Performance measurement APIs

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Source Code: lib/perf_hooks.js
Stability: 2Stable

This module provides an implementation of a subset of the W3C Web Performance APIs as well as additional APIs for Node.js-specific performance measurements.

Node.js supports the following Web Performance APIs:

import { performance, PerformanceObserver } from 'node:perf_hooks';

const obs = new PerformanceObserver((items) => {
  console.log(items.getEntries()[0].duration);
  performance.clearMarks();
});
obs.observe({ type: 'measure' });
performance.measure('Start to Now');

performance.mark('A');
doSomeLongRunningProcess(() => {
  performance.measure('A to Now', 'A');

  performance.mark('B');
  performance.measure('A to B', 'A', 'B');
});
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perf_hooks.performance

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An object that can be used to collect performance metrics from the current Node.js instance. It is similar to window.performance in browsers.

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performance.clearMarks

performance.clearMarks(name?)
PropertyTypeDescription
name<string>-

If name is not provided, removes all PerformanceMark objects from the Performance Timeline. If name is provided, removes only the named mark.

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performance.clearMeasures

performance.clearMeasures(name?)
PropertyTypeDescription
name<string>-

If name is not provided, removes all PerformanceMeasure objects from the Performance Timeline. If name is provided, removes only the named measure.

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performance.clearResourceTimings

performance.clearResourceTimings(name?)
PropertyTypeDescription
name<string>-

If name is not provided, removes all PerformanceResourceTiming objects from the Resource Timeline. If name is provided, removes only the named resource.

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performance.eventLoopUtilization

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performance.eventLoopUtilization(utilization1?, utilization2?): Object
PropertyTypeDescription
utilization1<Object>The result of a previous call to eventLoopUtilization().
utilization2<Object>The result of a previous call to eventLoopUtilization() prior to utilization1.
Returns<Object>-
idle<number>-
active<number>-
utilization<number>-

The eventLoopUtilization() method returns an object that contains the cumulative duration of time the event loop has been both idle and active as a high resolution milliseconds timer. The utilization value is the calculated Event Loop Utilization (ELU).

If bootstrapping has not yet finished on the main thread the properties have the value of 0. The ELU is immediately available on Worker threads since bootstrap happens within the event loop.

Both utilization1 and utilization2 are optional parameters.

If utilization1 is passed, then the delta between the current call's active and idle times, as well as the corresponding utilization value are calculated and returned (similar to process.hrtime()).

If utilization1 and utilization2 are both passed, then the delta is calculated between the two arguments. This is a convenience option because, unlike process.hrtime(), calculating the ELU is more complex than a single subtraction.

ELU is similar to CPU utilization, except that it only measures event loop statistics and not CPU usage. It represents the percentage of time the event loop has spent outside the event loop's event provider (e.g. epoll_wait). No other CPU idle time is taken into consideration. The following is an example of how a mostly idle process will have a high ELU.

import { eventLoopUtilization } from 'node:perf_hooks';
import { spawnSync } from 'node:child_process';

setImmediate(() => {
  const elu = eventLoopUtilization();
  spawnSync('sleep', ['5']);
  console.log(eventLoopUtilization(elu).utilization);
});

Although the CPU is mostly idle while running this script, the value of utilization is 1. This is because the call to child_process.spawnSync() blocks the event loop from proceeding.

Passing in a user-defined object instead of the result of a previous call to eventLoopUtilization() will lead to undefined behavior. The return values are not guaranteed to reflect any correct state of the event loop.

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performance.getEntries

performance.getEntries(): PerformanceEntry[]
PropertyTypeDescription
Returns<PerformanceEntry[]>-

Returns a list of PerformanceEntry objects in chronological order with respect to performanceEntry.startTime. If you are only interested in performance entries of certain types or that have certain names, see performance.getEntriesByType() and performance.getEntriesByName().

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performance.getEntriesByName

performance.getEntriesByName(name, type?): PerformanceEntry[]
PropertyTypeDescription
name<string>-
type<string>-
Returns<PerformanceEntry[]>-

Returns a list of PerformanceEntry objects in chronological order with respect to performanceEntry.startTime whose performanceEntry.name is equal to name, and optionally, whose performanceEntry.entryType is equal to type.

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performance.getEntriesByType

performance.getEntriesByType(type): PerformanceEntry[]
PropertyTypeDescription
type<string>-
Returns<PerformanceEntry[]>-

Returns a list of PerformanceEntry objects in chronological order with respect to performanceEntry.startTime whose performanceEntry.entryType is equal to type.

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performance.mark

performance.mark(name, options?)
PropertyTypeDescription
name<string>-
options<Object>-
detail<any>Additional optional detail to include with the mark.
startTime<number>An optional timestamp to be used as the mark time. Default: performance.now().

Creates a new PerformanceMark entry in the Performance Timeline. A PerformanceMark is a subclass of PerformanceEntry whose performanceEntry.entryType is always 'mark', and whose performanceEntry.duration is always 0. Performance marks are used to mark specific significant moments in the Performance Timeline.

The created PerformanceMark entry is put in the global Performance Timeline and can be queried with performance.getEntries, performance.getEntriesByName, and performance.getEntriesByType. When the observation is performed, the entries should be cleared from the global Performance Timeline manually with performance.clearMarks.

