Monitoring Report Server Performance

Use performance monitoring tools to monitor report server performance to evaluate server activity, watch trends, diagnose system bottlenecks, and gather data that can help you determine whether the current system configuration is sufficient. To tune server performance, you can specify how often to recycle the report server application domain. For more information, see Configure Available Memory for Report Server Applications.

Sources of Performance Data

Use a combination of technologies and tools to get comprehensive information about how the system is performing. Microsoft Windows Server operating systems provide performance information through the following tools:

  • Task Manager

  • Event Viewer

  • Performance Console

Task Manager provides information about programs and processes running on your computer. You can use Task Manager to monitor key indicators of your report server's performance. You can also assess the activity of running processes and view graphs and data on CPU and memory usage. For information about using Task Manager, see the Microsoft Windows product documentation.

You can use Performance Console and Event Viewer to create logs and alerts about report processing and resource consumption. For information about Windows events that are generated by Reporting Services, see Windows Application Log. For information about Performance Console, see "Windows Performance Counters" later in this topic.

SQL Server utilities also provide information about the report server database and temporary databases used for caching and session management.

Windows Performance Counters

Monitoring specific performance counters enables you to:

  • Estimate system requirements needed to support a predicted workload.

  • Create a performance baseline to measure effect of configuration changes or application upgrades.

  • Monitor application performance under certain loads, whether real or artificially generated.

  • Verify that hardware upgrades have the desired effect on performance.

  • Validate changes that were made to the system configuration have the desired effect on performance.

Reporting Services Performance Objects

SQL Server 2012 Reporting Services (SSRS) includes the following performance objects:

  • MSRS 2011 Web Service and MSRS 2011 SharePoint Mode Web Service to monitor report server performance. These performance objects include a collection of counters used to track report server processing typically initiated through interactive report viewing operations. These counters are reset whenever ASP.NET stops the Report Server Web service.

  • MSRS 2011 Windows Service and MSRS 2011 Windows Service SharePoint Mode to monitor scheduled operations and report delivery. These performance objects include a collection of counters used to track report processing that is initiated through scheduled operations. Scheduled operations include subscription and delivery, report execution snapshots, and report history.

  • ReportServer:Service and ReportServerSharePoint:Service to monitor HTTP-related events and memory management. These counters are specific to Reporting Services, and they track HTTP-related events for the report server, such as requests, connections, and logon attempts. This performance object also includes counters related to memory management.

If you have multiple report server instances on a single computer, you can monitor the instances together or separately. Choose which instances to include when you add a counter. For more information about using Performance Console (perfmon.msc) and adding counters, see the Microsoft Windows product documentation.

Other Performance Counters

Custom Reporting Services performance counters are provided only for MSRS 2008 Web Service, MSRS 2008 Windows Service, and ReportServer:Service. The following performance objects provide additional performance monitoring data for the report server.

Performance object

Notes

.NET CLR Data and .NET CLR Memory

Report Manager uses ASP.NET performance counters. For more information, see "Improving .NET Application Performance and Scalability" on MSDN.

Process

Add the Elapsed Time and ID Process performance counters for a ReportingServicesService instance to track process uptime by process ID.

SharePoint Events

In addition to the Reporting Services performance objects, you might also want to configure SharePoint events if you are running a report server in SharePoint integrated mode and have configured your reporting environment to use a SharePoint product. In this section, use the Events for a Report Server in SharePoint Integrated Mode to review diagnostic events that might provide useful information if your reporting environment is integrated with SharePoint.

In This Section

See Also

Concepts

Configure Available Memory for Report Server Applications

Reporting Services Report Server (Native Mode)

Tools (SSRS)