Saturday, January 31, 2009

SPDisposeCheck v1.3.1 is released

Hi,

SPDisposeCheck is a tool to help SharePoint Developers follow memory management best practices when using the SharePoint API with IDisposable objects including SPSite and SPWeb.

This tool Can be downloadable at http://code.msdn.microsoft.com/SPDisposeCheck

Go through below site for more information.

Source:http://blogs.msdn.com/pandrew/archive/2009/01/29/spdisposecheck-v1-3-1-is-released.aspx


Saturday, January 24, 2009

Setting custom property to the webpart - usercontrol

There are occasions when it may be necessary to provide web part users with a richer interface for setting custom properties than SharePoint provides out-of-the-Box

Setting up the custom properties for a webpart is very easy and straight
farward approach.

Recently i came acorss requirement in one of my webpart i need to set the custom property.
we usually go for usercontrol for better look and easily maintainable instead of writing entire code in webpart itself.
In my scenario i have one usercontrol form which has a cancel button, on clicking on cancel the redirection happens basing on the configurable property.
So for this usercontrol i need to pass the custom property value, i am getting the value in webpart but had very tough time trying to pass the value to the usercontrol.


But after tweaking my head at last got succeded by doing

1. Not enabling the click event for the Cancel button in usercontrol itself, declare the click event for the usercontrol in webpart itself
2. In the create child controls mehtod find the cancel button Id, and writing the event for the cancel button

Code:

publice string _navigateUrl=string.empty;

public class CustomWebpartProperties : System.Web.UI.WebControls.WebParts.WebPart
{
UserControl customUsercontrol ;
[WebBrowsable(true), WebDisplayName("Navigate Url"),
WebDescription("set the path")]
public string CustomURL
{
get
{
return _navigateUrl;
}
set
{
_navigateUrl = value;
}
}
Button btnCancel;
public override ToolPart[] GetToolParts()
{

ToolPart[] allToolParts = new ToolPart[3];
WebPartToolPart standardToolParts = new WebPartToolPart();
CustomPropertyToolPart customToolParts = new CustomPropertyToolPart();

allToolParts[0] = standardToolParts;
allToolParts[1] = customToolParts;
allToolParts[2] = new CustomToolPart();

return allToolParts;
}







protected override void CreateChildControls()
{
customUsercontrol = (UserControl)Page.LoadControl(@"/wpresources/TesUsercontrol.ascx");

btnCancel = (Button)UserControlContactUsByEmail.FindControl("btnCancel");
btnCancel.Click += new EventHandler(btnCancel_Click);


base.Controls.Add(customUsercontrol);
base.CreateChildControls();
}

protected override void Render(HtmlTextWriter writer)
{
writer.Write(NavigateUrl);
customUsercontrol.RenderControl(writer);
}

void btnCancel_Click(object sender, EventArgs e)
{
//redirection code
SPUtility.Redirect(NavigateUrl, SPRedirectFlags.UseSource, HttpContext.Current);
}

}

This class is used to set the new custom tool part and provides the user to enter the
value for url.
public class CustomToolPart : Microsoft.SharePoint.WebPartPages.ToolPart
{
Label lbl;
Panel customToolPart;
TextBox txt;


protected override void CreateChildControls()
{
customToolPart = new Panel();
txt = new TextBox();
txt.ID = "tb";

lbl = new Label();
lbl.ID = "lbl";
lbl.Text = "Navigate Url";

customToolPart.Controls.Add(lbl);
customToolPart.Controls.Add(new LiteralControl("
"));
customToolPart.Controls.Add(txt);
Controls.Add(customToolPart);
base.CreateChildControls();
}

public override void ApplyChanges()
{
ContactUsByEmail wp = (ContactUsByEmail)this.ParentToolPane.SelectedWebPart;
wp.NavigateUrl = txt.Text;
//Button btnClick = (Button)wp.FindControl("btnCancel");
//btnClick.Click += new EventHandler(btnClick_Click);
}

}


shoot a mail to shreecanth@gmail.com if you need any further assistance.

