View deoptimizations of your JavaScript in V8
Also consider checking out Deopt Explorer from the TypeScript team!
V8 only optimizes code that runs repeatedly. Often for websites this code is your framework's code and not your app code. If you are looking to improve your website's performance, first check out tools like Lighthouse or webhint, and follow other general website performance guidance.
Install NodeJS 14.x or greater.
npx v8-deopt-viewer program.js --open
If you want run this against URLs, also install puppeteer
:
npm i -g puppeteer
The main usage of this repo is through the CLI. Download the v8-deopt-viewer
package through NPM or use npx
to run the CLI. Options for the CLI can be found using the --help
.
$ npx v8-deopt-viewer --help
Description
Generate and view deoptimizations in JavaScript code running in V8
Usage
$ v8-deopt-viewer [file] [options]
Options
-i, --input Path to an already generated v8.log file
-o, --out The directory to output files too (default current working directory)
-t, --timeout How long in milliseconds to keep the browser open while the webpage runs (default 5000)
--keep-internals Don't remove NodeJS internals from the log
--skip-maps Skip tracing internal maps of V8
--open Open the resulting webapp in a web browser
-v, --version Displays current version
-h, --help Displays this message
Examples
$ v8-deopt-viewer examples/simple/adder.js
$ v8-deopt-viewer examples/html-inline/adders.html -o /tmp/directory
$ v8-deopt-viewer https://google.com
$ v8-deopt-viewer -i v8.log
$ v8-deopt-viewer -i v8.log -o /tmp/directory
Running the CLI will run the script or webpage provided with V8 flags to output a log of optimizations and deoptimizations. That log is saved as v8.log
. We'll then parse that log into a JSON object filtering out the useful log lines and extending the information with such as the severity of the deopts. This data is saved in a JavaScript file (v8-data.js
). We copy over the files from the webapp for viewing the data (index.html
, v8-deopt-webapp.js
, v8-deopt-webapp.css
). Finally, open the index.html
file in a modern browser to view the results of the run.
-
This project started out as a fork of the awesome
deoptigate
but as the scope of what I wanted to accomplish grew, I figured it was time to start my own project that I could re-architect to meet my requirements