Automated auditing, performance metrics, and best practices for the web.
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Paul Irish ec6e0fa1e3
Improve the `lighthouse --help` output
2016-05-09 13:31:42 -07:00
cli Improve the `lighthouse --help` output 2016-05-09 13:31:42 -07:00
closure Updates audits to use an object for generateAuditResult (#289) 2016-05-05 11:55:06 -07:00
extension Adds compat docs; fixes minor issues 2016-05-09 14:30:11 +01:00
module Adds module support. (#287) 2016-05-05 11:37:33 -07:00
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src Adds compat docs; fixes minor issues 2016-05-09 14:30:11 +01:00
test webinspector test. fix the assertion. 2016-04-29 14:38:53 -07:00
typings VSCode completions and intellisense via TypeScript compiler 2016-03-27 13:09:50 -07:00
.editorconfig editorconfig 2016-03-09 23:42:40 -08:00
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.eslintrc theme-color tests using DOM domain 2016-03-28 12:14:13 -07:00
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package.json Adds module support. (#287) 2016-05-05 11:37:33 -07:00
readme.md Update readme.md 2016-05-03 19:39:35 +01:00

readme.md

lighthouse

Stops you crashing into the rocks; lights the way

Build Status

status: early. sorta working

Install

npm install -g GoogleChrome/lighthouse

Run

# Start Chrome with a few flags
npm explore -g lighthouse -- npm run chrome

# Kick off a lighthouse run
lighthouse https://airhorner.com/

# see flags and options
lighthouse --help

Develop

Setup

git clone https://github.com/GoogleChrome/lighthouse
cd lighthouse

npm install
npm link

Tests

Some basic unit tests forked are in /test and run via mocha. eslint is also checked for style violations.

# lint and test all files
npm test

# watch for file changes and run tests
#   Requires http://entrproject.org : brew install entr
npm run watch

## run linting and unit tests seprately
npm run lint
npm run unit

Chrome Extension

The same audits are run against from a Chrome extension. See ./extension.

Architecture

Some incomplete notes

Components

  • Driver - Interfaces with Chrome Debugging Protocol
  • Gathers - Requesting data from the browser (and maybe post-processing)
  • Artifacts - The output of gatherers
  • Audits - Non-performance evaluations of capabilities and issues. Includes a raw value and score of that value.
  • Metrics - Performance metrics summarizing the UX
  • Diagnoses - The perf problems that affect those metrics
  • Aggregators - Pulling audit results, grouping into user-facing components (eg. install_to_homescreen) and applying weighting and overall scoring.

Protocol

  • Interacting with Chrome: The Chrome protocol connection maintained via chrome-remote-interface for the CLI and chrome.debuggger API when in the Chrome extension.
  • Event binding & domains: Some domains must be enable()d so they issue events. Once enabled, they flush any events that represent state. As such, network events will only issue after the domain is enabled. All the protocol agents resolve their Domain.enable() callback after they have flushed any pending events. See example:
// will NOT work
driver.sendCommand('Security.enable').then(_ => {
	driver.on('Security.securityStateChanged', state => { /* ... */ });
})

// WILL work! happy happy. :)
driver.on('Security.securityStateChanged', state => { /* ... */ }); // event binding is synchronous
driver.sendCommand('Security.enable');

Gatherers

  • Reading the DOM: We prefer reading the DOM right from the browser (See #77). The driver exposes a querySelector method that can be used along with a getAttribute method to read values.

Audits

The return value of each audit takes this shape:

Promise.resolve({
  name: 'audit-name',
  tags: ['what have you'],
  description: 'whatnot',
  // value: The score. Typically a boolean, but can be number 0-100
  value: 0,
  // rawValue: Could be anything, as long as it can easily be stringified and displayed,
  //   e.g. 'your score is bad because you wrote ${rawValue}'
  rawValue: {},
  // debugString: Some *specific* error string for helping the user figure out why they failed here.
  //   The reporter can handle *general* feedback on how to fix, e.g. links to the docs
  debugString: 'Your manifest 404ed'
  // fault:  Optional argument when the audit doesn't cover whatever it is you're doing,
  //   e.g. we can't parse your particular corner case out of a trace yet.
  //   Whatever is in `rawValue` and `score` would be N/A in these cases
  fault: 'some reason the audit has failed you, Anakin'
});

Code Style

The .eslintrc defines all.

Code documentation

We're using JSDoc along with closure annotations. Annotations encouraged for all contributions.

Variable declarations

const > let > var. Use const wherever possible. Save var for emergencies only.

Trace processing

The traceviewer-based trace processor from node-big-rig was forked into Lighthouse. Additionally, the DevTools' Timeline Model is available as well. There may be advantages for using one model over another.