Sunday, January 18, 2009

Best Practices: SharePoint Object Model for Performance Tuning

While working with SharePoint object model, most of developers will use SPWeb, SPSite, SPList objects intensively.

Some of developers who reported performance issues in their production environment after their project deployment. Their code works well in most of the scenarios but whenever the data get increases then there might be potential performance hits because of not handling the APIs properly.

In this post I will give information about some common methods that we are using in most of the scenarios and very important points that we need to remember in perspective of application’s performance. We do have two cool MSDN articles gives information about the best practices with SharePoint object model and I will recommend you all to go through those articles as well. Also we do have an excellent blog by Roget Lamb by giving the detailed information of Dispose Patterns with examples.

Best Practices: Common Coding Issues When Using the SharePoint Object Model

Best Practices: Using Disposable Windows SharePoint Services Objects

Roger Lamb’s cool post about SharePoint 2007 and WSS 3.0 Dispose Patterns by Example

Lots of situations where we will use APIs for retrieving information about Lists and List Items. In SharePoint, lists are the objects storing large amount of data. So we need to be little cautious while working with those APIs, because internally those APIs are calling some SQL queries to pull the data which has been stored the SharePoint Content DBs.

The performance issues may happen in some cases if numbers of lists are very high or in some cases total number of lists will be less but the items will be very large.

First we can take a look at different approaches of getting SPList instance and we can choose the best method to increase the performance. We have more than one method or property which will return the same result. For Eg: SPList.Item.Count & SPList.ItemCount will return the number of items, so here we need to decide which one need to opt in our code implementation to enhance the performance.

Scenario 1 : Retrieve SPList instance

SPWeb.Lists (“name”) – Not Good

using (SPSite site = new SPSite(strSite))

{

using (SPWeb web = site.OpenWeb())

{

SPList oList = web.Lists ["MyList"]

}

}

In this case, it loads the metadata* of the all lists in that specific SPWeb object. Then it does SPList.Title comparison with metadata of all the lists returned and then it returns the matching list from the SPWeb.Lists collection.

SPWeb.GetList (string strUrl) – Good

using (SPSite site = new SPSite(strSite))

{

using (SPWeb web = site.OpenWeb())

{

SPList oList = web.GetList("http://Site/list/AllItem.aspx")

}

}

In this case, first retrieves the list GUID from the url (database hit), then it loads the metadata* for that specific list.

metadata * = list of all information of List like its schema, fields info, content type info, column and items count.

Consider a scenario of a SharePoint site which contains 1000 lists.

If we use SPWeb.GetList(), it will load the SPList by finding out the exact GUID of that SPList from the SharePoint content DB and loads the metadata.

But if that is the scenario with SPWeb.Lists[“MyList”] then, SPWeb.Lists will load the metadata of all the 1000 lists in memory and then it does SPList.Title ( here it is “MyList”) comparison with metadata of all the lists returned and then it returns the matching list from the SPWeb.Lists collection.

If you debug the code in winDbg then you can find out the GC Heap size and then you can realize how badly it is affecting the performance of your application, sometimes for each SPList it will take some MB's.

So now we can consider this matter while writing code and use SPWeb.GetList() instead of using SPWeb.Lists[“MyList”].

Scenario 2 : Retrieve SPListItem

SPList.Items[int idx] – Not Good

using (SPSite site = new SPSite(strSite))

{

using (SPWeb web = site.OpenWeb())

{

SPList oList = web.GetList("http://Site/list/AllItem.aspx");

for(int idx =0; idx<>

{

string strLstItemName = oList.Items[idx].Name;

}

}

}

In this case, for each iteration oList.Item[idx] will load a SPListItemCollection. Eg: consider a list has 1000 list items. So whenever this code executes, for each iteration it will create a separate SPListItemCollection and it will create a huge memory consumption in the GC Heap by creating 1000 SPListItemCollection instances

SPListItemCollection[int idx] - Good

using (SPSite site = new SPSite(strSite))

{

using (SPWeb web = site.OpenWeb())

{

SPList oList = web.GetList("http://Site/list/AllItem.aspx");

SPListItemCollection oListItems = oList.Items;

for(int idx =0; idx<>

{

string strLstItemName = oListItems[idx].Name;

}

}

}

In this case, we can see the the only code change between this one and the not good one is, here we are first taking all the items from the list and populating it in a SPListItemCollection. And then we are iterating only that SPListeItemCollection and finding out the specific list item. Here the advantage is that, in the memory this code will load only one SPListItemCollection.

