nanotiming
Small timing library. Useful to integrate into libraries that have multiple
methods. Works both in the browser and Node. To use this in Node, make sure you
are using v8.5.0 or greater.
Usage
var nanotiming = require('nanotiming')
var timing = nanotiming('my-loop')
var i = 1000
while (--i) console.log(i)
timing()
var timings = window.performance.getEntries()
var timing = timings[timings.length - 1]
console.log(timing.name, timing.duration)
window.performance.clearMeasures(timing.name)
var timings = performance.getEntries()
var timing = timings[timings.length - 1]
console.log(timing.name, timing.duration)
performance.clearMeasures(timing.name)
Timing names
Timings inside the view are appended with a unique UUID so they can be cleared
individually. While there's no strict format for timing formats, we recommend
using a format along these lines:
choo.render [12356778]
choo.route('/') [13355671]
choo.emit('log:debug') [13355675]
Disabling timings
Performance timers are still a somewhat experimental technology. While they're
a great idea conceptually, there might be bugs. To disable timings complete, in
the browser set:
window.localStorage.DISABLE_NANOTIMING = true
Alternatively, in Node set:
process.env.DISABLE_NANOTIMING = true
API
endTiming = nanotiming(name)
Start a new timing.
endTiming.uuid
The unique ID created for the timing.
endTiming([cb(err, name)])
Close the timing. Measuring the timing is done inside a requestIdleCallback()
(browser) or setTimeout
(node) tick, so it might not be available
immediately. If a callback is passed it will be called with an error (if
measuring wasn't successful) and the timing's name.
License
MIT