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performance.markResourceTiming

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performance.markResourceTiming(timingInfo, requestedUrl, initiatorType, global, cacheMode, bodyInfo, responseStatus, deliveryType?)
PropertyTypeDescription
timingInfo<Object>Fetch Timing Info
requestedUrl<string>The resource url
initiatorType<string>The initiator name, e.g: 'fetch'
global<Object>-
cacheMode<string>The cache mode must be an empty string ('') or 'local'
bodyInfo<Object>Fetch Response Body Info
responseStatus<number>The response's status code
deliveryType<string>The delivery type.  Default: ''.

This property is an extension by Node.js. It is not available in Web browsers.

Creates a new PerformanceResourceTiming entry in the Resource Timeline. A PerformanceResourceTiming is a subclass of PerformanceEntry whose performanceEntry.entryType is always 'resource'. Performance resources are used to mark moments in the Resource Timeline.

The created PerformanceMark entry is put in the global Resource Timeline and can be queried with performance.getEntries, performance.getEntriesByName, and performance.getEntriesByType. When the observation is performed, the entries should be cleared from the global Performance Timeline manually with performance.clearResourceTimings.

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performance.measure

performance.measure(name, startMarkOrOptions?, endMark?)
PropertyTypeDescription
name<string>-
startMarkOrOptions<string> | <Object>Optional.
detail<any>Additional optional detail to include with the measure.
duration<number>Duration between start and end times.
end<number> | <string>Timestamp to be used as the end time, or a string identifying a previously recorded mark.
start<number> | <string>Timestamp to be used as the start time, or a string identifying a previously recorded mark.
endMark<string>Optional. Must be omitted if startMarkOrOptions is an <Object>.

Creates a new PerformanceMeasure entry in the Performance Timeline. A PerformanceMeasure is a subclass of PerformanceEntry whose performanceEntry.entryType is always 'measure', and whose performanceEntry.duration measures the number of milliseconds elapsed since startMark and endMark.

The startMark argument may identify any existing PerformanceMark in the Performance Timeline, or may identify any of the timestamp properties provided by the PerformanceNodeTiming class. If the named startMark does not exist, an error is thrown.

The optional endMark argument must identify any existing PerformanceMark in the Performance Timeline or any of the timestamp properties provided by the PerformanceNodeTiming class. endMark will be performance.now() if no parameter is passed, otherwise if the named endMark does not exist, an error will be thrown.

The created PerformanceMeasure entry is put in the global Performance Timeline and can be queried with performance.getEntries, performance.getEntriesByName, and performance.getEntriesByType. When the observation is performed, the entries should be cleared from the global Performance Timeline manually with performance.clearMeasures.

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performance.nodeTiming

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PropertyTypeDescription
-<PerformanceNodeTiming>-

This property is an extension by Node.js. It is not available in Web browsers.

An instance of the PerformanceNodeTiming class that provides performance metrics for specific Node.js operational milestones.

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performance.now

performance.now(): number
PropertyTypeDescription
Returns<number>-

Returns the current high resolution millisecond timestamp, where 0 represents the start of the current node process.

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performance.setResourceTimingBufferSize

performance.setResourceTimingBufferSize(maxSize)

Sets the global performance resource timing buffer size to the specified number of "resource" type performance entry objects.

By default the max buffer size is set to 250.

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performance.timeOrigin

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PropertyTypeDescription
-<number>-

The timeOrigin specifies the high resolution millisecond timestamp at which the current node process began, measured in Unix time.

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performance.timerify

performance.timerify(fn, options?)
PropertyTypeDescription
fn<Function>-
options<Object>-
histogram<RecordableHistogram>A histogram object created using perf_hooks.createHistogram() that will record runtime durations in nanoseconds.

This property is an extension by Node.js. It is not available in Web browsers.

Wraps a function within a new function that measures the running time of the wrapped function. A PerformanceObserver must be subscribed to the 'function' event type in order for the timing details to be accessed.

import { performance, PerformanceObserver } from 'node:perf_hooks';

function someFunction() {
  console.log('hello world');
}

const wrapped = performance.timerify(someFunction);

const obs = new PerformanceObserver((list) => {
  console.log(list.getEntries()[0].duration);

  performance.clearMarks();
  performance.clearMeasures();
  obs.disconnect();
});
obs.observe({ entryTypes: ['function'] });

// A performance timeline entry will be created
wrapped();

If the wrapped function returns a promise, a finally handler will be attached to the promise and the duration will be reported once the finally handler is invoked.

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performance.toJSON

performance.toJSON()

An object which is JSON representation of the performance object. It is similar to window.performance.toJSON in browsers.

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resourcetimingbufferfull

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The 'resourcetimingbufferfull' event is fired when the global performance resource timing buffer is full. Adjust resource timing buffer size with performance.setResourceTimingBufferSize() or clear the buffer with performance.clearResourceTimings() in the event listener to allow more entries to be added to the performance timeline buffer.

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PerformanceEntry

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The constructor of this class is not exposed to users directly.

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performanceEntry.duration

PropertyTypeDescription
-<number>-

The total number of milliseconds elapsed for this entry. This value will not be meaningful for all Performance Entry types.

