Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
Published byJack Tucker Modified over 9 years ago
1
SharePoint 2013 Performance Boost the Performance of SharePoint Today! SharePoint 2013 Performance Boost the Performance of SharePoint Today! Brian Culver
2
Special Thanks to our Platinum Sponsor …and our Gold Sponsor
3
About Brian Culver SharePoint Solutions Architect for Expert Point Solutions Based in Houston, TX Author SharePoint 2010 Unleashed Upcoming SharePoint 2013 Workflows Various White Papers Speaker and Blogger
4
Session Agenda Software Boundaries What is Performance? Infrastructure Performance Hardware Performance SharePoint Performance Testing Performance
5
Understand the tested (by Microsoft) performance and capacity limits of SharePoint General recommendations for average hardware and usage Many come from MSIT > 150,000 employees and vendors Very large amounts of content Globally accessed Meet various goals including: Backup and restore to meet standard SLAs Ensure good performance early on with low hardware standards and low knowledge requirements Allow configuration to scale and maintain decent performance SharePoint 2013 Software Boundaries http://technet.microsoft.com/en-us/library/cc262787.aspx SharePoint 2010 Software Boundaries http://technet.microsoft.com/en-us/library/cc262787(v=office.14).aspx SharePoint 2007 Software Boundaries http://technet.microsoft.com/en-us/library/cc262787(v=office.12).aspx Software Boundaries
6
What is Poor Performance? Increased end user response time Reduced overall system throughput
7
Infrastructure Performance Active Directory Exchange Desktops Network Topology WAN Optimization SharePoint Farm Web Front Ends Application Servers Database Servers
8
SharePoint Farm Performance 3-4 Web Servers per DC 8 Web Servers per SQL Server Bandwidth and Latency<1 ms 10 Application Pools per web server 20 web applications per farm Search: Indexing iFilters # of servers Scheduling and throttling of crawling “Boundaries” vs. “Supported” Test, Measure, and Re-test
9
Search Performance Crawl Time: How long does the overall time the crawl takes? Corpus Size: How big is the corpus size? Indexing Speed: How many documents are being indexed per second?
10
Search Performance Grouping content sources by speed Tuning crawling Protocol Authentication Choosing multithreaded iFilters Proper infrastructure Dedicated Query Apps vs Distributed Query Apps
11
SharePoint Farm Performance Authentication Performance # of round trips Processing speed of provider Fastest to Slowest Anonymous Claims Authentication Kerberos NTLM (Classic Windows Authentication Basic Forms and WebSSO ADFS In 2013, Claims is the default. Avoid Classic Authentication.
12
SharePoint Farm Performance Which Machines cause the bottleneck? Watch CPU Memory Disk I/O Network
13
SharePoint Farm Performance Requests per Second (RPS): How many requests you can service? RPS is used for measuring how many pages are delivered. It can measure how many searches are executed. Requests per Hour (RPH): Average user requests in an hour. Page Time (TTLB): How long it takes to deliver a page back to the client? Used in conjunction with RPS. For example, our farm needs to deliver 100 RPS and pages should reach the client within 5 seconds.
14
SharePoint Farm Performance Understand SharePoint workload Use RAID 10 over other RAID ## And yes, RAID 10 for SharePoint is better than RAID 5, 50, 60, etc. Separate your database files ** TempDB ** is the most heavily used DB ** Create a TempDB per proc Usage database is very busy Search database is very busy Log files separate from data files Place different databases on different volumes SQL Server files separate from other uses (e.g. OS files) Separate your files according to I/O workload. A single volume may be fast enough to handle several databases.
15
Common Performance Problems Large Lists Lots of Web Parts importing non-cached data from various places Cross-List queries and CBQ Web Parts Too Deep Site Structures Too many sites in a site collection Too many site collections in a Content DB Too many ACLs
16
SharePoint Performance We will discuss the following: Large List Control Performance Throttling Developer Dashboard Great for IT Pros and Developers alike Caching IIS 7.0/8.0 Content Query Web Part
17
Large List Control So what is new? Lists and Libraries hold 50,000,000 items Recommended List View Size: Why 2000 or 5000? Server Overload Solution: List View Throttling
18
Limits the number of list items returned per view. Operations that exceed this limit are prohibited. Recommended to configure at the Web Application level. Default List View Threshold values: 5000 for Users 20000 for Auditors and Administrator
19
List View Throttling List can be configured individually via API Daily Time Window for Large Queries: Turn off Throttling during a daily window Comes with a Warning List View Lookup Threshold: How many complex fields are allowed Lookup, Person/Group, or workflow status fields Result in JOINs
20
Performance Throttling HTTP Request Monitoring and Throttling: Throttle Performance during high server load SharePoint monitors performance counters and uses threshhold values Get 503 request errors Timer Job fails to start PUT request still allowed Search can trigger performance throttling and cause issues
21
Performance Throttling Protects the server during peak loads. Monitors: Available Memory CPU % ASP.NET Queue Wait time in queue Checked every 5 seconds 3 over limit start throttling, logs events 1 below limit stop throttling Configure via PowerShell and Object Model Add/Remove counters via Object Model
22
List View Throttling and Load Performance Throttling Demo
23
List View Throttling
26
List View Throttling – Gone in SP2013
27
List View Throttling
28
Caching Page Output Cache: for generated HTML markup for future requests Cache frequently used Lists and reduce round trips to the database Object Cache: for common objects and query results Content Query Web Part List Views Disk-Based (BLOB) Cache: for commonly requested files on WFE disks Automatically cache BLOBs and reduce round trips to the content databases
29
Object Cache Settings Configure caching via the Site Settings Configure caching via web.config for Web Applications. Web.config overrides the Site Settings.
