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I'm using Mvc-Mini-Profiler (what a great product!). Using my ordinary web browser everything seems to work fine but as soon as I use my own http client (basic http 1.1 without cookie support) the amount of X-MiniProfiler-Ids in the http header increases. This happens quite rapidly and becomes quite many in a short amount of time (11kB and above of data).

Can the lack of cookies make Mvc-Mini-Profiler work this way or could anything be wrong with my implementation?

2 Answers 2

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This is by design I think. Though we could improve the implementation a bit.

The X-MiniProfiler-Ids need to be "consumed", they only show up when profiling is enabled. The reason it works this way is so you can profile POST and redirects.

We probably should set some clear upper limit there (like 20 or so) - please post a bug for that.

However, since you never really plan to consume any profiling blocks for you HTTP client, I would recommend abandoning profiling if the useragent is your HTTP client.

You can do this by adding a conditional before:

// don't run if UserAgent is "my http client"
if(notMyUserAgent)
   MvcMiniProfiler.MiniProfiler.Start();  
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  • Thanks, bug reported as #99
    – m__
    Aug 29, 2011 at 5:37
1

Another option is to override the SqlServerStorage class and default the UserHasViewed field to true. This will keep the X-MiniProfiler-Id string down to a minimum.

public class MvcMiniProfilerStorage : SqlServerStorage
{
    public MvcMiniProfilerStorage(string connectionString) : base(connectionString)
    {
    }

    /// <summary>
    ///     Stores  to dbo.MiniProfilers under its ;
    ///     stores all child Timings and SqlTimings to their respective tables.
    /// </summary>
    public override void Save(MiniProfiler profiler)
    {
        const string sql =
            @"insert into MiniProfilers
        (Id,
         Name,
         Started,
         MachineName,
         [User],
         Level,
         RootTimingId,
         DurationMilliseconds,
         DurationMillisecondsInSql,
         HasSqlTimings,
         HasDuplicateSqlTimings,
         HasTrivialTimings,
         HasAllTrivialTimings,
         TrivialDurationThresholdMilliseconds,
         HasUserViewed)
select       @Id,
         @Name,
         @Started,
         @MachineName,
         @User,
         @Level,
         @RootTimingId,
         @DurationMilliseconds,
         @DurationMillisecondsInSql,
         @HasSqlTimings,
         @HasDuplicateSqlTimings,
         @HasTrivialTimings,
         @HasAllTrivialTimings,
         @TrivialDurationThresholdMilliseconds,
         @HasUserViewed
where not exists (select 1 from MiniProfilers where Id = @Id)";
        // this syntax works on both mssql and sqlite

        using (DbConnection conn = GetOpenConnection())
        {
            int insertCount = conn.Execute(sql,
                new
                    {
                        profiler.Id,
                        Name = Truncate(profiler.Name, 200),
                        profiler.Started,
                        MachineName = Truncate(profiler.MachineName, 100),
                        User = Truncate(profiler.User, 100),
                        profiler.Level,
                        RootTimingId = profiler.Root.Id,
                        profiler.DurationMilliseconds,
                        profiler.DurationMillisecondsInSql,
                        profiler.HasSqlTimings,
                        profiler.HasDuplicateSqlTimings,
                        profiler.HasTrivialTimings,
                        profiler.HasAllTrivialTimings,
                        profiler.TrivialDurationThresholdMilliseconds,
                        // BUG: Too many X-MiniProfiler-Id headers cause
                        // Firefox to stop all requests
                        //
                        // This hack marks all entries as read so that
                        // they do not end up part of that header.
                        HasUserViewed = true
                    });

            if (insertCount > 0)
            {
                SaveTiming(conn, profiler, profiler.Root);
            }
        }
    }

    private static string Truncate(string s, int maxLength)
    {
        return s != null && s.Length >
                    maxLength ? s.Substring(0, maxLength) : s;
    }
}
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  • Clever solution, but does this require me to use an sql storage? Also, this prevents the user agents that can handle a large amount of x-mini-profiler-ids from operating "normally".
    – m__
    Oct 27, 2011 at 7:18
  • This approach could be used to override the MemoryStorage also, I just happened to post this code from my project. However, storing the data in a database does have its advantages MVC Mini Profiler Dashboard. Oct 31, 2011 at 23:57
  • To answer your second question: Yes, it would prevent normal functionality on clients that can handle the large number of x-mini-profiler-ids. Your other option would be to fork the Mvc-mini-profiler and make the fix to the original code or remove the x-mini-profiler-id headers for clients that can't support them :( Nov 1, 2011 at 0:06

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