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@shopify/performance

Primitives for collecting browser performance metrics

  • 1.3.0-sk-next-beta.0
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@shopify/performance

Build Status Build Status License: MIT npm version npm bundle size (minified + gzip)

Primitives for collecting browser performance metrics.

Installation

$ yarn add @shopify/performance

Usage

This library wraps around the native Performance and PerformanceObserver browser globals, providing a normalized interface for tracking performance across browsers. It also adds the notion of "navigations": sections of time spent navigating to a "complete" page, during which events (time to first byte, script downloads, GraphQL queries, etc) occur. Finally, it provides a few event listeners to be informed of new navigation and key events.

Performance

To start using this library, construct an instance of the Performance class. Only one instance of this class should exist during the lifecycle of your app, as this class assumes it is constructed near the page’s initial load.

import {Performance} from '@shopify/performance';

const performance = new Performance();

If you want to listen for events, you can use the on method. There are three events you can listen for:

// Listen for completed navigations. If you call this after the initial load
// "navigation", your handler will immediately be invoked with that object.
performance.on('navigation', navigation => {});

// Listen for the start of new navigations.
performance.on('inflightNavigation', () => {});

// Listen for "lifecycle" events; that is, those that are part of the initial
// page load and come directly from the browser. These are events like time
// to first byte and time to first paint. See the `LifecycleEvent` type for
// the full set of possible events. If you add your listener after some of these
// events have been triggered, it will immediately be invoked once for each
// previously-triggered event.
performance.on('lifecycleEvent', event => {});

The on method returns a clean-up function that you can invoke when you're done listening on the event:

const cleanupNavigationListener = performance.on(
  'navigation',
  navigation => {},
);

cleanupNavigationListener();

You can also manage navigations using this object. Calling performance.start() will begin a new navigation, cancelling any that are currently inflight. performance.event() allows you to register custom events on the navigation. Finally, performance.finish() marks the navigation is complete.

import {now} from '@shopify/performance';

// You usually don't need this, as we automatically start a visit when the
// browser first loads, and when the history API is used to navigate the app.
performance.start({
  target: '/my-page',
});

// A duration of 0 indicates a mark of some kind, while a non-0 duration would
// be used for things like network requests. Make sure to use the `now()` function
// because it will use high-resolution time when available.
performance.event({
  type: 'customevent',
  start: now(),
  duration: 0,
});

performance.finish();

Navigation

The Navigation object represents a full navigation, either from a full-page refresh, or between two pages. It has the following key details about the navigation:

  • start: the full timestamp when the navigation started, using high-resolution time when available.
  • duration: how long the navigation took, using high-resolution time when available.
  • target: a string representing the "end" of the navigation, defaulting to the target page’s pathname.
  • result: a NavigationResult marking the navigation as either finished, cancelled (another navigation began before this one completed), or timed out (performance.finish() was not called in a reasonable amount of time, which defaults to 60 seconds from when performance.start() is called)
  • metadata: an object giving additional context to the navigation. This object has the following properties:
    • index (the number of navigations before this one since the last full page navigation)
    • supportsDetailedEvents (whether events like time to first paint are supported by the browser)
    • supportsDetailedTime (whether high-resolution time is supported by the browser)
  • events: an array of objects representing the events that occurred during the navigation. These events include the following properties:
    • type: the type of event
    • start: when the event started, relative to the start of the navigation
    • duration: how long the event took (0 indicates a mark, rather than an event occurring over time)
    • metadata: an object with arbitrary key-value pairs providing additional context

Navigation also provides a number of utility methods for gathering more actionable information, such as eventsByType for filtering events to a particular type, or totalDownloadSize for the cumulative size of all requested resources. Please consult the TypeScript definitions for a full listing of these methods.

Events

The Performance and Navigation classes both deal with Event objects with which contain information about the timing of specific milestones during the course of a user's browser session in milliseconds.

Lifecycle Events
Time to First Byte (EventType.TimeToFirstByte)

The time until the server sends the first part of the response. Learn more about time to First Byte.

First Paint (EventType.TimeToFirstPaint)

The time until the browser renders anything that differs from the previous page. Learn more about first paint.

First Contentful Paint (EventType.TimeToFirstContentfulPaint)

The time until the browser renders the first bit of content from the DOM. Learn more about this first Contentful Paint.

DOM Content Loaded (EventType.DomContentLoaded)

The time until the DOM has been entirely loaded and parsed. Learn more about DOM Content Loaded.

First Input Delay (EventType.FirstInputDelay)

The time from when a user first interacts with your site to the time when the browser is able to respond to that interaction. Learn more about first Input Delay.

Load Event (EventType.Load)

The time until the DOM and all its styles and synchronous scripts have loaded. Learn more about load Event.

Navigation Events
Long Task (EventType.LongTask)

Any task that take 50 milliseconds or more. Learn more about long task.

Script Download Event (EventType.ScriptDownload)

The time spent downloading a script resource.

This event will also log the name and size of the resource as metadata.

Style Download Event (EventType.StyleDownload)

The time spent downloading a style resource.

This event will also log the name and size of the resource as metadata.

GraphQL Event (EventType.GraphQL)

The time spent resolving GraphQL queries during the navigation.

This metric needs to be manually set up in Apollo Client. The setup can be done as a ApolloLink.

Usable Event (EventType.Usable)

The time between navigation start and the first time a @shopify/react-performance's <PerformanceMark stage="usable" /> component is rendered.

FAQs

Package last updated on 15 Dec 2020

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