vote up 1 vote down star

For instance, with a level of IIS compression set to 9, the web browsing is significantly faster. However, I also have a Web Services application on the box, which transfers significant amounts of data (e.g. 3MB payload is typical), it actually takes 20-30% longer for the data to get to the client, because the CPU on the server takes a while to compress it.

Is there a rule of thumb for the level of IIS compression vs amount of data transfered?

Anecdotal experience is welcome as well.

flag

2 Answers

vote up 0 vote down

Doubtful, because there are so many variables:

  • client/server connection speed
  • CPU speed and workload
  • Type of data (entropy)
  • ...

I expect the connection is fairly speedy in your use case? Compressing 3MB shouldn't take all that long after all.

link|flag
vote up 0 vote down check

Ok, I ran some benchmarks and no matter how you slice it, turning off compression results in faster performance for my use case. Here are the result for a web service call that returns 3.2 megabytes of data (mostly list of things deserialized into byte arrays)

Compression  Bandwidth  Time
Level       (KB)       (seconds)
9   		1,174	   4.2
8   		1,174	   2.2
7   		1,172	   1.625
6   		1,174      1.5
5   		1,181	   1.39
4   		1,213	   1.344
3   		1,441	   1.375
2   		1,490	   1.344
1   		1,548	   1.312
0   		1,554	   1.312

No         3,226	  1.266
Compression

The CPU is pretty pegged at level 9 for the duration of the web service call, not so bad at level 8 and anything beneath that is in single digits utilization.

link|flag

Your Answer

Get an OpenID
or

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