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performanceEntry.entryType

PropertyTypeDescription
-<string>-

The type of the performance entry. It may be one of:

  • 'dns' (Node.js only)
  • 'function' (Node.js only)
  • 'gc' (Node.js only)
  • 'http2' (Node.js only)
  • 'http' (Node.js only)
  • 'mark' (available on the Web)
  • 'measure' (available on the Web)
  • 'net' (Node.js only)
  • 'node' (Node.js only)
  • 'resource' (available on the Web)
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performanceEntry.name

PropertyTypeDescription
-<string>-

The name of the performance entry.

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performanceEntry.startTime

PropertyTypeDescription
-<number>-

The high resolution millisecond timestamp marking the starting time of the Performance Entry.

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PerformanceMark

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class PerformanceMark extends PerformanceEntry

Exposes marks created via the Performance.mark() method.

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performanceMark.detail

PropertyTypeDescription
-<any>-

Additional detail specified when creating with Performance.mark() method.

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PerformanceMeasure

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class PerformanceMeasure extends PerformanceEntry

Exposes measures created via the Performance.measure() method.

The constructor of this class is not exposed to users directly.

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performanceMeasure.detail

PropertyTypeDescription
-<any>-

Additional detail specified when creating with Performance.measure() method.

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PerformanceNodeEntry

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class PerformanceNodeEntry extends PerformanceEntry

This class is an extension by Node.js. It is not available in Web browsers.

Provides detailed Node.js timing data.

The constructor of this class is not exposed to users directly.

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performanceNodeEntry.detail

PropertyTypeDescription
-<any>-

Additional detail specific to the entryType.

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performanceNodeEntry.flags

Stability: 0Deprecated: Use performanceNodeEntry.detail instead.
PropertyTypeDescription
-<number>-

When performanceEntry.entryType is equal to 'gc', the performance.flags property contains additional information about garbage collection operation. The value may be one of:

  • perf_hooks.constants.NODE_PERFORMANCE_GC_FLAGS_NO
  • perf_hooks.constants.NODE_PERFORMANCE_GC_FLAGS_CONSTRUCT_RETAINED
  • perf_hooks.constants.NODE_PERFORMANCE_GC_FLAGS_FORCED
  • perf_hooks.constants.NODE_PERFORMANCE_GC_FLAGS_SYNCHRONOUS_PHANTOM_PROCESSING
  • perf_hooks.constants.NODE_PERFORMANCE_GC_FLAGS_ALL_AVAILABLE_GARBAGE
  • perf_hooks.constants.NODE_PERFORMANCE_GC_FLAGS_ALL_EXTERNAL_MEMORY
  • perf_hooks.constants.NODE_PERFORMANCE_GC_FLAGS_SCHEDULE_IDLE
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performanceNodeEntry.kind

Stability: 0Deprecated: Use performanceNodeEntry.detail instead.
PropertyTypeDescription
-<number>-

When performanceEntry.entryType is equal to 'gc', the performance.kind property identifies the type of garbage collection operation that occurred. The value may be one of:

  • perf_hooks.constants.NODE_PERFORMANCE_GC_MAJOR
  • perf_hooks.constants.NODE_PERFORMANCE_GC_MINOR
  • perf_hooks.constants.NODE_PERFORMANCE_GC_INCREMENTAL
  • perf_hooks.constants.NODE_PERFORMANCE_GC_WEAKCB

Garbage Collection ('gc') Details

When performanceEntry.type is equal to 'gc', the performanceNodeEntry.detail property will be an <Object> with two properties:

PropertyTypeDescription
kind<number>One of:
flags<number>One of:

HTTP ('http') Details

When performanceEntry.type is equal to 'http', the performanceNodeEntry.detail property will be an <Object> containing additional information.

If performanceEntry.name is equal to HttpClient, the detail will contain the following properties: req, res. And the req property will be an <Object> containing method, url, headers, the res property will be an <Object> containing statusCode, statusMessage, headers.

If performanceEntry.name is equal to HttpRequest, the detail will contain the following properties: req, res. And the req property will be an <Object> containing method, url, headers, the res property will be an <Object> containing statusCode, statusMessage, headers.

This could add additional memory overhead and should only be used for diagnostic purposes, not left turned on in production by default.

HTTP/2 ('http2') Details

When performanceEntry.type is equal to 'http2', the performanceNodeEntry.detail property will be an <Object> containing additional performance information.

If performanceEntry.name is equal to Http2Stream, the detail will contain the following properties:

PropertyTypeDescription
bytesRead<number>The number of DATA frame bytes received for this Http2Stream.
bytesWritten<number>The number of DATA frame bytes sent for this Http2Stream.
id<number>The identifier of the associated Http2Stream
timeToFirstByte<number>The number of milliseconds elapsed between the PerformanceEntry startTime and the reception of the first DATA frame.
timeToFirstByteSent<number>The number of milliseconds elapsed between the PerformanceEntry startTime and sending of the first DATA frame.
timeToFirstHeader<number>The number of milliseconds elapsed between the PerformanceEntry startTime and the reception of the first header.

