ASP.NET: Compress ViewState

我与影子孤独终老i 提交于 2019-12-03 03:36:54

The simple answer might not be what you want to hear. Too often, controls on the page have viewstate by default when they really don't need it. It's a good idea to switch off viewstate until you know you're going to need it, and only switch it on for the (hopefully) few cases where you actually want to keep the view state.

  1. Avoid using ViewState
  2. Use compression on the IIS server.
  3. You can wireup something that will compress the viewstate into and out of a page by doing something like:
public abstract class PageBase : System.Web.UI.Page
{
    private ObjectStateFormatter _formatter = new ObjectStateFormatter();

    private static byte[] Compress( byte[] data )
    {
            var compressedData = new MemoryStream();
            var compressStream = new GZipStream(output, CompressionMode.Compress, true);
            compressStream.Write(data, 0, data.Length);
            compressStream.Close();
            return compressedData.ToArray();
    }
    private static byte[] Uncompress( byte[] data )
    {
            var compressedData = new MemoryStream();
            input.Write(compressedData, 0, compressedData.Length);
            input.Position = 0;
            var compressStream = new GZipStream(compressedData, CompressionMode.Decompress, true);
            var uncompressedData = new MemoryStream();
            var buffer = new byte[64];
            var read = compressStream.Read(buffer, 0, buffer.Length);

            while (read > 0)
            {
                uncompressedData.Write(buffer, 0, read);
                read = compressStream.Read(buffer, 0, buffer.Length);
            }
            compressStream.Close();
            return uncompressedData.ToArray();
    }
    protected override void SavePageStateToPersistenceMedium(object viewState)
    {
        var ms = new MemoryStream();
        _formatter.Serialize(ms, viewState);
        var viewStateBytes = ms.ToArray();
        ClientScript.RegisterHiddenField("__COMPRESSED_VIEWSTATE"
            , Convert.ToBase64String( Compress(viewStateArray)) );
    }
    protected override object LoadPageStateFromPersistenceMedium()
    {
        var compressedViewState = Request.Form["__COMPRESSED_VIEWSTATE"];
        var bytes = Uncompress( Convert.FromBase64String( compressedViewState ) );
        return _formatter.Deserialize( Convert.ToBase64String( bytes ) );
    }
}

I realize this is an old thread, but we have been using Telerik's RadCompression HttpModule for a while now and it works incredibly well at compressing ViewState, AJAX and Web Service responses. You can also cheat and save ViewState in session - good for low traffic sites.

http://www.telerik.com/help/aspnet-ajax/radcompression.html

Again, after some research into this I summarized my findings in a blog-post about Compressing View State.

To save a compressed View State, this is what I did:

protected override void SavePageStateToPersistenceMedium(object state) {
    SaveCompressedPageState(state);
}

private void SaveCompressedPageState(object state) {
    byte[] viewStateBytes;
    using(MemoryStream stream = new MemoryStream()) {
        ObjectStateFormatter formatter = new ObjectStateFormatter();
        formatter.Serialize(stream, state);
        viewStateBytes = stream.ToArray();
    }

    byte[] compressed = CompressionHelper.Compress(viewStateBytes);
    string compressedBase64 = Convert.ToBase64String(compressed);

    ClientScript.RegisterHiddenField(ViewStateFieldName, compressedBase64);
}

And for the loading-part, this code made it work for me:

protected override object LoadPageStateFromPersistenceMedium() {
    return LoadCompressedPageState();
}

private object LoadCompressedPageState() {
    string viewState = Request.Form[ViewStateFieldName];
    if(string.IsNullOrEmpty(viewState)) {
        return string.Empty;
    }

    byte[] decompressed = CompressionHelper.Decompress(viewState);
    string decompressedBase64 = Convert.ToBase64String(decompressed);

    ObjectStateFormatter formatter = new ObjectStateFormatter();
    return formatter.Deserialize(decompressedBase64);
}
Polaris878

Seb, ViewState is already compressed... that is what you are seeing... a compressed version of your controls. If you want less overhead, then don't use viewstate :)

Viewstate use should be kept to a minimum!

