Copyright © 2021 W3C ® ( MIT , ERCIM , Keio , Beihang ). W3C liability , trademark and permissive document license rules apply.
This specification defines an interface to help web developers measure the performance of their applications by giving them access to high precision timestamps.
This section describes the status of this document at the time of its publication. Other documents may supersede this document. A list of current W3C publications and the latest revision of this technical report can be found in the W3C technical reports index at https://www.w3.org/TR/.
User Timing Level 3 is intended to supersede [ USER-TIMING-2 ] and includes:
This document was published by the Web Performance Working Group as an Editor's Draft.
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Publication as an Editor's Draft does not imply endorsement by the W3C Membership.
This is a draft document and may be updated, replaced or obsoleted by other documents at any time. It is inappropriate to cite this document as other than work in progress.
This document was produced by a group operating under the W3C Patent Policy . W3C maintains a public list of any patent disclosures made in connection with the deliverables of the group; that page also includes instructions for disclosing a patent. An individual who has actual knowledge of a patent which the individual believes contains Essential Claim(s) must disclose the information in accordance with section 6 of the W3C Patent Policy .
This document is governed by the 15 September 2020 W3C Process Document .
This section is non-normative.
Web
developers
need
the
ability
to
assess
and
understand
the
performance
characteristics
of
their
applications.
While
JavaScript
[
ECMA-262
]
provides
a
mechanism
to
measure
application
latency
(retrieving
the
current
timestamp
from
the
Date.now()
method),
the
precision
of
this
timestamp
varies
between
user
agents.
This
document
defines
the
PerformanceMark
and
PerformanceMeasure
interfaces,
and
extensions
to
the
Performance
interface,
which
expose
a
high
precision,
monotonically
increasing
timestamp
so
that
developers
can
better
measure
the
performance
characteristics
of
their
applications.
The following script shows how a developer can use the interfaces defined in this document to obtain timing data related to developer scripts.
async function run() {
performance.mark("startTask1");
await doTask1(); // Some developer code
performance.mark("endTask1");
performance.mark("startTask2");
await doTask2(); // Some developer code
performance.mark("endTask2");
// Log them out
const entries = performance.getEntriesByType("mark");
for (const entry of entries) {
console.table(entry.toJSON());
}
}
run();
[
PERFORMANCE-TIMELINE-2
]
defines
two
mechanisms
that
can
be
used
to
retrieve
recorded
metrics:
getEntries()
and
getEntriesByType()
methods,
and
the
PerformanceObserver
interface.
The
former
is
best
suited
for
cases
where
you
want
to
retrieve
a
particular
metric
by
name
at
a
single
point
in
time,
and
the
latter
is
optimized
for
cases
where
you
may
want
to
receive
notifications
of
new
metrics
as
they
become
available.
As another example, suppose that there is an element which, when clicked, fetches some new content and indicates that it has been fetched. We'd like to report the time from when the user clicked to when the fetch was complete. We can't mark the time the click handler executes since that will miss latency to process the event, so instead we use the event hardware timestamp. We also want to know the name of the component to have more detailed analytics.
element.addEventListener("click", e => {
const component = getComponent(element);
fetch(component.url).then(() => {
element.textContent = "Updated";
const updateMark = performance.mark("update_component", {
detail: {component: component.name},
});
performance.measure("click_to_update_component", {
detail: {component: component.name},
start: e.timeStamp,
end: updateMark.startTime,
});
});
});
As well as sections marked as non-normative, all authoring guidelines, diagrams, examples, and notes in this specification are non-normative. Everything else in this specification is normative.
The key words MAY and MUST in this document are to be interpreted as described in BCP 14 [ RFC2119 ] [ RFC8174 ] when, and only when, they appear in all capitals, as shown here.
Some conformance requirements are phrased as requirements on attributes, methods or objects. Such requirements are to be interpreted as requirements on user agents.