If performanceEntry.name is equal to Http2Session, the detail will contain the following properties:

PropertyTypeDescription
bytesRead<number>The number of bytes received for this Http2Session.
bytesWritten<number>The number of bytes sent for this Http2Session.
framesReceived<number>The number of HTTP/2 frames received by the Http2Session.
framesSent<number>The number of HTTP/2 frames sent by the Http2Session.
maxConcurrentStreams<number>The maximum number of streams concurrently open during the lifetime of the Http2Session.
pingRTT<number>The number of milliseconds elapsed since the transmission of a PING frame and the reception of its acknowledgment. Only present if a PING frame has been sent on the Http2Session.
streamAverageDuration<number>The average duration (in milliseconds) for all Http2Stream instances.
streamCount<number>The number of Http2Stream instances processed by the Http2Session.
type<string>Either 'server' or 'client' to identify the type of Http2Session.

Timerify ('function') Details

When performanceEntry.type is equal to 'function', the performanceNodeEntry.detail property will be an <Array> listing the input arguments to the timed function.

Net ('net') Details

When performanceEntry.type is equal to 'net', the performanceNodeEntry.detail property will be an <Object> containing additional information.

If performanceEntry.name is equal to connect, the detail will contain the following properties: host, port.

DNS ('dns') Details

When performanceEntry.type is equal to 'dns', the performanceNodeEntry.detail property will be an <Object> containing additional information.

If performanceEntry.name is equal to lookup, the detail will contain the following properties: hostname, family, hints, verbatim, addresses.

If performanceEntry.name is equal to lookupService, the detail will contain the following properties: host, port, hostname, service.

If performanceEntry.name is equal to queryxxx or getHostByAddr, the detail will contain the following properties: host, ttl, result. The value of result is same as the result of queryxxx or getHostByAddr.

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PerformanceNodeTiming

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class PerformanceNodeTiming extends PerformanceEntry

This property is an extension by Node.js. It is not available in Web browsers.

Provides timing details for Node.js itself. The constructor of this class is not exposed to users.

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performanceNodeTiming.bootstrapComplete

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PropertyTypeDescription
-<number>-

The high resolution millisecond timestamp at which the Node.js process completed bootstrapping. If bootstrapping has not yet finished, the property has the value of -1.

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performanceNodeTiming.environment

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PropertyTypeDescription
-<number>-

The high resolution millisecond timestamp at which the Node.js environment was initialized.

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performanceNodeTiming.idleTime

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PropertyTypeDescription
-<number>-

The high resolution millisecond timestamp of the amount of time the event loop has been idle within the event loop's event provider (e.g. epoll_wait). This does not take CPU usage into consideration. If the event loop has not yet started (e.g., in the first tick of the main script), the property has the value of 0.

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performanceNodeTiming.loopExit

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PropertyTypeDescription
-<number>-

The high resolution millisecond timestamp at which the Node.js event loop exited. If the event loop has not yet exited, the property has the value of -1. It can only have a value of not -1 in a handler of the 'exit' event.

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performanceNodeTiming.loopStart

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PropertyTypeDescription
-<number>-

The high resolution millisecond timestamp at which the Node.js event loop started. If the event loop has not yet started (e.g., in the first tick of the main script), the property has the value of -1.

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performanceNodeTiming.nodeStart

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PropertyTypeDescription
-<number>-

The high resolution millisecond timestamp at which the Node.js process was initialized.

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performanceNodeTiming.uvMetricsInfo

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PropertyTypeDescription
Returns<Object>-
loopCount<number>Number of event loop iterations.
events<number>Number of events that have been processed by the event handler.
eventsWaiting<number>Number of events that were waiting to be processed when the event provider was called.

This is a wrapper to the uv_metrics_info function. It returns the current set of event loop metrics.

It is recommended to use this property inside a function whose execution was scheduled using setImmediate to avoid collecting metrics before finishing all operations scheduled during the current loop iteration.

const { performance } = require('node:perf_hooks');

setImmediate(() => {
  console.log(performance.nodeTiming.uvMetricsInfo);
});
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performanceNodeTiming.v8Start

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PropertyTypeDescription
-<number>-

The high resolution millisecond timestamp at which the V8 platform was initialized.

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PerformanceResourceTiming

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class PerformanceResourceTiming extends PerformanceEntry

Provides detailed network timing data regarding the loading of an application's resources.

The constructor of this class is not exposed to users directly.

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performanceResourceTiming.workerStart

PropertyTypeDescription
-<number>-

The high resolution millisecond timestamp at immediately before dispatching the fetch request. If the resource is not intercepted by a worker the property will always return 0.

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performanceResourceTiming.redirectStart

PropertyTypeDescription
-<number>-

The high resolution millisecond timestamp that represents the start time of the fetch which initiates the redirect.

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performanceResourceTiming.redirectEnd

PropertyTypeDescription
-<number>-

The high resolution millisecond timestamp that will be created immediately after receiving the last byte of the response of the last redirect.

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performanceResourceTiming.fetchStart

PropertyTypeDescription
-<number>-

The high resolution millisecond timestamp immediately before the Node.js starts to fetch the resource.

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performanceResourceTiming.domainLookupStart

PropertyTypeDescription
-<number>-

The high resolution millisecond timestamp immediately before the Node.js starts the domain name lookup for the resource.

