ASP.NET application on IIS7 - very slow startup after iisreset
Thats the compilation of asp.Net pages into intermediate language + JIT compilation - it only happens the first time the page is loaded. (See http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/ms366723.aspx)
If it really bothers you then you can stop it from happening by pre-compiling your site.
EDIT: Just re-read the question - 60 seconds is very long, and you would expect to see some processor activity during that time. Check the EventLog for errors / messages in the System and Application destinations. Also try creating a crash dump of the w3wp process during this 60 seconds - there is an chance you might recognise what its doing by looking at some of the call stacks.
If it takes exactly 60 seconds each time then its likely that its waiting for something to time out - 60 seconds is a nice round number. Make sure that it has proper connections to the domain controllers etc...
(If there are some IIS diagnostic tools that would do a better job then I'm afraid I'm not aware of them, this question might be more suited to ServerFault, the above is a much more developer-ish approach to troubleshooting :-p)
We had a similar problem and it turned out to be Windows timing out checking for the revocation of signing certificates. Check to see if your server is trying to call out somewhere (e.g. crl.microsoft.com). Perhaps you have a proxy setting incorrect? Or a firewall in the way? We ultimately determined we had enough control over the server and did not want to 'call home', so we simply disabled the check. You can do this with .NET 2.0 SP1 and later by adding the following to the machine.config.
<runtime> <generatePublisherEvidence enabled="false"/> </runtime>
I am not sure if you can just put this in your app.config/web.config.
IL is being converted into machine native code (Assembly) by the Just-In-Time compiler and you get to wait while all the magic happens.
When compiling the source code to managed code, the compiler translates the source into Microsoft intermediate language (MSIL). This is a CPU-independent set of instructions that can efficiently be converted to native code. Microsoft intermediate language (MSIL) is a translation used as the output of a number of compilers. It is the input to a just-in-time (JIT) compiler. The Common Language Runtime includes a JIT compiler for the conversion of MSIL to native code.
Before Microsoft Intermediate Language (MSIL) can be executed it, must be converted by the .NET Framework just-in-time (JIT) compiler to native code. This is CPU-specific code that runs on the same computer architecture as the JIT compiler. Rather than using time and memory to convert all of the MSIL in a portable executable (PE) file to native code. It converts the MSIL as needed whilst executing, then caches the resulting native code so its accessible for any subsequent calls.
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