How do I measure the execution time of JavaScript code with callbacks?
Surprised no one had mentioned yet the new built in libraries:
Available in Node >= 8.5, and should be in Modern Browers
https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/API/Performance
https://nodejs.org/docs/latest-v8.x/api/perf_hooks.html#
Node 8.5 ~ 9.x (Firefox, Chrome)
// const { performance } = require('perf_hooks'); // enable for node
const delay = time => new Promise(res=>setTimeout(res,time))
async function doSomeLongRunningProcess(){
await delay(1000);
}
performance.mark('A');
(async ()=>{
await doSomeLongRunningProcess();
performance.mark('B');
performance.measure('A to B', 'A', 'B');
const measure = performance.getEntriesByName('A to B')[0];
// firefox appears to only show second precision.
console.log(measure.duration);
// apparently you should clean up...
performance.clearMarks();
performance.clearMeasures();
// Prints the number of milliseconds between Mark 'A' and Mark 'B'
})();
https://repl.it/@CodyGeisler/NodeJsPerformanceHooks
Node 12.x
https://nodejs.org/docs/latest-v12.x/api/perf_hooks.html
const { PerformanceObserver, performance } = require('perf_hooks');
const delay = time => new Promise(res => setTimeout(res, time))
async function doSomeLongRunningProcess() {
await delay(1000);
}
const obs = new PerformanceObserver((items) => {
console.log('PerformanceObserver A to B',items.getEntries()[0].duration);
// apparently you should clean up...
performance.clearMarks();
// performance.clearMeasures(); // Not a function in Node.js 12
});
obs.observe({ entryTypes: ['measure'] });
performance.mark('A');
(async function main(){
try{
await performance.timerify(doSomeLongRunningProcess)();
performance.mark('B');
performance.measure('A to B', 'A', 'B');
}catch(e){
console.log('main() error',e);
}
})();
Use the Node.js console.time()
and console.timeEnd()
:
var i;
console.time("dbsave");
for(i = 1; i < LIMIT; i++){
db.users.save({id : i, name : "MongoUser [" + i + "]"}, end);
}
end = function(err, saved) {
console.log(( err || !saved )?"Error":"Saved");
if(--i === 1){console.timeEnd("dbsave");}
};
Invoking console.time('label')
will record the current time in milliseconds, then later calling console.timeEnd('label')
will display the duration from that point.
The time in milliseconds will be automatically printed alongside the label, so you don't have to make a separate call to console.log to print a label:
console.time('test');
//some code
console.timeEnd('test'); //Prints something like that-> test: 11374.004ms
For more information, see Mozilla's developer docs on console.time
.
There is a method that is designed for this. Check out process.hrtime(); .
So, I basically put this at the top of my app.
var start = process.hrtime();
var elapsed_time = function(note){
var precision = 3; // 3 decimal places
var elapsed = process.hrtime(start)[1] / 1000000; // divide by a million to get nano to milli
console.log(process.hrtime(start)[0] + " s, " + elapsed.toFixed(precision) + " ms - " + note); // print message + time
start = process.hrtime(); // reset the timer
}
Then I use it to see how long functions take. Here's a basic example that prints the contents of a text file called "output.txt":
var debug = true;
http.createServer(function(request, response) {
if(debug) console.log("----------------------------------");
if(debug) elapsed_time("recieved request");
var send_html = function(err, contents) {
if(debug) elapsed_time("start send_html()");
response.writeHead(200, {'Content-Type': 'text/html' } );
response.end(contents);
if(debug) elapsed_time("end send_html()");
}
if(debug) elapsed_time("start readFile()");
fs.readFile('output.txt', send_html);
if(debug) elapsed_time("end readFile()");
}).listen(8080);
Here's a quick test you can run in a terminal (BASH shell):
for i in {1..100}; do echo $i; curl http://localhost:8080/; done