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performanceResourceTiming.domainLookupEnd

PropertyTypeDescription
-<number>-

The high resolution millisecond timestamp representing the time immediately after the Node.js finished the domain name lookup for the resource.

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performanceResourceTiming.connectStart

PropertyTypeDescription
-<number>-

The high resolution millisecond timestamp representing the time immediately before Node.js starts to establish the connection to the server to retrieve the resource.

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performanceResourceTiming.connectEnd

PropertyTypeDescription
-<number>-

The high resolution millisecond timestamp representing the time immediately after Node.js finishes establishing the connection to the server to retrieve the resource.

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performanceResourceTiming.secureConnectionStart

PropertyTypeDescription
-<number>-

The high resolution millisecond timestamp representing the time immediately before Node.js starts the handshake process to secure the current connection.

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performanceResourceTiming.requestStart

PropertyTypeDescription
-<number>-

The high resolution millisecond timestamp representing the time immediately before Node.js receives the first byte of the response from the server.

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performanceResourceTiming.responseEnd

PropertyTypeDescription
-<number>-

The high resolution millisecond timestamp representing the time immediately after Node.js receives the last byte of the resource or immediately before the transport connection is closed, whichever comes first.

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performanceResourceTiming.transferSize

PropertyTypeDescription
-<number>-

A number representing the size (in octets) of the fetched resource. The size includes the response header fields plus the response payload body.

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performanceResourceTiming.encodedBodySize

PropertyTypeDescription
-<number>-

A number representing the size (in octets) received from the fetch (HTTP or cache), of the payload body, before removing any applied content-codings.

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performanceResourceTiming.decodedBodySize

PropertyTypeDescription
-<number>-

A number representing the size (in octets) received from the fetch (HTTP or cache), of the message body, after removing any applied content-codings.

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performanceResourceTiming.toJSON

performanceResourceTiming.toJSON()

Returns a object that is the JSON representation of the PerformanceResourceTiming object

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PerformanceObserver

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PerformanceObserver.supportedEntryTypes

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PropertyTypeDescription
-<string[]>-

Get supported types.

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PerformanceObserver Constructor

new PerformanceObserver(callback)
PropertyTypeDescription
callback<Function>-

PerformanceObserver objects provide notifications when new PerformanceEntry instances have been added to the Performance Timeline.

import { performance, PerformanceObserver } from 'node:perf_hooks';

const obs = new PerformanceObserver((list, observer) => {
  console.log(list.getEntries());

  performance.clearMarks();
  performance.clearMeasures();
  observer.disconnect();
});
obs.observe({ entryTypes: ['mark'], buffered: true });

performance.mark('test');

Because PerformanceObserver instances introduce their own additional performance overhead, instances should not be left subscribed to notifications indefinitely. Users should disconnect observers as soon as they are no longer needed.

The callback is invoked when a PerformanceObserver is notified about new PerformanceEntry instances. The callback receives a PerformanceObserverEntryList instance and a reference to the PerformanceObserver.

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performanceObserver.disconnect

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performanceObserver.disconnect()

Disconnects the PerformanceObserver instance from all notifications.

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performanceObserver.observe

performanceObserver.observe(options)
PropertyTypeDescription
options<Object>-
type<string>A single <PerformanceEntry> type. Must not be given if entryTypes is already specified.
entryTypes<string[]>An array of strings identifying the types of <PerformanceEntry> instances the observer is interested in. If not provided an error will be thrown.
buffered<boolean>If true, the observer callback is called with a list global PerformanceEntry buffered entries. If false, only PerformanceEntrys created after the time point are sent to the observer callback. Default: false.

Subscribes the <PerformanceObserver> instance to notifications of new <PerformanceEntry> instances identified either by options.entryTypes or options.type:

import { performance, PerformanceObserver } from 'node:perf_hooks';

const obs = new PerformanceObserver((list, observer) => {
  // Called once asynchronously. `list` contains three items.
});
obs.observe({ type: 'mark' });

for (let n = 0; n < 3; n++)
  performance.mark(`test${n}`);
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performanceObserver.takeRecords

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performanceObserver.takeRecords(): PerformanceEntry[]
PropertyTypeDescription
Returns<PerformanceEntry[]>Current list of entries stored in the performance observer, emptying it out.
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PerformanceObserverEntryList

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The PerformanceObserverEntryList class is used to provide access to the PerformanceEntry instances passed to a PerformanceObserver. The constructor of this class is not exposed to users.

