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I have a client winform application that connects to the local network server of WCF. There has a performance issue on the client side and I searched for the solution and found this post.

It says there that:

This sounds like the serialization assemblies being created at runtime. Try changing the settings of the Serialization Assembly dropdown at the bottom of the Build pane of the properties window for the project.

My question is When to change the Generate Serialization Assembly value and what value should I change it into to improve the performance of my client side application?

My code is in C#, framework 4, build in VS2010Pro.

1 Answer 1

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In order to serialize classes/structs, serialization assemblies need to be generated. This can happen at compiletime or runtime. Sgen.exe is used to generate serialization assemblies at compiletime; Visual Studio can optionally automate this process, as you have discovered.

  • Off: Default for Debug configurations (thanks, @Alexandru Lache). Do not generate serialization assemblies at compiletime. Serialization assemblies will be generated each time the application runs, according to MSDN:

    When the XML Serializer Generator is not used, a XmlSerializer generates serialization code and a serialization assembly for each type every time an application is run. To improve the performance of XML serialization startup, use the Sgen.exe tool to generate those assemblies the assemblies in advance. These assemblies can then be deployed with the application.

  • On: Use Sgen.exe to generate a serialization assembly at compiletime. This saves startup time, but increases deployment size.
  • Auto: Default for Release configurations. Officially, only generates assembly if XmlSerializer is used in your code, per MSDN (thanks, @L-Three). In my tests, this didn't always work, so I recommend explicitly setting it to On if you are using XmlSerializer.

So, my answer would be this: if you are concerned about startup time, and you use the Serializable attribute even once, set the option to On. If you are more concerned about deployment size, change it to Off. I never leave it on Auto anymore, because I don't trust it. Like I said, it seems to be the same as Off, but I wouldn't count on it.

Edit: I'm definitely having some trouble differentiating between Off and Auto. The difference isn't clearly defined anywhere. I'd stick with On if you use the Serializable attribute at all, and Off if you don't. I wouldn't take deployment size or startup time into account. I just seem to run into fewer serialization-related bugs if I stick to that rule.

Update:

After a review of the sources mentioned, I believe "startup" refers to the first time an XmlSerializer is used on any given type, not initial application launch. I can't be sure; it's a bit ambiguous.

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    One remark: the [Serializable] attribute is related to binary serialization, not XML serialization. So, you should consider using this if you are using the XmlSerializer class and you are concerned about time needed to (de)serialize the first object instance.
    – vgru
    Jun 4, 2013 at 9:39
  • @Groo No, SerializableAttribute is for all forms of serialization, not just binary serialization. See MSDN.
    – Zenexer
    Jun 6, 2013 at 22:28
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    When you say "all forms of serialization", I believe you are talking about different serialization formatters used by the .NET runtime serialization. But the XmlSerializer class is not related to .NET runtime serialization, it is the only class which uses these generated serialization assemblies (runtime serialization and WCF data contracts do not use them), and it has nothing to do with the [Serializable] attribute. A class only needs to be public and have a public parameterless constructor for XmlSerializer to work.
    – vgru
    Jun 7, 2013 at 15:17
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    I strongly disagree with this "should be" convention you mention. Where did you read that? If public members of a class can be serialized, it doesn't mean it is safe to serialize it with runtime serialization. You are only creating a potential security and stability risk, allowing unwanted serialization of its private fields. See Drawbacks of marking a class as Serializable, Why classes are not Serializable by default?, Disadvantage of making class Serializable.
    – vgru
    Jun 9, 2013 at 9:18
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    Please note Auto on DEBUG is Off and on RELEASE is On. Aug 19, 2013 at 8:23

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