Frank, here are my thoughts as far as performance optimization is concerned.
I have solved my company's dreaded performance problems, thanks to
FusionReactor and good advice from this group and more specifically Charlie
Arehart. Thank you all. :-)

1. Get FusionReactor. Trust me, you will never use ColdFusion without
FusionReactor next time. I guarantee it.For 300 dollars you will not go
wrong.

2. FusionReactor will let you monitor all requests i.e. running or
completed. So you can look at what requests took lot of time.

3. Even better, if a page is running slow, you can go and view exactly on
which line number the code is stuck executing. Brilliant feature to solve
performance problems. I love it.

4. You can view system metrics to see your servers health like memory, cpu
usage, currently running request count all in one screen.

5. You can kill a request. Worst case scenario. There are exceptions but
still there is an option.

I can just go on like that. No kidding about that. Its an awesome tool for
CFers.

Now to the other important point. You didnt mention much about your
configuration. How much memory you have available? things like that. If you
can tell us that, we can help you better.

Now you do say, its because of images in pdf. So let me ask you this, are
you using local images or images from a url. If you are not using local
images, then look at localurl = "yes" attribute that was added to cfdocument
in CF 8/9.

I would also look at the image you are using and check for the famous issue
posted by Rupesh Kumar
http://www.rupeshk.org/blog/index.php/2007/12/images-and-cfdocument-performance/

<http://www.rupeshk.org/blog/index.php/2007/12/images-and-cfdocument-performance/>Finally,
have you looked at any of the logs in ColdFusion to see anything obvious?

Let me know if you have questions.

HTH

<Ajas Mohammed />
http://ajashadi.blogspot.com
We cannot become what we need to be, remaining what we are.
No matter what, find a way. Because thats what winners do.
You can't improve what you don't measure.
Quality is never an accident; it is always the result of high intention,
sincere effort, intelligent direction and skillful execution; it represents
the wise choice of many alternatives.


On Mon, Jan 31, 2011 at 8:12 PM, Frank Moorman
<[email protected]>wrote:

> All,
>
> The last month I have encountered a few performance issues. About 3 times a
> week I am getting a "The Request has exceeded the maximum time limit." It is
> happening on different pages and different tags. I know I can probably
> increase the global timeout value, but I would rather fix any real issue
> instead.
>
> Here is the question... We are on a small budget, I can get the owner to
> spring some cash, if it is really necessary. What would be my best option to
> find out the root cause of the issues? We are using CF9 Standard. I know the
> performance monitor in enterprise is decent, but for the $6000 upgrade cost,
> he won't be happy if it does not get me to the right results. (he'll deal
> with it, but I wouldn't like spending that much if I don't get my answer.)
>
> Is fusion reactor a better choice than the CF9 Enterprise upgrade?
>
> Does anyone else know other good choices?
>
> Right now my *guess* is that our large picture based pdf files are being
> created at the same time limiting overall resources slowing down the other
> pages. It would be nice to see what the resources are on the machine at the
> time of the error. To add to the complexity, IIS and MySQL are all running
> on the same server. (It is a small enough site, I have never seen more the
> 300MB of RAM allocated to MySQL.)
>
> Thanks,
> Frank
>
>
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