding it from client side through WebService which has no such "onClientTimeSlotCreated" event, also these time slots are not having any identity at client side to access.
how to suppress the "AM" in the gridview (template Bind("RideTimeMin", "{0:t}")? Don't tell me to use military time because the function is not "time on a clock"; it's how much time is allowed for a task (in this case the min/max hours & minutes that horses have to complete a 20 mile trail; e.g. 05:00, 05:27, etc). I'm currently accomplishing this in the "ondatabound" function by "..RTmin.Replace("AM","")". I have looked and looked at all the websites that talk about datetime formatting but have yet to find a way to do it upfront in the gridview bind statement.
I have created one web application for uploading the document. Once the document is uploaded to the web server, i am processing the document for some information and displaying the result back to the web page. Document takes more than 15min to upload and processing takes 30min. After 16min, i am getting error such that there is no response from server. Is there any way we can extent our execution time?
i tried by using <httpRunTime executionTime="10000". Still i am getting this error
why classic asp pages run so much faster than consuming a web service in .net?
I have a classic asp page that consumes a web service like so:
[Code]....
I run a log of every transaction and the time from call of the page to finish is ALWAYS between 1 and 2 seconds.However, when I try to consume the web service through .net like so:
[Code]....
This way takes on average at LEAST 10 seconds. Sometimes less, but not often.
I guess I just assume it should be the other way around. How can i speed this up? Seriously, don't make me stick to classic asp pages!
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".