what are the measures which reflects a highly scalable and with high performance asp.net form.
like time in seconds to load the page?
time in seconds to do data actions like Add delete.
page size.
what are the measures which reflects a highly scalable and with high performance asp.net form.
like time in seconds to load the page?
time in seconds to do data actions like Add delete.
page size.
This is a very open ended question. Performance and scalability can mean a whole host of different things. Serving a page quickly, or having it render in the browser quickly, is just one aspect of this. Tools such as Fiddler, YSlow etc can help you look at the time it takes a page, and all its assets (images, scripts etc) to get to the browser and become useful to the user, but this won't tell you whether your site can serve 10s, 100, 1000s or millions of users.
To determine the scalability of your site you need to start looking at profiling tools, such as those that ship in VS.NET. You'll be looking at numbers such as requests per second, CPU load, disk saturation. Generally, you'll want to understand what your scale unit is - how many users each of your servers can support at some given load (e.g. 80% CPU) before you need to go buy another server.
Finally, your system isn't scalable if you can't add new servers, or add new resources to your existing server (e.g. memory disk), to see an improvement. You need to know that your architecture supports being scaled out or scaled up.
If I were you I'd...
update from your comments to other answers you appear to be concerned about HOW to you should time stuff.
To use Fiddler for performance measurements look at this: http://www.fiddler2.com/fiddler/Perf/
To use IE's developer tools for measuring perf look here: http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/ie/aa740478
To use the Chrome developer tools look here: http://code.google.com/chrome/devtools/docs/overview.html
However, I really like Fiddler. Not only will it allow you to see performance, it can record the HTTP requests and then generate VS.NET Web Tests. This allows you to create a set of performance tests based upon real user interactions. As you change your code you can re-test and look for perf improvements.
You should look into some simple but useful tips on the Web that are highly recommended a combination of all of these will give you different results.
Front End Pro Tips
http://developer.yahoo.com/performance/rules.html
ASP.NET Pro Tips
http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/magazine/cc163854.aspx
ASP.NET White Paper
http://www.asp.net/ajaxlibrary/GetFile.aspx?Page=Building-High-Performance-Websites&File=Building%20High%20Performance%20Web%20Applications.pdf
There are a few books also.
http://www.amazon.com/High-Performance-Web-Sites-Essential/dp/0596529309
http://my.safaribooksonline.com/book/-/9781849690683
Avoid session state.
Reduce view-state.
Employ caching wherever you can: page, assets, controls, data, etc.
And as Martin suggests, establish baseline acceptance so you know what 'too slow' means.