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6

We are trying to lighten our page load as much as possible. Since ViewState can sometimes swell up to 100k of the page, I'd love to completely eliminate it.

I'd love to hear some techniques other people have used to move ViewState to a custom provider.

That said, a few caveats:

  • We serve on average 2 Million unique visitors per hour.
  • Because of this, Database reads have been a serious issue in performance, so I don't want to store ViewState in the database.
  • We also are behind a load balancer, so any solution has to work with the user bouncing from machine to machine per postback.

Ideas?

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2 million unique visitors per hour? Wow! Is this Experts Exchange or some (other) pr0n site? ;-) – splattne Nov 3 '08 at 15:21
pr0n for sure :))))))) (kidding Jonathan) – Andrei Rinea Jan 5 '09 at 1:00
100k for ViewState? This can not be normal. – Andrei Rinea Jan 5 '09 at 1:01

14 Answers

vote up 5 vote down

How do you handle Session State? There is a built-in "store the viewstate in the session state" provider. If you are storing the session state in some fast, out of proc system, that might be the best option for the viewstate.

edit: to do this add the following code to the your Page classes / global page base class

    protected override PageStatePersister PageStatePersister {
        get { return new SessionPageStatePersister(this); }
    }

Also... this is by no means a perfect (or even good) solution to a large viewstate. As always, minimize the size of the viewstate as much as possible. However, the SessionPageStatePersister is relatively intelligent and avoids storing an unbounded number of viewstates per session as well as avoids storing only a single viewstate per session.

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I've used this in a key production app on a page that only had a handful of users. It was a huge success (after trying many failed alternatives)... HOWEVER, it does not scale. Make sure you do the math on this! – Brian MacKay Nov 25 '08 at 0:11
This is what I was looking for. – Przemek Jan 24 at 8:18
Its better to use a custom PageAdapter as you don't have to make your pages inherit from a base class. – mcintyre321 Aug 12 at 15:29
vote up 2 vote down

I have tested many ways to remove the load of view state from the page and between all hacks and some software out there the only thing that it is truly scalable is the StrangeLoops As10000 appliance. Transparent, no need to change the underlying application.

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vote up 2 vote down

As previously stated, I have used the database to store the ViewState in the past. Although this works for us, we don't come close to 2 million unique visitors per hour.

I think a hardware solution is definitely the way to go, whether using the StrangeLoop products or another product.

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vote up 2 vote down

The following works quite well for me:

string vsid;

protected override object LoadPageStateFromPersistenceMedium()
{
  Pair vs = base.LoadPageStateFromPersistenceMedium() as Pair;
  vsid = vs.First as string;
  object result = Session[vsid];
  Session.Remove(vsid);
  return result;
}

protected override void SavePageStateToPersistenceMedium(object state)
{
  if (vsid == null)
  {
    vsid = Guid.NewGuid().ToString();
  }
  Session[vsid] = state;
  base.SavePageStateToPersistenceMedium(new Pair(vsid, null));
}
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vote up 0 vote down

Due to the typical organizational bloat, requesting new hardware takes eons, and requesting hardware that would involve a complete rewire of our current setup would probably get some severe resistance from the engineering department.

I really need to come up with a software solution, because that's the only world I have some control over.

Yay for Enterprise :(

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vote up 0 vote down

I've tried to find some of the products I had researched in the past that works just like StrangeLoops (but software based) It looks like they went all out of business, the only thing from my list that still up there is ScaleOut but they are specialized in session state caching.

I understand how hard it is to sell hardware solutions to senior management but it is always a good idea to at least get management to accept listening to the hardware's sales rep. I am much rather putting some hardware that will present me with an immediate solution because it allows me (or buy me some time) to get some other real job done.

I understand, it really sucks but the alternative is to change your code for optimization and that would maybe cost a lot more than getting an appliance.

Let me know if you find another software based solution.

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vote up 0 vote down

I'm going to see if I can come up with a way to leverage our current State server to contain the viewstate in memory, I should be able to use the user session ID to keep things synched up between machines.

If I come up with a good solution, I'll remove any IP protected code and put it out for public use.

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Any specific reason you are not using the built in SessionPageStatePersister? msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/… – Mike Sep 7 '08 at 6:47
vote up 0 vote down

Oh no, red tape. Well this is going to be a tall order to fill. You mentioned here that you use a state server to serve your session state. How do you have this setup? Maybe you can do something similar here also?

Edit

Awh @Jonathan, you posted while I was typing this answer up. I think going that route could be promising. One thing is that it will definitely be memory intensive.

@Mike I don't think storing it in the session information will be a good idea, due to the memory intensiveness of viewstate and also how many times you will need to access the viewstate. SessionState is accessed a lot less often as the viewstate. I would keep the two separate.

I think the ultimate solution would be storing the ViewState on the client some how and maybe worth looking at. With Google Gears, this could be possible now.

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vote up 0 vote down

Have you considered if you really need all that viewstate? For example, if you populate a datagrid from a database, all the data will be saved in viewstate by default. However, if the grid is just for presenting data, you dont need a form a all, and hence no viewstate.

You only need viewstate when there is some interaction with the user through postbacks, and even then the actual form data may be sufficient to recreate the view. You can selectively disable viewstate for controls on the page.

You have a very special UI if you actually need 100K of viewstate. If you reduce the viewstate to what is absolutely necessary, it might turn out to be the easiest and most scalable to keep the viewstate in the page.

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vote up 0 vote down

Hello All,

I am an Account Executive with Strangeloop Networks and I want to thank Erick for sharing information on our technology.

Not only is Strangeloop Networks able to remove viewstate with our hardware appliance but we are typically improving application performance significantly for your clients whilst allowing you scale more effectively.

Strangeloop Networks is currently offering free evaluations of our technology to companies that see the value in using our AS1000 to automate and simplify time-consuming and expensive performance tuning tasks (like viewstate removal).

Feel free to get in touch if you want to find out more.

Regards,

Ryan Walsh Account Executive Strangeloop Networks Office: 604-639-8320 www.strangeloopnetworks.com

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vote up 0 vote down

I might have a simple solution for you in another post. It's a simple class to include in your app and a few lines of code in the asp.net page itself. If you combine it with a distributed caching system you could save a lot of dough as viewstate is large and costly. Microsoft’s velocity might be a good product to attach this method too. If you do use it and save a ton of money though I'd love a little mention for that. Also if you are unsure of anything let me know and I can talk with you in person.

Here is the link to my code. link text

If you are concerned with scaling then using the session token as a unique identifier or storing the state in session is more or less guaranteed to work in a web farm scenario.

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vote up 0 vote down

Store the viewstate in a session object and use a distributed cache or state service to store session seperate from the we servers such as microsofts velocity.

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vote up 0 vote down

I know this is a little stale, but I've been working for a couple of days on an opensource "virtual appliance" using squid and ecap to:

1.) gzip 2.) handle ssl 3.) replace viewstate with a token on request / response 4.) memcache for object caching

Anyways, it looks pretty promising. basically it would sit in front of the loadbalancers and should really help client performance. Doesnt seem to be very hard to set up either.

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vote up 0 vote down

I blogged on this a while ago - the solution is at http://www.adverseconditionals.com/2008/06/storing-viewstate-in-memcached-ultimate.html

This lets you change the ViewState provider to one of your choice without having to change each of your Page classes, by using a custom PageAdapter. I stored the ViewState in memcached. In retrospect I think storing it in a database or on disk is better - we filled memcached up very quickly. Its a very low friction solution.

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