Don’t Tune What You Don’t Need to Tune
The most efficient tuning you can do is not to alter what works well. As they say, “If it ain’t broke, don’t fix it.” This may seem obvious, but the temptation to tweak something just because you have thought of an improvement has a tendency to override this obvious statement.
The second most efficient tuning is to discard work that doesn’t need doing. It is not at all uncommon for an application to be started with one set of specifications and to have some of the specifications change over time. Many times the initial specifications are much more generic than the final product. However, the earlier generic specifications often still have their stamps in the application. I frequently find routines, variables, objects, and subsystems that are still being maintained but are never used and never will be used, since some critical aspect of these resources is no longer supported. These redundant parts of the application can usually be chopped without any bad consequences, often resulting in a performance gain.
In general, you need to ask yourself exactly what the application is doing and why. Then question whether it needs to do it in that way, or even if it needs to do it at all. If you have third-party products and tools being used by the application, consider exactly what they are doing. Try to be aware of the main resources they use (from their documentation). For example, a zippy DLL (shared library) that is speeding up all your network transfers ...
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