GoogleChromeLabs / AutoWebPerf

AutoWebPerf provides a flexible and scalable framework for running web performance audits with arbitrary audit tools including PageSpeedInsights, WebPageTest and more.
Apache License 2.0
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chrome-ux-report crux lighthouse pagespeed-insights pagespeed-insights-api performance performance-metrics web webperformance

AutoWebPerf (AWP)

quicklink

AutoWebPerf provides a flexible and scalable framework for running web performance audits with arbitrary audit tools like WebPageTest and PageSpeedInsights. This library enables developers to collect metrics consistently and store metrics to a preferred data store such as local JSON files, Google Sheets, BigQuery, or an in-house SQL database.

Check out https://web.dev/autowebperf for introduction.

How it works

AutoWebPerf takes a list of Tests from an arbitrary data store platform, such as local JSONs, Google Sheets, BigQuery, or a self-hosted SQL database. With the list of Tests, it executes audits based on each Test config, collects metrics from individual data sources into a list of Results.

The process of running an audit through an measurement tool (e.g. WebPageTest) is defined in the individual Gatherer. The logic of reading and writing with a data platform (e.g. local JSON) is implemented in a Connector.

Feature highlights

How does this compare to the rest of Google's speed measurement tools?

AutoWebPerf serves as a performance audit aggregator that automates the process of performance audit and metrics collection through multiple speed measurement tools including WebPageTest, PageSpeedInsights, and Chrome UX Report. As each individual speed measurement tool provides audit metrics, AutoWebPerf aggregates the results and writes to any preferred data storage platform, such as local JSONs, cloud-based database, or GoogleSheets.

Quickstart

First, clone AWP repo and run npm install:

git clone https://github.com/GoogleChromeLabs/AutoWebPerf.git
npm install

Once finished, check the install by running a single test with the following command:

./awp run examples/tests.json output/results.json

This command uses the example file in examples/tests.json and returns the results to output/results.json.

To start recurring tests, you'll need to include a recurring.frequency property in the test file and set the next trigger in the test file. To setup the next trigger time and to run a one-off test, use this command after adding the recurring.frequency property to your tests:

./awp recurring examples/tests-recurring.json output/results.json

If this was successful, the trigger time will have updated base on your chosen frequency, and a result would have been written to output/results.json.

Once the trigger time is correctly set, you can have your tests auto-run on the next triger time with the continue command:

./awp continue examples/tests-recurring.json output/results.json

This will automatically run each test at the frequency specified. More information can be found below in the "Run recurring tests" section below.

More Examples

Single URL: To test a single URL through PageSpeedInsights:

./awp run url:https://www.thinkwithgoogle.com/ json:output/results.json

Pick Gatherer: to test a single URL with a specific gatherer like PageSpeedInsights or WebPageTest:

./awp run --gatherers=psi url:https://web.dev json:output/results.json

CSV file: To run tests defined in a CSV file and write results to a JSON file:

./awp run csv:examples/tests.csv json:output/results.json

PageSpeedInsights API: To run PageSpeedInsights tests with an API Key:

PSI_APIKEY=SAMPLE_KEY ./awp run examples/tests.json output/results.json

WebPageTest API: To run WebPageTest tests:

WPT_APIKEY=SAMPLE_KEY ./awp run examples/tests-wpt.json output/results.json

Override vs. Append: To run tests and override existing results in the output file

./awp run examples/tests.json output/results.json --override-results

Available gatherers:

Available connectors:

Alternatively, to specify using the JSON connector for the Tests path and the Results path:

./awp run json:/examples/tests.json json:output/results.json

Please note that this connector only works with Tests path, not for the Results path.

Using AWP with Node CLI

Run tests

You can run the following anytime for printing CLI usages:

./awp --help

To run tests, you can run the following CLI command with given Tests JSON, like examples/tests.json, which contains an array of tests. You can check out the examples/tests.json for the data structure of Tests.

./awp run examples/tests.json output/results.json

This will generate the result object(s) in the given path to results.json.

