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Hi all. I'm trying to implement a limited web crawler in C# (for a few hundred sites only) using HttpWebResponse.GetResponse() and Streamreader.ReadToEnd() , also tried using StreamReader.Read() and a loop to build my HTML string.

I'm only downloading pages which are about 5-10K.

It's all very slow! For example, the average GetResponse() time is about half a second, while the average StreamREader.ReadToEnd() time is about 5 seconds!

All sites should be very fast, as they are very close to my location, and have fast servers. (in Explorer takes practically nothing to D/L) and I am not using any proxy.

My Crawler has about 20 threads reading simultaneously from the same site. Could this be causing a problem?

How do I reduce StreamReader.ReadToEnd times DRASTICALLY?

Thanks! Roey

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WebClient's DownloadString is a simple wrapper for HttpWebRequest, could you try using that temporarily and see if the speed improves? If things get much faster, could you share your code so we can have a look at what may be wrong with it?

EDIT:

It seems HttpWebRequest observes IE's 'max concurrent connections' setting, are these URLs on the same domain? You could try increasing the connections limit to see if that helps? I found this article about the problem:

By default, you can't perform more than 2-3 async HttpWebRequest (depends on the OS). In order to override it (the easiest way, IMHO) don't forget to add this under section in the application's config file:

<system.net>
  <connectionManagement>
     <add address="*" maxconnection="65000" />
  </connectionManagement>
</system.net>
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Tried using WebClient, same results (average times have not changed). I should also mention that I have a 1.5MBPS connection with an average d/l speed of 180KBPS I was thinking that maybe 20 threads all calling StreamReader.Read at the same time could have something to do with it? Or is this irrelevant? – Roey May 23 at 11:59

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