I guess I can answer my own question:

So let's say our page is 50k. We have 1000 users on a server. With each user
having 100 click throughs before cleanup.

So I figure roughly (51200x100) * 1000 = 5,120,000,000

So 1000 users clicking 100 times each on a 50k page will take up 5 GB of
space.

The above scenario is pretty far fetched!

Does anyone know how page cleanup occurs?

Thanks, Graeme.


Graeme Knight wrote:
> 
> Hi. I hope this appropriate for this forum.
> 
> I am writing a fairly heavy AJAX rich application with two pages - A login
> page and a work page. I was interested in progress so far regarding
> serialized page state, so I tracked the size of my page map file as I
> clicked around the application. Below is the size change in the file for
> my single user. I would like to know if this is as expected as I have no
> metrics from any other place - perhaps you have experience.
> 
> Each value is the size of the page file in kilobytes after each click of a
> link:
> 
> 5.9
> 25.5
> 49.3
> 71.9
> 95.7
> 116.4
> 140.2          <-------- so I see my page map file is growing as I assumed
> it would.
> 
> My file therefore changed by the following amount each click, indicating
> that my page is around the 22 kilobyte mark:
> 
> 19.6
> 23.8
> 22.6
> 23.8
> 20.7
> 23.8
> 
> Does this sound about right? Is there something wrong with the growth of
> the file? Is it excessive? 
> 
> When does the file cleanup?
> 
> Thanks for any input, Graeme.
> 

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