By default, AWP will use JSON as the default connector for both reading tests and writing results. Alternatively, you can specify a different connector in the format of <connector>:<path>.

E.g. to run tests defined in CSV and write results in JSON:

./awp run csv:examples/tests.csv json:output/results.csv

Retrieve test results

For some audit platforms like WebPageTest, each test may take a few minutes to fetch actual results. For these type of asynchronous audits, each Result will stay in "Submitted" status. You will need to explicitly retrieve results later.

Run the following to retrieve the final metrics of results in the results.json.

./awp retrieve examples/tests.json output/results.json

This will fetch metrics for all audit platforms and update to the Result object in the output/results.json. You can check out examples/results.json for details in Result objects.

Run recurring tests

If you'd like to set up recurring tests, you can define the recurring object that contains frequency for that Test.

./awp recurring examples/tests-recurring.json output/results.json

This will generate the Result object in the results.json and updates the next trigger time to its original Test object in the tests.json. E.g. the updated Test object would look like the following, with the updated nextTriggerTimestamp.

{
  "label": "web.dev",
  "url": "https://web.dev",
  "recurring": {
    "frequency": "Daily",
    "nextTriggerTimestamp": 1599692305567,
    "activatedFrequency": "Daily"
  },
  "psi": {
    "settings": {
      "locale": "en-GB",
      "strategy": "mobile"
    }
  }
}

The nextTriggerTimestamp will be updated to the next day based on the previous timestamp. This is to prevent repeated runs with the same Test and to guarantee that this Test is executed only once per day.

Set up a cron job to run recurring tests

In most Unix-like operating system, you can set up a cron job to run the AWP CLI periodically.

For example, in macOS, you can run the following commands to set up a daily cron job with AWP:

# Edit the cronjob with a text editor.
EDITOR=nano crontab -e

Add the following line to the crontab for a daily run at 12:00 at noon. Note that this is based on the system time where it runs AWP.

0 12 * * * PSI_APIKEY=SAMPLE_KEY cd ~/workspace/awp && ./awp run examples/tests.json csv:output/results-recurring.csv

Run tests with extensions

An extension is a module to assist AWP to run tests with additional process and computation. For example, budgets extension is able to add performance budgets and compute the delta between the targets and the result metrics.

To run with extensions:

./awp run examples/tests.json output/results.json --extensions=budgets

Tests and Results

Define the Tests

The list of tests is simply an array of Tests objects, like the sample Tests below. Or check out src/examples/tests.js for a detailed example of Tests list.

[{
  "label": "Test-1",
  "url": "example1.com",
  "webpagetest": {
    ...
  }
}, {
  "label": "Test-2",
  "url": "example2.com",
  "psi": {
    ...
  }
}]

Each Test object defines which audits to run by defining gatherers property. For example, the first Test has a webpagetest property which defines the configuration of running a WebPageTest audit. The second Test has a psi property that defines how to run PageSpeedInsights audit.

Generate the Results

After running tests, a list of Results is generated like below. Each Result contains its corresponding metrics to the predefined gatherers such as WebPageTest and PageSpeedInsights. See the example below.

[{
  "label": "Test-1",
  "url": "example1.com",
  "webpagetest": {
    "metrics": {
      FirstContentfulPaint: 900,
      ...
    }
  }  
}, {
  "label": "Test-2",
  "url": "example2.com",
  "psi": {
    "metrics": {
      FirstContentfulPaint: 900,
      ...
    }
  }  
}]

Environmental Variables

Some conenctors or gatherers may require one or more environmental variables, such as API keys or the path to service account. For example, running with the CrUX API gatherer requires the CrUX API key.

To pass the environmental variables in the CLI, run the command with the regular usage of environment vars:

CRUX_APIKEY=<YOUR_KEY> ./awp run url:https://wev.dev/ json:output/results.json

Gatherers

AWP supports the following audit gatherers. Please check out the corresponding documentations for details.

WebPageTest

The WebPageTest gatherer runs Tests through either the public WebPageTest endpoints or a custom private WebPageTest instance.

