RE: Performance settings

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From: Joe (anonymous_at_discussions.microsoft.com)
Date: 05/20/04


Date: Thu, 20 May 2004 16:46:04 -0700

Thanks mko
I will do that
Joe
>-----Original Message-----
>
>
> ----- Joe wrote: -----
>
> Thanks for your reply
>
> How many hits do you expect to be getting per day
seems to
> be the main criteria.
>
> (Assuming advertisement on radio and television
quite a
> few. Not really sure.)
>
> If your content is mainly static (yes it is) then
your
> hardware could easily handle the 100 000 plus
setting.
>
> (this would be connections correct?)
>
> In the Performance tab of your web site choose the
100 000 plus setting. NOTE: This may not be the right
setting see below.
>
> I would not bandwith or CPU throttle either, unless
there
> is some compelling reason to do so.
>
> (This left on the unlimited setting Correct?)
>
> Just leave the options to CPU and bandwith throttle
UNCHECKED in the Performance tab. Unless you are going to
get 100 000 hits trying to download a multi megabyte file?
That might slow things down a bit compared to displaying a
10-20kb HTML file.
>
> Its really worth downloading the microsoft web
applications stress testing tool and running windows
performance monitor to see what sort of bottlenecks your
site may generate, regards memory, bandwith, disk use
etc...
>
> Stress test tool.
> http://www.microsoft.com/downloads/details.aspx?
FamilyID=E2C0585A-062A-439E-A67D-
75A89AA36495&displaylang=en
>
> A good article on Tuning IIS
>
http://www.microsoft.com/technet/prodtechnol/windows2000ser
v/technologies/iis/maintain/optimize/iis5tune.mspx
>
>
>
> >-----Original Message-----
> >How many hits do you expect to be getting per day
seems
> to be the main criteria.
> >>If your content is mainly static then your
hardware could
> easily handle the 100 000 plus setting.
> >>I would not bandwith or CPU throttle either,
unless there
> is some compelling reason to do so.
> >.
> >
>.
>