Target-Time to render a single page

Author Message

Nabil Alimi

Tuesday 18 April 2006 3:43:20 am

Hi,

I was working on caching and I was wondering what <i>Total script time</i> is considered to be "good" render time.
The number of view pages and unique visitors will be very variable.

Actually, for a single user (myself :) ) I get :

<b>ini_load</b>
Load cache 0.0325 sec 10.7713% 8 0.0041 sec
<b>Mysql Total</b>
Mysql_queries 0.0080 sec 2.6489% 36 0.0002 sec
Looping result 0.0031 sec 1.0255% 29 0.0001 sec
Template Total 0.2367 sec 78.4% 2 0.1183 sec
Template load 0.0130 sec 4.2974% 2 0.0065 sec
Template processing 0.2233 sec 74.0103% 1 0.2233 sec
<b>override</b>
Cache load 0.0104 sec 3.4426% 2 0.0052 sec
Matching rules 0.0096 sec 3.1858% 12 0.0008 sec
Total script time: 0.3018 sec

What about ez.no for example ? :)

EDIT : Ok I've reached ~0.1800.

My blog : http://www.starnab.com/ezpublish / http://www.starnab.com/ / http://www.assiki-consulting.com
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nabil at assiki d0t fr

Xavier Dutoit

Tuesday 18 April 2006 4:19:06 am

Hi,

That obviously depends on the hardware and the complexity of the layout. At 0.2 0.3 I wouldn't spend time trying to get any better.

There is a thread with various people posting their result.

X+

http://www.sydesy.com

Ole Morten Halvorsen

Tuesday 18 April 2006 4:34:42 am

What about ez.no for example ? :)

There are two articles on the ez.no setup:
1. http://ez.no/community/articles/clustering_ez_publish
2. http://ez.no/community/news/ez_publish_3_enterprise_setup_test (slightly outdated)

A cached ez.no page loads in about ~0.05 seconds.

Ole M.

Senior Software Engineer - Vision with Technology

http://www.visionwt.com
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Bertrand Dunogier

Tuesday 18 April 2006 5:38:02 am

On decent hardware, I usually manage to get the loading time for a content page down to < 0.1 sec (0.07 or 0.08 after one or two refresh).

What I notice in your post is that you still have more than 20 SQL queries executed on the page. Using cache blocks you can get it down to 1 or 2. Then we can start talking business :-)

(I don't think you can go way below 0.1 on good hardware)

Bertrand Dunogier
eZ Systems Engineering, Lyon
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