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Home/ Questions/Q 7772703
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: June 1, 20262026-06-01T16:56:33+00:00 2026-06-01T16:56:33+00:00

My environment is: Windows Server 2008, SQL Server 2008, IIS 7, .NET 4.0, and

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My environment is: Windows Server 2008, SQL Server 2008, IIS 7, .NET 4.0, and .ASMX web service.

I am currently just using all the default settings on IIS 7 for the ASMX web service site. But I think there may be some tweaks and optimizations that probably will further improve its performance.

I found this article on MSDN though. Just not sure if it’d apply to IIS 7 as well. So what do I need to do here regarding IIS 7 settings and configurations?

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-06-01T16:56:34+00:00Added an answer on June 1, 2026 at 4:56 pm

    The two main IIS 7 performance features are

    • Compression

    • Output Caching

    “IIS 7 provides a powerful, unified facility for output caching by
    integrating the dynamic output-caching capabilities of ASP.NET with
    the static output-caching capabilities that were present in IIS 6.0.
    IIS also lets you use bandwidth more effectively and efficiently by
    using common compression mechanisms such as Gzip and Deflate”

    • Configuring HTTP Compression in IIS 7

    IIS provides the following compression options:
    – Static files only
    – Dynamic application responses only
    – Both static files and dynamic application responses

    • Configuring Output Caching in IIS 7

    In IIS 7, you can configure output caching to improve performance on
    your Web server, site, or application. When a user requests a Web
    page, IIS processes the request and returns a page to the client
    browser. If you enable output caching, a copy of that processed Web
    page is stored in memory on the Web server and returned to client
    browsers in subsequent requests for that same resource. This
    eliminates the requirement to reprocess the page every time that it is
    requested. This is helpful when your content relies on an external
    program for processing, such as with a Common Gateway Interface (CGI)
    program, or includes data from an external source, such as from a
    remote share or a database.

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