The IDL fragments in this specification MUST be interpreted as required for conforming IDL fragments, as described in the Web IDL specification. [ WEBIDL ]
Performance
interface
The
Performance
interface
and
DOMHighResTimeStamp
are
defined
in
[
HR-TIME-2
].
The
PerformanceEntry
interface
is
defined
in
[
PERFORMANCE-TIMELINE-2
].
WebIDLdictionary PerformanceMarkOptions {
any detail;
DOMHighResTimeStamp startTime;
};
dictionary PerformanceMeasureOptions {
any detail;
(DOMString or DOMHighResTimeStamp) start;
DOMHighResTimeStamp duration;
(DOMString or DOMHighResTimeStamp) end;
};
partial interface Performance {
PerformanceMark mark(DOMString markName, optional PerformanceMarkOptions markOptions = {});
undefined clearMarks(optional DOMString markName);
PerformanceMeasure measure(DOMString measureName, optional (DOMString or PerformanceMeasureOptions) startOrMeasureOptions = {}, optional DOMString endMark);
undefined clearMeasures(optional DOMString measureName);
};
mark()
method
Stores a timestamp with the associated name (a "mark"). It MUST run these steps:
PerformanceMarkOptions
dictionary
detail
startTime
clearMarks()
method
Removes the stored timestamp with the associated name. It MUST run these steps:
measure()
method
Stores
the
DOMHighResTimeStamp
duration
between
two
marks
along
with
the
associated
name
(a
"measure").
It
MUST
run
these
steps:
PerformanceMeasureOptions
object,
run
the
following
checks:
PerformanceMeasureOptions
object,
and
if
its
end
member
is
present
,
let
end
time
be
the
value
returned
by
running
the
convert
a
mark
to
a
timestamp
algorithm
passing
in
startOrMeasureOptions
's
end
.
PerformanceMeasureOptions
object,
and
if
its
start
and
duration
members
are
both
present
:
start
.
duration
.
Performance
object's
now()
method.
PerformanceMeasureOptions
object,
and
if
its
start
member
is
present
,
let
start
time
be
the
value
returned
by
running
the
convert
a
mark
to
a
timestamp
algorithm
passing
in
startOrMeasureOptions
's
start
.
PerformanceMeasureOptions
object,
and
if
its
duration
and
end
members
are
both
present
:
duration
.
end
.
DOMString
,
let
start
time
be
the
value
returned
by
running
the
convert
a
mark
to
a
timestamp
algorithm
passing
in
startOrMeasureOptions
.
0
.
name
attribute
to
measureName
.
entryType
attribute
to
DOMString
"measure"
.
startTime
attribute
to
start
time
.
duration
attribute
to
the
duration
from
start
time
to
end
time
.
The
resulting
duration
value
MAY
be
negative.
detail
attribute
as
follows:
PerformanceMeasureOptions
object
and
startOrMeasureOptions
's
detail
member
is
present
:
detail
.
null
.
PerformanceMeasureOptions
dictionary
detail
start
duration
end
clearMeasures()
method
Removes stored timestamp with the associated name. It MUST run these steps:
name
is
measureName
.
The
PerformanceMark
interface
also
exposes
marks
created
via
the
Performance
interface's
mark
()
method
to
the
Performance
Timeline
.
[Exposed=*]
interface PerformanceMark : PerformanceEntry {
constructor(DOMString markName, optional PerformanceMarkOptions markOptions = {});
readonly attribute any detail;
};
The
PerformanceMark
interface
extends
the
following
attributes
of
the
PerformanceEntry
interface:
The
name
attribute
must
return
the
mark's
name.
The
entryType
attribute
must
return
the
DOMString
"mark"
.
The
startTime
attribute
must
return
a
DOMHighResTimeStamp
with
the
mark's
time
value.
The
duration
attribute
must
return
a
DOMHighResTimeStamp
of
value
0
.