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performanceObserverEntryList.getEntries

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performanceObserverEntryList.getEntries(): PerformanceEntry[]
PropertyTypeDescription
Returns<PerformanceEntry[]>-

Returns a list of PerformanceEntry objects in chronological order with respect to performanceEntry.startTime.

import { performance, PerformanceObserver } from 'node:perf_hooks';

const obs = new PerformanceObserver((perfObserverList, observer) => {
  console.log(perfObserverList.getEntries());
  /**
   * [
   *   PerformanceEntry {
   *     name: 'test',
   *     entryType: 'mark',
   *     startTime: 81.465639,
   *     duration: 0,
   *     detail: null
   *   },
   *   PerformanceEntry {
   *     name: 'meow',
   *     entryType: 'mark',
   *     startTime: 81.860064,
   *     duration: 0,
   *     detail: null
   *   }
   * ]
   */

  performance.clearMarks();
  performance.clearMeasures();
  observer.disconnect();
});
obs.observe({ type: 'mark' });

performance.mark('test');
performance.mark('meow');
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performanceObserverEntryList.getEntriesByName

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performanceObserverEntryList.getEntriesByName(name, type?): PerformanceEntry[]
PropertyTypeDescription
name<string>-
type<string>-
Returns<PerformanceEntry[]>-

Returns a list of PerformanceEntry objects in chronological order with respect to performanceEntry.startTime whose performanceEntry.name is equal to name, and optionally, whose performanceEntry.entryType is equal to type.

import { performance, PerformanceObserver } from 'node:perf_hooks';

const obs = new PerformanceObserver((perfObserverList, observer) => {
  console.log(perfObserverList.getEntriesByName('meow'));
  /**
   * [
   *   PerformanceEntry {
   *     name: 'meow',
   *     entryType: 'mark',
   *     startTime: 98.545991,
   *     duration: 0,
   *     detail: null
   *   }
   * ]
   */
  console.log(perfObserverList.getEntriesByName('nope')); // []

  console.log(perfObserverList.getEntriesByName('test', 'mark'));
  /**
   * [
   *   PerformanceEntry {
   *     name: 'test',
   *     entryType: 'mark',
   *     startTime: 63.518931,
   *     duration: 0,
   *     detail: null
   *   }
   * ]
   */
  console.log(perfObserverList.getEntriesByName('test', 'measure')); // []

  performance.clearMarks();
  performance.clearMeasures();
  observer.disconnect();
});
obs.observe({ entryTypes: ['mark', 'measure'] });

performance.mark('test');
performance.mark('meow');
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performanceObserverEntryList.getEntriesByType

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performanceObserverEntryList.getEntriesByType(type): PerformanceEntry[]
PropertyTypeDescription
type<string>-
Returns<PerformanceEntry[]>-

Returns a list of PerformanceEntry objects in chronological order with respect to performanceEntry.startTime whose performanceEntry.entryType is equal to type.

import { performance, PerformanceObserver } from 'node:perf_hooks';

const obs = new PerformanceObserver((perfObserverList, observer) => {
  console.log(perfObserverList.getEntriesByType('mark'));
  /**
   * [
   *   PerformanceEntry {
   *     name: 'test',
   *     entryType: 'mark',
   *     startTime: 55.897834,
   *     duration: 0,
   *     detail: null
   *   },
   *   PerformanceEntry {
   *     name: 'meow',
   *     entryType: 'mark',
   *     startTime: 56.350146,
   *     duration: 0,
   *     detail: null
   *   }
   * ]
   */
  performance.clearMarks();
  performance.clearMeasures();
  observer.disconnect();
});
obs.observe({ type: 'mark' });

performance.mark('test');
performance.mark('meow');
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perf_hooks.createHistogram

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perf_hooks.createHistogram(options?): RecordableHistogram
PropertyTypeDescription
options<Object>-
lowest<number> | <bigint>The lowest discernible value. Must be an integer value greater than 0. Default: 1.
highest<number> | <bigint>The highest recordable value. Must be an integer value that is equal to or greater than two times lowest. Default: Number.MAX_SAFE_INTEGER.
figures<number>The number of accuracy digits. Must be a number between 1 and 5. Default: 3.
Returns<RecordableHistogram>-

Returns a <RecordableHistogram>.

M

perf_hooks.monitorEventLoopDelay

History
perf_hooks.monitorEventLoopDelay(options?): IntervalHistogram
PropertyTypeDescription
options<Object>-
resolution<number>The sampling rate in milliseconds. Must be greater than zero. Default: 10.
Returns<IntervalHistogram>-

This property is an extension by Node.js. It is not available in Web browsers.

Creates an IntervalHistogram object that samples and reports the event loop delay over time. The delays will be reported in nanoseconds.

Using a timer to detect approximate event loop delay works because the execution of timers is tied specifically to the lifecycle of the libuv event loop. That is, a delay in the loop will cause a delay in the execution of the timer, and those delays are specifically what this API is intended to detect.

import { monitorEventLoopDelay } from 'node:perf_hooks';

const h = monitorEventLoopDelay({ resolution: 20 });
h.enable();
// Do something.
h.disable();
console.log(h.min);
console.log(h.max);
console.log(h.mean);
console.log(h.stddev);
console.log(h.percentiles);
console.log(h.percentile(50));
console.log(h.percentile(99));
C

Histogram

History
P

histogram.count

History
PropertyTypeDescription
-<number>-

The number of samples recorded by the histogram.

P

histogram.countBigInt

History
PropertyTypeDescription
-<bigint>-

The number of samples recorded by the histogram.

P

histogram.exceeds

History
PropertyTypeDescription
-<number>-

The number of times the event loop delay exceeded the maximum 1 hour event loop delay threshold.

P

histogram.exceedsBigInt

History
PropertyTypeDescription
-<bigint>-

The number of times the event loop delay exceeded the maximum 1 hour event loop delay threshold.