Scenario 3 : Retrieve SPListItem in Event Handlers

SPListItem – Not Good

public override void ItemAdded(SPItemEventProperties properties)

{

using (SPSite oSite = new SPSite(properties.WebUrl))

{

using (SPWeb oWeb = oSite.OpenWeb())

{

SPList oList = oWeb.Lists[properties.ListId];

SPListItem oListItem = oList.GetItemByUniqueId(properties.ListItemId);

}

}

}

In this case, we are unnecessarily giving extra load to the memory by adding so many memory consuming APIs. For each iteration, oList.Item[idx] will load a SPListItemCollection. Please see the Good method below.

SPListItem – Good

public override void ItemAdded(SPItemEventProperties properties)

{

SPListItem oItem = properties.ListItem;

}

In this case, we have reduced lots of code and it will return the current ListItem by using this single line of code. Avoid creation of SPWeb & SPSite instances, because in an event handler those are directly accessble through the SPItemEventProperties.

Scenario 4 : Retrieve SPListItem Count

SPList.Item.Count – Not Good

using (SPSite site = new SPSite(strSite))

{

using (SPWeb web = site.OpenWeb())

{

SPList oList = web.GetList("http://Site/list/AllItem.aspx");

int iCount = oList.Items.Count;

}

}

In this case, oList.Items.Count, first it will load all the SPListItems in the memory and then it will find out the total count. For eg: Consider a list with 1000 list items. Then in this scenario the above code will load all the 1000 SPListItems and then return the total count, which will really create some performance hit.

SPList.Item.ItemCount – Good

using (SPSite site = new SPSite(strSite))

{

using (SPWeb web = site.OpenWeb())

{

SPList oList = web.GetList("http://Site/list/AllItem.aspx");

int iCount = oList.ItemsCount;

}

}

In this case, ItemCount is a part of metadata of the SPList object and this will get generated whenver we create a SPList instance. So there is no any overburden to the list to find out its total number of list items.

Scenario 5 : A list of recommended properties and methods

Not Good (replace this by the Good one)

Good

SPList.Items.Count

SPList.ItemsCount

SPList.Items[Guid]

SPList.GetItemByUniqueId(Guid)

SPList.Items[Int32]

SPList.GetItemById(Int32)

SPList.Items.GetItemById(Int32)

SPList.GetItemById(Int32)

Scenario 5 : Specify the RowLimit Property while using SPQuery Object

SPQuery.RowLimit Good

SPQuery oQuery = new SPQuery();

oQuery.RowLimit = 2000;

Performing an SPQuery without setting RowLimit will perform purely and will be fail on large lists. Thus it will be always recommend to specify the RowLimit between 1 and 2000. Because if we didn’t mention it, in SQL server it ill return the resullt by using “select top x from table”, here the x will be a very large number. So it would give a very good performance if we limit the row by explicilty setting the RowLimit.

Also, the query must use an indexed field or it will cause a complete table scan and WSS will block it on a large list.

I hope all these information will help the developers while writing the code in their custom SharePoint applications. Since in SharePoint most of the data are storing in the lists, the maintenance of those tables in DB as well through code (by querying through SharePoint APIs) will be always be a best practice. Also everybody can consider these points while reviewing the code.

Using Visual Studio TFS 2008, we can do the performance testing of methods by profiling the methods and we can do a load runner test by simulating the requests from users and the time. It is really a great facility in VS 2008.

Happy coding

Srikanth Sapelly