Creating a More Efficient Web Site
Applies To: Windows Server 2003, Windows Server 2003 with SP1
Creating a page-load performance profile provides a systematic way of looking at a Web page and recording its performance characteristics across a wide area network (WAN). A page-load performance profile incorporates the distance, congestion, and limited bandwidth that 99 percent of your users experience when accessing your site.
Page-load performance profiles can help you determine the following:
The impact of not setting expiration dates.
Which files are taking the longest to load.
Whether you have unneeded file content.
Where to reduce and consolidate files.
How long your pages take to load (on first access and second access).
Whether you need to enable or adjust your compression configuration.
To perform a page-load test, install the appropriate tools to collect data so that you can develop performance profiles by analyzing HTTP traffic. Network Monitor is a protocol analyzer that looks into packet-level detail. For more information about obtaining and using this tool, see Network Monitor overview in Help and Support Center for Windows Server 2003.
After obtaining page-load performance profiles for your Web pages, you can use the performance data to identify changes that you can make in order to optimize the performance of the Web pages.