Hi,
Very interesting...
can you give me a reply to this post, then suerly i will reply to your
question.

I have a web application in ASP.NET 1.0. its a single tier application. for
enhancing this web app, i have changed this application to  ASP.net 3.5 and
also i have re wrote  it into 3 tier + SOA architecture...

Now the application is 15 times slower than the older version ie application
which wroote in ASP.NET 1.0

Is any thing wrong there ?
This means, 3 tier architecture is the worst method for developing web
application using .NET paltform.

Thanks


On Sat, Jun 12, 2010 at 1:51 AM, Jayhawk <[email protected]> wrote:

> It seems this group has very little answering activity, so I will try
> elsewhere.
> I therefore will not read this group and not read any answer to my
> initial question.
>
> Thanks anyway :-)
>
> On 7 Jun., 18:31, Jayhawk <[email protected]> wrote:
> > I have existing code which takes commands over a pipe and returns
> > large amounts of data. I didliked the design which was not as compact
> > as I would like, so I rewrote it to use remoting. The resulting data
> > transfer speed is now 12 times slower than using the pipe.
> >
> > I do use a binary tcp channel. I make a singleton object available
> > which lets the remote client open a binary datafile (it is a hd video)
> > and request sequential blocks of data (frames) from the server. This
> > works well, but very slowly compared to just streaming the binary
> > data, using binary stream writer, over a pipe.
> > Note that currently both client and server runs on the same computer.
> >
> > The question is now if this is to be expected. Should one generally
> > avoid using remoting for datatransfer intensive tasks, or might I
> > simply be doing something silly somewhere?
>



-- 
"People who never make mistakes, never do anything."

dEv

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