P

histogram.max

History
PropertyTypeDescription
-<number>-

The maximum recorded event loop delay.

P

histogram.maxBigInt

History
PropertyTypeDescription
-<bigint>-

The maximum recorded event loop delay.

P

histogram.mean

History
PropertyTypeDescription
-<number>-

The mean of the recorded event loop delays.

P

histogram.min

History
PropertyTypeDescription
-<number>-

The minimum recorded event loop delay.

P

histogram.minBigInt

History
PropertyTypeDescription
-<bigint>-

The minimum recorded event loop delay.

M

histogram.percentile

History
histogram.percentile(percentile): number
PropertyTypeDescription
percentile<number>A percentile value in the range (0, 100].
Returns<number>-

Returns the value at the given percentile.

M

histogram.percentileBigInt

History
histogram.percentileBigInt(percentile): bigint
PropertyTypeDescription
percentile<number>A percentile value in the range (0, 100].
Returns<bigint>-

Returns the value at the given percentile.

P

histogram.percentiles

History
PropertyTypeDescription
-<Map>-

Returns a Map object detailing the accumulated percentile distribution.

P

histogram.percentilesBigInt

History
PropertyTypeDescription
-<Map>-

Returns a Map object detailing the accumulated percentile distribution.

M

histogram.reset

History
histogram.reset()

Resets the collected histogram data.

P

histogram.stddev

History
PropertyTypeDescription
-<number>-

The standard deviation of the recorded event loop delays.

C

IntervalHistogram extends Histogram

A Histogram that is periodically updated on a given interval.

M

histogram.disable

History
histogram.disable(): boolean
PropertyTypeDescription
Returns<boolean>-

Disables the update interval timer. Returns true if the timer was stopped, false if it was already stopped.

M

histogram.enable

History
histogram.enable(): boolean
PropertyTypeDescription
Returns<boolean>-

Enables the update interval timer. Returns true if the timer was started, false if it was already started.

M

histogram[Symbol.dispose]

History
histogram[Symbol.dispose]()

Disables the update interval timer when the histogram is disposed.

const { monitorEventLoopDelay } = require('node:perf_hooks');
{
  using hist = monitorEventLoopDelay({ resolution: 20 });
  hist.enable();
  // The histogram will be disabled when the block is exited.
}

Cloning an IntervalHistogram

<IntervalHistogram> instances can be cloned via <MessagePort>. On the receiving end, the histogram is cloned as a plain <Histogram> object that does not implement the enable() and disable() methods.

C

RecordableHistogram extends Histogram

History
M

histogram.add

History
histogram.add(other)
PropertyTypeDescription
other<RecordableHistogram>-

Adds the values from other to this histogram.

M

histogram.record

History
histogram.record(val)
PropertyTypeDescription
val<number> | <bigint>The amount to record in the histogram.
M

histogram.recordDelta

History
histogram.recordDelta()

Calculates the amount of time (in nanoseconds) that has passed since the previous call to recordDelta() and records that amount in the histogram.

Examples

Measuring the duration of async operations

The following example uses the Async Hooks and Performance APIs to measure the actual duration of a Timeout operation (including the amount of time it took to execute the callback).

import { createHook } from 'node:async_hooks';
import { performance, PerformanceObserver } from 'node:perf_hooks';

const set = new Set();
const hook = createHook({
  init(id, type) {
    if (type === 'Timeout') {
      performance.mark(`Timeout-${id}-Init`);
      set.add(id);
    }
  },
  destroy(id) {
    if (set.has(id)) {
      set.delete(id);
      performance.mark(`Timeout-${id}-Destroy`);
      performance.measure(`Timeout-${id}`,
                          `Timeout-${id}-Init`,
                          `Timeout-${id}-Destroy`);
    }
  },
});
hook.enable();

const obs = new PerformanceObserver((list, observer) => {
  console.log(list.getEntries()[0]);
  performance.clearMarks();
  performance.clearMeasures();
  observer.disconnect();
});
obs.observe({ entryTypes: ['measure'], buffered: true });

setTimeout(() => {}, 1000);

Measuring how long it takes to load dependencies

The following example measures the duration of require() operations to load dependencies:

import { performance, PerformanceObserver } from 'node:perf_hooks';

// Activate the observer
const obs = new PerformanceObserver((list) => {
  const entries = list.getEntries();
  entries.forEach((entry) => {
    console.log(`import('${entry[0]}')`, entry.duration);
  });
  performance.clearMarks();
  performance.clearMeasures();
  obs.disconnect();
});
obs.observe({ entryTypes: ['function'], buffered: true });

const timedImport = performance.timerify(async (module) => {
  return await import(module);
});

await timedImport('some-module');

Measuring how long one HTTP round-trip takes

The following example is used to trace the time spent by HTTP client (OutgoingMessage) and HTTP request (IncomingMessage). For HTTP client, it means the time interval between starting the request and receiving the response, and for HTTP request, it means the time interval between receiving the request and sending the response:

import { PerformanceObserver } from 'node:perf_hooks';
import { createServer, get } from 'node:http';

const obs = new PerformanceObserver((items) => {
  items.getEntries().forEach((item) => {
    console.log(item);
  });
});

obs.observe({ entryTypes: ['http'] });

const PORT = 8080;

createServer((req, res) => {
  res.end('ok');
}).listen(PORT, () => {
  get(`http://127.0.0.1:${PORT}`);
});

