SharePoint 2013 is very robust and powerful. All of this robustness and power comes with a price: resources. If you have twenty available servers and can scale-out like crazy, you shouldn't have any problems. However, most of us don’t have that many servers at our disposal; especially for QA and development environments.
Therefore, it is important to tweak and configure SharePoint 2013 such that you get the performance and functionality without utilizing too many resources.
This guide explores various areas and options for both Web and Service Application Application Pools such that minimal resource usage is achieved in both Development/QA environments as well as Production.
Check out the other optimization areas in Steve’s solution series or get them all together in Optimizing Your SharePoint 2013 Environments.
Therefore, it is important to tweak and configure SharePoint 2013 such that you get the performance and functionality without utilizing too many resources.
This guide explores various areas and options for both Web and Service Application Application Pools such that minimal resource usage is achieved in both Development/QA environments as well as Production.
Check out the other optimization areas in Steve’s solution series or get them all together in Optimizing Your SharePoint 2013 Environments.