The PerformanceMark interface contains the following additional attribute:
The
detail
attribute
must
return
the
value
it
is
set
to
(it's
copied
from
the
PerformanceMarkOptions
dictionary).
The PerformanceMark constructor must run the following steps:
Window
object
and
markName
uses
the
same
name
as
a
read
only
attribute
in
the
PerformanceTiming
interface,
throw
a
SyntaxError
.
name
attribute
to
markName
.
entryType
attribute
to
DOMString
"mark"
.
startTime
attribute
as
follows:
duration
attribute
to
0
.
detail
is
null,
set
entry
's
detail
to
null.
detail
.
The
PerformanceMeasure
interface
also
exposes
measures
created
via
the
Performance
interface's
measure
()
method
to
the
Performance
Timeline
.
[Exposed=*]
interface PerformanceMeasure : PerformanceEntry {
readonly attribute any detail;
};
The
PerformanceMeasure
interface
extends
the
following
attributes
of
the
PerformanceEntry
interface:
The
name
attribute
must
return
the
measure's
name.
The
entryType
attribute
must
return
the
DOMString
"measure"
.
The
startTime
attribute
must
return
a
DOMHighResTimeStamp
with
the
measure's
start
mark.
The
duration
attribute
must
return
a
DOMHighResTimeStamp
with
the
duration
of
the
measure.
The PerformanceMeasure interface contains the following additional attribute:
The
detail
attribute
must
return
the
value
it
is
set
to
(it's
copied
from
the
PerformanceMeasureOptions
dictionary).
A
user
agent
implementing
the
User
Timing
API
would
need
to
include
"mark"
and
"measure"
in
supportedEntryTypes
.
This
allows
developers
to
detect
support
for
User
Timing.
To
convert
a
mark
to
a
timestamp
,
given
a
mark
that
is
a
DOMString
or
DOMHighResTimeStamp
run
these
steps:
DOMString
and
it
has
the
same
name
as
a
read
only
attribute
in
the
PerformanceTiming
interface,
let
end
time
be
the
value
returned
by
running
the
convert
a
name
to
a
timestamp
algorithm
with
name
set
to
the
value
of
mark
.
DOMString
,
let
end
time
be
the
value
of
the
startTime
attribute
from
the
most
recent
occurrence
of
a
PerformanceMark
object
in
the
performance
entry
buffer
whose
name
is
mark
.
If
no
matching
entry
is
found,
throw
a
SyntaxError
.
DOMHighResTimeStamp
:
TypeError
.
To
convert
a
name
to
a
timestamp
given
a
name
that
is
a
read
only
attribute
in
the
PerformanceTiming
interface,
run
these
steps:
Window
object,
throw
a
TypeError
.
navigationStart
,
return
0
.
navigationStart
in
the
PerformanceTiming
interface.
PerformanceTiming
interface.
0
,
throw
an
InvalidAccessError
.
The PerformanceTiming interface was defined in [ NAVIGATION-TIMING ] and is now considered obsolete. The use of names from the PerformanceTiming interface is supported to remain backwards compatible, but there are no plans to extend this functionality to names in the PerformanceNavigationTiming interface defined in [ NAVIGATION-TIMING-2 ] (or other interfaces) in the future.
This section is non-normative.
The interfaces defined in this specification expose potentially sensitive timing information on specific JavaScript activity of a page. Please refer to [ HR-TIME-2 ] for privacy and security considerations of exposing high-resolution timing information.
Because the web platform has been designed with the invariant that any script included on a page has the same access as any other script included on the same page, regardless of the origin of either scripts, the interfaces defined by this specification do not place any restrictions on recording or retrieval of recorded timing information - i.e. a user timing mark or measure recorded by any script included on the page can be read by any other script running on the same page, regardless of origin.
Thanks to James Simonsen, Jason Weber, Nic Jansma, Philippe Le Hegaret, Karen Anderson, Steve Souders, Sigbjorn Vik, Todd Reifsteck, and Tony Gentilcore for their contributions to this work.
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