5

I have an ASP.Net application and I've noticed through using profilers that there is a sizable amount of processing that happens before my page even runs. In my application, we don't used viewstate, asp.Net session, and we probably don't require most of the overhead that comes of a consequence of using the asp.net page lifecycle. Is there some other class I can easily inherit from that will cut out all the Asp.Net stuff, and just let my handle writing to the page by myself?

I've heard that ASP.Net MVC can cut down page loads considerably, simply because it doesn't use the old asp.net lifecycle, and handles pages differently. Is there an easy way, maybe by simply having my web pages inherit some other class to take advantage of something like this. I would like a solution that works in ASP.Net 2.0 if at all possible.

0

3 Answers 3

10

Most articles I found where talking about using the Page as a base class and implementing functionality on top of that, it looks like you need to make your own MyPage class that implements IHttpHandler

From the MSDN article


using System.Web;

namespace HandlerExample { public class MyHttpHandler : IHttpHandler { // Override the ProcessRequest method. public void ProcessRequest(HttpContext context) { context.Response.Write("This is an HttpHandler Test.");
context.Response.Write("Your Browser:"); context.Response.Write("Type: " + context.Request.Browser.Type + ""); context.Response.Write("Version: " + context.Request.Browser.Version); }

  // Override the IsReusable property.
  public bool IsReusable
  {
     get { return true; }
  }

} }

Again, from the article: To use this handler, include the following lines in a Web.config file.


<configuration>
   <system.web>
      <httpHandlers>
         <add verb="*" path="handler.aspx" type="HandlerExample.MyHttpHandler,HandlerTest"/>
      </httpHandlers>
   </system.web>
</configuration>

I'd take a look at the source code for System.web.ui.page and take a look at what it does to guide you. My guess is that it mostly just calls the different methods in the asp.net page lifecycle in the right order. You'd do something similar by calling your own page_load from the ProcessRequest method. That would route to your individual implementation of your classes that implement your MyPage.

I've never thought of doing something like this before and it sounds pretty good since I really don't use any of the bloated webforms functionality. MVC may make this whole exercise futile, but it does seem pretty neat.

My Quick Example

new base:


using System.Web;
namespace HandlerExample
{
    // Replacement System.Web.UI.Page class
    public abstract class MyHttpHandler : IHttpHandler
    {
        // Override the ProcessRequest method.
        public void ProcessRequest(HttpContext context)
        {
            // Call any lifecycle methods that you feel like
            this.MyPageStart(context);
            this.MyPageEnd(context);
        }

    // Override the IsReusable property.
    public bool IsReusable
    {
        get { return true; }
    }

    // define any lifecycle methods that you feel like
    public abstract void MyPageStart(HttpContext context);
    public abstract void MyPageEnd(HttpContext context);

}

Implementation for the page:

// Individual implementation, akin to Form1 / Page1
public class MyIndividualAspPage : MyHttpHandler
{

    public override void MyPageStart(HttpContext context)
    {
        // stuff here, gets called auto-magically
    }

    public override void MyPageEnd(HttpContext context)
    {
        // stuff here, gets called auto-magically
    }
}

}

3

If you don't need all this "asp.net stuff", you may wish to implement a custom IHttpHandler. Afaik, there are no other standard IHttpHandlers to reuse except the Page class.

0

To do this you should start by looking at the System.Web.UI.PageHandlerFactory class and the corresponding System.Web.IHttpHandlerFactory interface.

From there you will probably look at the System.Web.IHttpHandler inferface and the System.Web.UI.Page class.

Basically you will write your own IHttpHandlerFactory that generates IHttpHandlers that handles the page requests.

3
  • Is this step optional? Everything on msdn written about this is geared towards making handlers to support custom extension like *.sample rather than *.aspx. Just curious, thanks
    – Allen Rice
    Feb 25, 2009 at 18:34
  • In the simplest case you don't need an IHttpHandlerFactory, for you can register a single IHttpHandler that handles all requests to a file type. By implementing an IHttpHandlerFactory you can look at the request and return different implementations as needed. Feb 25, 2009 at 20:59
  • ... This is what ASP.Net does using the PageHandlerFactory. Based on the requested url it will return an IHttpHandler that is implemented in the Page class with the same name. So instead of having one IHttpHandler that handles all requests to a file type you can have many. Feb 25, 2009 at 21:02

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.