This is an XML-lized visualization of your posted viewstate:

<viewstate>
  <Pair>
    <Pair>
      <String>1382774129</String>
    </Pair>
  </Pair>
</viewstate>
<controlstate>
  <HybridDictionary>
    <DictionaryEntry>
      <String>__ControlsRequirePostBackKey__</String>
      <ArrayList>
        <String>ctl00$ContentPlaceHolder_MainContent$RadBut1</String>
        <String>ctl00$ContentPlaceHolder_MainContent$RadBut1</String>
        <String>ctl00$ContentPlaceHolder_MainContent$RadBut2</String>
        <String>ctl00$ContentPlaceHolder_MainContent$RadBut2</String>
        <String>ctl00$ContentPlaceHolder_MainContent$RadBut3</String>
        <String>ctl00$ContentPlaceHolder_MainContent$RadBut4</String>
        <String>ctl00$ContentPlaceHolder_MainContent$RadBut4</String>
        <String>ctl00$ContentPlaceHolder_MainContent$RadBut5</String>
        <String>ctl00$ContentPlaceHolder_MainContent$RadBut5</String>
      </ArrayList>
    </DictionaryEntry>
  </HybridDictionary>
</controlstate>

Basically just a few radiobuttons which like to know of their existance. (browsers don't send an <input type="radio"> field with the postdata if it is not checked). This is pretty minimal already.

It can likely be compressed by hooking in the load/save methods or HTTP modules, but this may not be really practical nor really needed.


In case the viewstate is much bigger in your real app, avoid getting objects in the viewstate at all. This can be achieved by initializing the controls in the OnInit() or Page_Init() methods instead of the default Page_Load().

The rationale behind this can be found at http://weblogs.asp.net/infinitiesloop/archive/2006/08/03/Truly-Understanding-Viewstate.aspx and http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/ms972976.aspx

A quick summary:

  • ViewState is just the backing store for almost all control properties, including defaults.
  • After the defaults are set by OnInit(), the TrackViewState() method will is called.
  • Any subsequent changes (e.g. by Page_Load()) or an eventhandler, will be tracked and submitted to the client. This way those controls can restore their state at the next request.
  • Instead of relying at the framework to restore objects, restore objects in OnInit() when needed. (e.g. repopulating the options of a DropDownList from the database).

One exception:

If a control is dynamically added to the control tree, it plays a catch-up. Their OnInit() method may run at a later moment, causing those properties to end up in the viewstate after all. If the initialization of the control can't happen in OnInit(), setting EnableViewState="false" can be used as workaround.

Each time my viewstate grows unexpectedly, I'm using the "ViewState Decoder 2.2" app to find out what ended up in the viewstate. Often, it's not needed for the data to be there.

And a final word:

The viewstate is not used for repopulating forms!! Those values are already submitted with the postdata.

Compressing view state fails in certain cases: - If you are using update panel on page don’t use compression mode. - If somehow you are changing the view state in result of ICallBack code don’t use compression mode, as this will don’t reflect the correct view state on post back.

The best way to minimize the view state is just to not use it. It will cause you to do some extra work programming (repopulating control values etc on post back, but it will save you on the amount of information you send to the browser). You can't tamper with it.

Here is a link to the view state on MSDN:

http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/ms972976.aspx

Here is a link describing some best practices:

http://mnairooz.blogspot.com/2007/01/aspnet-20-viewstate-and-good-practices.html

And One on disabling the ViewState:

http://www.codeproject.com/KB/aspnet/ASPNET_Best_Practices.aspx

易学教程内所有资源均来自网络或用户发布的内容,如有违反法律规定的内容欢迎反馈
该文章没有解决你所遇到的问题?点击提问,说说你的问题,让更多的人一起探讨吧!