Measuring how long the net.connect (only for TCP) takes when the connection is successful

import { PerformanceObserver } from 'node:perf_hooks';
import { connect, createServer } from 'node:net';

const obs = new PerformanceObserver((items) => {
  items.getEntries().forEach((item) => {
    console.log(item);
  });
});
obs.observe({ entryTypes: ['net'] });
const PORT = 8080;
createServer((socket) => {
  socket.destroy();
}).listen(PORT, () => {
  connect(PORT);
});

Measuring how long the DNS takes when the request is successful

import { PerformanceObserver } from 'node:perf_hooks';
import { lookup, promises } from 'node:dns';

const obs = new PerformanceObserver((items) => {
  items.getEntries().forEach((item) => {
    console.log(item);
  });
});
obs.observe({ entryTypes: ['dns'] });
lookup('localhost', () => {});
promises.resolve('localhost');
Reading Time
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Added In
v8.5.0
View As
  1. JSON
  2. MD
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Table of Contents
  1. perf_hooks.performance
  2. performance.clearMarks
  3. performance.clearMeasures
  4. performance.clearResourceTimings
  5. performance.eventLoopUtilization
  6. performance.getEntries
  7. performance.getEntriesByName
  8. performance.getEntriesByType
  9. performance.mark
  10. performance.markResourceTiming
  11. performance.measure
  12. performance.nodeTiming
  13. performance.now
  14. performance.setResourceTimingBufferSize
  15. performance.timeOrigin
  16. performance.timerify
  17. performance.toJSON
  18. PerformanceEntry
  19. performanceEntry.duration
  20. performanceEntry.entryType
  21. performanceEntry.name
  22. performanceEntry.startTime
  23. PerformanceMark
  24. performanceMark.detail
  25. PerformanceMeasure
  26. performanceMeasure.detail
  27. PerformanceNodeEntry
  28. performanceNodeEntry.detail
  29. performanceNodeEntry.flags
  30. performanceNodeEntry.kind
  31. Garbage Collection ('gc') Details
  32. HTTP ('http') Details
  33. HTTP/2 ('http2') Details
  34. Timerify ('function') Details
  35. Net ('net') Details
  36. DNS ('dns') Details
  37. PerformanceNodeTiming
  38. performanceNodeTiming.bootstrapComplete
  39. performanceNodeTiming.environment
  40. performanceNodeTiming.idleTime
  41. performanceNodeTiming.loopExit
  42. performanceNodeTiming.loopStart
  43. performanceNodeTiming.nodeStart
  44. performanceNodeTiming.uvMetricsInfo
  45. performanceNodeTiming.v8Start
  46. PerformanceResourceTiming
  47. performanceResourceTiming.workerStart
  48. performanceResourceTiming.redirectStart
  49. performanceResourceTiming.redirectEnd
  50. performanceResourceTiming.fetchStart
  51. performanceResourceTiming.domainLookupStart
  52. performanceResourceTiming.domainLookupEnd
  53. performanceResourceTiming.connectStart
  54. performanceResourceTiming.connectEnd
  55. performanceResourceTiming.secureConnectionStart
  56. performanceResourceTiming.requestStart
  57. performanceResourceTiming.responseEnd
  58. performanceResourceTiming.transferSize
  59. performanceResourceTiming.encodedBodySize
  60. performanceResourceTiming.decodedBodySize
  61. performanceResourceTiming.toJSON
  62. PerformanceObserver
  63. PerformanceObserver.supportedEntryTypes
  64. PerformanceObserver Constructor
  65. performanceObserver.disconnect
  66. performanceObserver.observe
  67. performanceObserver.takeRecords
  68. PerformanceObserverEntryList
  69. performanceObserverEntryList.getEntries
  70. performanceObserverEntryList.getEntriesByName
  71. performanceObserverEntryList.getEntriesByType
  72. perf_hooks.createHistogram
  73. perf_hooks.monitorEventLoopDelay
  74. Histogram
  75. histogram.count
  76. histogram.countBigInt
  77. histogram.exceeds
  78. histogram.exceedsBigInt
  79. histogram.max
  80. histogram.maxBigInt
  81. histogram.mean
  82. histogram.min
  83. histogram.minBigInt
  84. histogram.percentile
  85. histogram.percentileBigInt
  86. histogram.percentiles
  87. histogram.percentilesBigInt
  88. histogram.reset
  89. histogram.stddev
  90. IntervalHistogram extends Histogram
  91. histogram.disable
  92. histogram.enable
  93. histogram[Symbol.dispose]
  94. Cloning an IntervalHistogram
  95. RecordableHistogram extends Histogram
  96. histogram.add
  97. histogram.record
  98. histogram.recordDelta
  99. Examples
  100. Measuring the duration of async operations
  101. Measuring how long it takes to load dependencies
  102. Measuring how long one HTTP round-trip takes
  103. Measuring how long the net.connect (only for TCP) takes when the connection is successful
  104. Measuring how long the DNS takes when the request is successful