30
Output Cache Settings Configure caching via the Site Settings Configure caching via web.config for Web Applications. Web.config overrides the Site Settings.
31
Publishing Site Output Cache (Site Output Cache) Now configurable per Site/Web Use the Publishing Images Library (Images) Use Pages Publishing Library (Pages)
32
Caching Demo
33
IIS 7.0/8.0 Performance Design pages for fast downloading and rendering Lazy loading of large JavaScript files Clustering images Reduce image requests Reduce the number of secured items in pages Each secured request results in two roundtrips Validate credentials Enumeration of groups the user belongs to Leverage IIS Compression Static Compression Dynamic Compression
34
IIS 7.0/8.0 Performance Reduce amount of data sent to client and reduce the number of trips a browser makes. View State Caching and Reduce Payload. Cache View State to be used in subsequent post-backs Minify JavaScript Remove redundant white spaces and new lines Reduce File Requests Merge multiple JavaScript/CSS files in one request Microsoft didn’t get the memo on this one in SP2013
35
IIS 7.0/8.0 Performance Increase static compression level to 9 and dynamic to 9 APPCMD.EXE set config -section:httpCompression - [name='gzip'].staticCompressionLevel:9 -[name='gzip'].dynamicCompressionLevel:9 Change dynamic compression CPU utilization threshold range from 100- 100% (This effectively disables it) APPCMD.EXE set config –section:httpCompression /dynamicCompressionDisableCpuUsage:100 APPCMD.EXE set config –section:httpCompression /dynamicCompressionEnableCpuUsage:100 Enable caching before insertion into page output cache APPCMD.EXE set config –section:urlCompression /dynamicCompressionBeforeCache:true
36
IIS Compression
37
Content Search Web Part Powerful web part for searching, aggregating and rolling up information from literally any source. Best Performance period! Security Trimming Cross Site Collection scoping Very flexible Use Display Templates to customize output.
38
Content Query Web Part Powerful web part for aggregating and rolling up information from various sources. Designed to leverage the object cache by caching the query results. In MOSS 2007, Disabled by default In SP2010 and SP2013, Enabled by default Best performance when content shares the same permissions and doesn’t change often.
39
Custom Code Common cause for poor performance Custom inefficient features
40
Testing Performance SharePoint Load/Performance Testing Population tools, performance tuning techniques
41
Developer Dashboard Allows monitoring page loads and performance Information: Times to render page Page checkout level DB query info Web part processing time Any critical events or alerts
42
Developer Dashboard
43
Always ON for all users ON Completely OFF for all users OFF NOTE: Ondemand is only available in SP2010 $csvc = [Microsoft.SharePoint.Administration.SPWebService]::ContentService; $devdash = $csvc.DeveloperDashboardSettings ; $devdash.DisplayLevel = "On“; $devdash.Update();
44
Developer Dashboard Demo
45
Visual Studio Test Suite Test throughout your testing lifecycle of planning, testing and tracking your progress Use with TFS to automate builds, deployments and testing
46
Fiddler Great, light weight tool. Provides quick overview of the website performance. Free (still …) It can also record scripts that you can use in Visual Studio Test Suite. neXpert: Fiddler Add-on that checks for classic performance best practices and produces a HTML report on the issues found in a Fiddler capture.
47
YSlow Analyzes web pages and suggests ways to improve their performance based on a set of rules for high performance web pages. Grades web page based rulesets. Suggests performance improvements, summarizes page components, statistics for the page, and provides tools for performance analysis.
48
Questions ? ? ? ?
49
Constructive Feedback Is Appreciated Great information, but would like to have learned more about [Insert Topic] Brian – Your presentation was … Good Demos! Thanks!
50
Thank you! Twitter: @spbrianculver E-mail: brian.culver@expertpointsolutions.com brian.culver@expertpointsolutions.com Blog: http://blog.expertpointsolutions.com/ http://blog.expertpointsolutions.com/
51
http://technet.microsoft.com/en-us/library/jj721440.aspx
Similar presentations
© 2025 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.