My team is currently building a new SaaS application for our company (Amilia.com). We are in "alpha" release and the application was built to be deployed on a web farm.
For our session provider, we are using Sql Server mode (in DEV and TEST) and it seems to be not "scalable", hence we are looking for the best solution for handling sessions in asp.net (mvc3 in our case). We are currently using Sql Server but we would like to switch to an other system due to license cost.
We target 20 000 [EDITED, was 100k before] concurrent users. In session, we store a GUID, a string and a Cart object (we try to keep it as little as possible, this object allows us to save 3 queries at each request).
Here are the different solutions I've found :
ASP.NET built-in solutions:
No session : impossible in our case (eliminated)
In-Proc Mode : can't be used in a webfarm. (eliminated)
StateServer Mode : can be used in a webfarm but if the server goes down, I lose all my sessions. (eliminated)
StateServer Mode with a PartitionResolver using multiple servers (http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-ca/magazine/cc163730.aspx#S8) If I undestand well, if one of these servers goes down, only a part of my users will lose their session.
SqlServer Mode : can be used in a webfarm, if the server goes down, I can recover my sessions but the process is quite slow. Moreover, that database becomes a bottleneck in case of heavy load.
SqlServer Mode with a PartitionResolver using multiple servers (http://www.bulletproofideas.net/2011/01/true-scale-out-model-for-aspnet-session.html) : If one of these servers goes down, only a part of my users will lose their session. If the user was doing nothing between the downtime, he will recover his previous session otherwise he will be redirected to the signin screen.
Custom solutions :
Use MongoDB as Session storage (http://www.adathedev.co.uk/2011/05/mongodb-aspnet-session-state-store.html) It seems to be a good tradeoff but my knowledge in nosql is quite rudimentary so I cannot see the cons.
Use Memcached : the problem will be the same as StateServer mode and if the memcached server goes down, all my sessions are lost. Furthermore, I think Memcached is not dedicated to store session state ?
Use distributed memcached like ScaleOut (http://highscalability.com/product-scaleout-stateserver-memcached-steroids) : seems to be the best solution but it costs money.
Use repcached and memcached (http://repcached.lab.klab.org/), I've never seen an implementation of that solution.
We could easily go to Ms Azure and use tools provided by it but we have only one application, so if Microsoft doubles the price, we immediately double our infrastructure cost (but that's another subject).
So, what's the best way or at least what's your opinion about this ?