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Measure Time Invoking ASP.NET MVC Controller Actions

Some users of an MVC 4 app are experiencing sporadic slowness. Presumably not every user reports that problem every time it happens to them.

My thought is to measure the time spent in each controller action and log details of action invocations that exceed a prescribed time to facilitate further analysis (to rule in or rule out a server/code issue).

Is there a convenient way to hook in to perform such measurements so that I can avoid adding instrumentation code to each action? I'm not currently using IOC for this project and would hesitate to introduce it just to solve this issue.

Is there a better way to tackle this type of problem?

like image 211
Eric J. Avatar asked Jul 05 '12 22:07

Eric J.


3 Answers

Could you create a global action filter? Something like this:

public class PerformanceTestFilter : IActionFilter
{
    private Stopwatch stopWatch = new Stopwatch();

    public void OnActionExecuting(ActionExecutingContext filterContext)
    {
        stopWatch.Reset();
        stopWatch.Start();
    }

    public void OnActionExecuted(ActionExecutedContext filterContext)
    {
        stopWatch.Stop();
        var executionTime = stopWatch.ElapsedMilliseconds;
        // Do something with the executionTime
    }
}

and then add it to your GlobalFilters collection in `Application_Start()'

GlobalFilters.Filters.Add(new PerformanceTestFilter());

You can get details about the controller being tested from the filterContext parameter.

UPDATE

Adding the filter to the GlobalFilters collection directly will create a single instance of the filter for all actions. This, of course, will not work for timing concurrent requests. To create a new instance for each action, create a filter provider:

public class PerformanceTestFilterProvider : IFilterProvider
{
    public IEnumerable<Filter> GetFilters(ControllerContext controllerContext, ActionDescriptor actionDescriptor)
    {
        return new[] {new Filter(new PerformanceTestFilter(), FilterScope.Global, 0)};
    }
}

Then instead of adding the filter directly, rather add the filter provider in Application_Start():

FilterProviders.Providers.Add(new PerformanceTestFilterProvider());
like image 60
Kevin Aenmey Avatar answered Nov 17 '22 08:11

Kevin Aenmey


I usually add this simple code to the bottom of my Layout view:

<!-- Page generated in @((DateTime.UtcNow - HttpContext.Current.Timestamp.ToUniversalTime()).TotalSeconds.ToString("F4")) s -->

Outputs something like:

<!-- Page generated in 0.4399 s -->

This starts measuring when the HttpContext is created (according to the documentation), and stops right before writing to output, so it should be pretty accurate.

It might not work for all use cases (if you want to measure child actions, or ignore the time outside the MVC action, etc.), but it's easy to paste into a view.

For more advanced diagnostics, I used to use Glimpse.

like image 4
Tom Pažourek Avatar answered Nov 17 '22 08:11

Tom Pažourek


Try ASP.NET 4.5 Page Instrumentation

It instruments page rendering: The time of your app might be spent in the controller, but there are lots of times where it is spent in the viewrendering. Especially if you have lots of partials and html helpers.

like image 1
Mathias F Avatar answered Nov 17 '22 08:11

Mathias F