See docs/webpagetest.md for more details for the usage of WebPageTest gatherer.

PageSpeed Insights

The PageSpeed Insights gatherer runs Tests through the public PageSpeed Insights API.

See docs/psi.md for more details for the usage of PSI gatherer.

Chrome UX Report API (CrUX API)

The CrUX API gatherer collects performance metrics through the Chrome UX Report API.

See docs/cruxapi.md for more details for the usage of CrUX API gatherer.

Chrome UX Report History (CrUX via BigQuery)

The CrUX BigQuery gatherer collects performance metrics through the Chrome UX Report with its public Google BigQuery project. Please noet that you would need set up a Google Cloud project in order to query the public BigQuery table.

See docs/cruxbigquery.md for more details for the usage of CrUX API gatherer.

Design

AWP is designed with modules, including modules for running audits with WebPageTest, PageSpeedInsights, or other tools, and modules for reading/writing data from data platforms such as JSON, GoogleSheets or a Cloud service.

In a high-level view, there are three types of modules:

The AWP engine uses two major JavaScript Object structures for running audits and collecting metrics.

Audit steps

In order to deal with asynchronous audit tool like WebPageTest, AWP breaks the audit cycle into three steps of actions:

AWP Config

To set up modules and their configurations, an overall AWP Config is required as a JavaScript Object.

AWP Config has the following required properties:

Other optional properties:

The following config example comes from the examples/awp-config.js:

{
  connector: 'JSON',
  helper: 'Node',
  dataSources: ['webpagetest'],
  json: { // Config for JSON Connector.
    tests: 'tests.json',
    results: 'results.json',
  },
  extensions: [
    'budgets',
  ],
  budgets: { // Config for Budgets extension.
    dataSource: 'webpagetest',
  },
  verbose: true,
  debug: false,
}

With the example config above, it will use JSON connector which reads and writes Tests and Results as JSON files. See examples/tests.json and examples/results.json for examples.

In addition to fundamental properties, there are a few additional properties used by modules:

Usage of AutoWebPerf core

Examples of creating a new instance of AWP:

let awp = new AutoWebPerf({
  connector: 'JSON',
  helper: 'Node',
  dataSources: ['webpagetest'],
  extensions: extensions,
  json: { // Config for JSON connector.
    tests: argv['tests'],
    results: argv['results'],
  },
  verbose: verbose,
  debug: debug,
});

To submit all tests:

awp.run();

To submit specific tests using filters: This will run the test which has id=1 and selected=true properties.

awp.run({
  filters: ['id="1"', 'selected'],
});

To retrieve all pending results, filtering with status !== "Retrieved".

awp.retrieve({
  filters: ['status!=="Retrieved"'],
});

To run recurring tests:

// This will run the actual audit and update the nextTriggerTimestamp.
awp.recurring();

To run tests with specific extensions:

// This will override the extension list defined in the awpConfig.
awp.run({
  extensions: ['budgets']
})

Gatherer Modules

A Gatherer class extends src/gatherers/gatherer.js and overrides the following methods:

Connector Modules

A Connector class extends src/connectors/connector.js and overrides the following methods:

Extension Modules

A Extension class extends src/extensions/extension.js and overrides the following methods:

Test Object

A standard Test object contains the following properties:

(You can refer to examples/tests.json for an example.)

Gatherer-specific settings will be in their own property with the Gatherer's name in lower case. For example, the settings for WebPageTests will be:

Result Object

A standard Result object contains the following properties:

Standardized Metrics

All metric names used in AWP are required to follow the names, case sensitive. See the full list of standardized metrics in src/common/metrics.js

Source Folder Structure

All source codes for major functions are located in src folder. Files are organized into the following subfolders:

Unit Test

Run the following commands to run unit test:

npm test

To run individual test spec, you can install Jest NPM module to your local machine:

npm install -g jest
jest test/some-module.test.js

Unit Test Design

The Unit Test is based on Jest unit test framework. All unit tests are located in the ./test folder, and are organized into its own corresponding subfolders, as the same structure as in the src folder.