Hi I have some major problems with auto mapper and it being slow. I am not sure how to speed it up.
I am using nhibernate,fluent nhibernate and asp.net mvc 3.0
[Serializable()]
public class Test
{
public virtual int Id { get; private set; }
public virtual string Name { get; set; }
public virtual string Description { get; set; }
public virtual DateTimeDate { get; set; }
public virtual IList<Reminder> Reminders { get; set; }
public virtual IList<Reminder2> Reminders2 { get; set; }
public virtual Test2 Test2 { get; set; }
public Test()
{
Reminders = new List<Reminders>();
Reminders2 = new List<Reminders2>();
}
}
So as you can see I got some properties, Some other classes as in my database I have references between them.
I then do this
var a = // get all items (returns a collection of Test2)
var List<MyViewModel> collection = new List<MyViewModel>();
foreach (Test2 t in a)
{
MyViewModel vm = Mapper.Map<Test2, MyViewModel>(t);
vm.SetDateFormat(t.DateTimeDate, DateFilters.All.ToString());
collection.Add(vm);
}
// view model
public class MyViewModel
{
public int Id { get; private set; }
public string Name { get; set; }
public string Description { get; set; }
public DateTime DateTimeDate { get; set; }
public string FormatedDueDate { get; set; }
public string Test2Prefix { get; set; }
public string Test2BackgroundColor { get; set; }
public string SelectedDateFilter { get; set; }
public bool DescState { get; set; }
public bool AlertState { get; set; }
/// <summary>
/// Constructor
/// </summary>
public MyViewModel()
{
// Default values
SelectedDateFilter = "All";
DescState = false;
AlertState = false;
}
/// <summary>
/// Sets the date formatter string used
/// </summary>
/// <param name="dateFormat"></param>
public void SetDateFormat(DateTime dueDate, string dateFilter)
{
// simple if statement to format date.
}
}
// mapping
Mapper.CreateMap<Test2,MyViewModel>().ForMember(dest => dest.DescState, opt =>
opt.ResolveUsing<DescStateResolver>())
.ForMember(dest => dest.AlertState, opt =>
opt.ResolveUsing<AlertStateResolver>());
// resolvers
public class AlertStateResolver : ValueResolver<Task, bool>
{
protected override bool ResolveCore(Task source)
{
if (source.Reminders.Count > 0 || source.Reminders2.Count > 0)
{
return true;
}
else
{
return false;
}
}
}
public class DescStateResolver : ValueResolver<Task,bool>
{
protected override bool ResolveCore(Task source)
{
if (String.IsNullOrEmpty(source.Description))
{
return false;
}
else
{
return true;
}
}
}
Ignore the weird names and any typos my real object works just fine and makes sense.
So I used the stop watch and did this
Stopwatch a = new Stopwatch()
foreach (Test2 t in a)
{
a.Start()
MyViewModel vm = Mapper.Map<Test2, MyViewModel>(t);
a.Stop()
vm.SetDateFormat(t.DateTimeDate, DateFilters.All.ToString());
collection.Add(vm);
}
var b = a.Elapsed; // comes back with 32 seconds.
I need to optimized this very badly.
Was Able to improve Launch Time when added this
at end of Each
I fixed the same issue as yours. It also costs me 32s for mapping only one object. So, I use opts.Ignore() to deal with some customized object as below:
After that, it just cost a few milliseconds.
Another thing to look for is mapping code that throws exceptions. AutoMapper will catch these silently, but catching exceptions in this way impacts performance.
So if SomethingThatMightBeNull is often null, then this mapping will perform poorly due to the NullreferenceExceptions :
I've found making a change like this will more than half the time the mapping takes:
Update: C# 6 syntax
Instead of:
Try:
which is equivalent to the first except the
SetDateFormat
call which you could do at your mapping definition. It might also be faster.If you have a mapping defined between
Test2 => MyViewModel
AutoMapper automatically provides one forIEnumerable<Test2> => IEnumerable<MyViewModel>
so that you don't need to loop.Also you have mentioned NHibernate in your question. Make sure that your source object along with its collections is eagerly loaded from the database before passing it to the mapping layer or you cannot blame AutoMapper for being slow because when it tries to map one of the collections of your source object it hits the database because NHibernate didn't fetch this collection.
If your subcollections are large you might benefit from using "Any()" instead of the "Count > 1". The Any function will only have to iterate once while the Count might need to iterate the entmes collection (depending on the implementation).
A good tip is to optimize the configuration of AutoMapper, use Ignore for the properties of the ViewModels, and make the method call to validate the mappings "Mapper.AssertConfigurationIsValid()".