Chrome 64 to deprecate the chrome.loadTimes() API
chrome.loadTimes()
is a non-standard API that exposes loading metrics and
network information to developers in order to help them better understand their
site's performance in the real world.
Since this API was implemented in 2009, all of the useful information it reports can be found in standardized APIs such as:
- Navigation Timing 2
- Paint Timing
- The
nextHopProtocol
addition to Navigation Timing 2 and Resource Timing 2.
These standardized APIs are being implemented by multiple browser vendors. As a
result, chrome.loadTimes()
is being deprecated in Chrome 64.
The deprecated API
The chrome.loadTimes()
function returns a single object containing all of its
loading and network information. For example, the following object is the result
of calling chrome.loadTimes()
on www.google.com:
{
"requestTime": 1513186741.847,
"startLoadTime": 1513186741.847,
"commitLoadTime": 1513186742.637,
"finishDocumentLoadTime": 1513186742.842,
"finishLoadTime": 1513186743.582,
"firstPaintTime": 1513186742.829,
"firstPaintAfterLoadTime": 0,
"navigationType": "Reload",
"wasFetchedViaSpdy": true,
"wasNpnNegotiated": true,
"npnNegotiatedProtocol": "h2",
"wasAlternateProtocolAvailable": false,
"connectionInfo": "h2"
}
Standardized replacements
You can now find each of the above values using standardized APIs. The following table matches each value to its standardized API, and the sections below show code examples of how to get each value in the old API with modern equivalents.
chrome.loadTimes() feature
| Standardized API replacement |
---|---|
requestTime |
Navigation Timing 2 |
startLoadTime |
Navigation Timing 2 |
commitLoadTime |
Navigation Timing 2 |
finishDocumentLoadTime |
Navigation Timing 2 |
finishLoadTime |
Navigation Timing 2 |
firstPaintTime |
Paint Timing |
firstPaintAfterLoadTime |
N/A |
navigationType |
Navigation Timing 2 |
wasFetchedViaSpdy |
Navigation Timing 2 |
wasNpnNegotiated |
Navigation Timing 2 |
npnNegotiatedProtocol |
Navigation Timing 2 |
wasAlternateProtocolAvailable |
N/A |
connectionInfo |
Navigation Timing 2 |
The code examples below return equivalent values to those returned by
chrome.loadTimes()
. However, for new code these code examples are not
recommended. The reason is chrome.loadTimes()
gives times values in epoch
time in seconds whereas new performance APIs
typically report values in milliseconds relative to a page's time origin, which tends to be more useful for performance
analysis.
Several of the examples also favor Performance Timeline
2 APIs (e.g.
performance.getEntriesByType()
) but provide fallbacks for the older
Navigation Timing 1 API as it has
wider browser support. Going forward, Performance Timeline APIs are preferred
and are typically reported with higher precision.
requestTime
function requestTime() {
// If the browser supports the Navigation Timing 2 and HR Time APIs, use
// them, otherwise fall back to the Navigation Timing 1 API.
if (window.PerformanceNavigationTiming && performance.timeOrigin) {
const ntEntry = performance.getEntriesByType('navigation')[0];
return (ntEntry.startTime + performance.timeOrigin) / 1000;
} else {
return performance.timing.navigationStart / 1000;
}
}
startLoadTime
function startLoadTime() {
// If the browser supports the Navigation Timing 2 and HR Time APIs, use
// them, otherwise fall back to the Navigation Timing 1 API.
if (window.PerformanceNavigationTiming && performance.timeOrigin) {
const ntEntry = performance.getEntriesByType('navigation')[0];
return (ntEntry.startTime + performance.timeOrigin) / 1000;
} else {
return performance.timing.navigationStart / 1000;
}
}
commitLoadTime
function commitLoadTime() {
// If the browser supports the Navigation Timing 2 and HR Time APIs, use
// them, otherwise fall back to the Navigation Timing 1 API.
if (window.PerformanceNavigationTiming && performance.timeOrigin) {
const ntEntry = performance.getEntriesByType('navigation')[0];
return (ntEntry.responseStart + performance.timeOrigin) / 1000;
} else {
return performance.timing.responseStart / 1000;
}
}
finishDocumentLoadTime
function finishDocumentLoadTime() {
// If the browser supports the Navigation Timing 2 and HR Time APIs, use
// them, otherwise fall back to the Navigation Timing 1 API.
if (window.PerformanceNavigationTiming && performance.timeOrigin) {
const ntEntry = performance.getEntriesByType('navigation')[0];
return (ntEntry.domContentLoadedEventEnd + performance.timeOrigin) / 1000;
} else {
return performance.timing.domContentLoadedEventEnd / 1000;
}
}
finishLoadTime
function finishLoadTime() {
// If the browser supports the Navigation Timing 2 and HR Time APIs, use
// them, otherwise fall back to the Navigation Timing 1 API.
if (window.PerformanceNavigationTiming && performance.timeOrigin) {
const ntEntry = performance.getEntriesByType('navigation')[0];
return (ntEntry.loadEventEnd + performance.timeOrigin) / 1000;
} else {
return performance.timing.loadEventEnd / 1000;
}
}
firstPaintTime
function firstPaintTime() {
if (window.PerformancePaintTiming) {
const fpEntry = performance.getEntriesByType('paint')[0];
return (fpEntry.startTime + performance.timeOrigin) / 1000;
}
}
firstPaintAfterLoadTime
function firstPaintTimeAfterLoad() {
// This was never actually implemented and always returns 0.
return 0;
}
navigationType
function navigationType() {
if (window.PerformanceNavigationTiming) {
const ntEntry = performance.getEntriesByType('navigation')[0];
return ntEntry.type;
}
}
wasFetchedViaSpdy
function wasFetchedViaSpdy() {
// SPDY is deprecated in favor of HTTP/2, but this implementation returns
// true for HTTP/2 or HTTP2+QUIC/39 as well.
if (window.PerformanceNavigationTiming) {
const ntEntry = performance.getEntriesByType('navigation')[0];
return ['h2', 'hq'].includes(ntEntry.nextHopProtocol);
}
}
wasNpnNegotiated
function wasNpnNegotiated() {
// NPN is deprecated in favor of ALPN, but this implementation returns true
// for HTTP/2 or HTTP2+QUIC/39 requests negotiated via ALPN.
if (window.PerformanceNavigationTiming) {
const ntEntry = performance.getEntriesByType('navigation')[0];
return ['h2', 'hq'].includes(ntEntry.nextHopProtocol);
}
}
npnNegotiatedProtocol
function npnNegotiatedProtocol() {
// NPN is deprecated in favor of ALPN, but this implementation returns the
// HTTP/2 or HTTP2+QUIC/39 requests negotiated via ALPN.
if (window.PerformanceNavigationTiming) {
const ntEntry = performance.getEntriesByType('navigation')[0];
return ['h2', 'hq'].includes(ntEntry.nextHopProtocol) ?
ntEntry.nextHopProtocol : 'unknown';
}
}
wasAlternateProtocolAvailable
function wasAlternateProtocolAvailable() {
// The Alternate-Protocol header is deprecated in favor of Alt-Svc
// (https://www.mnot.net/blog/2016/03/09/alt-svc), so technically this
// should always return false.
return false;
}
connectionInfo
function connectionInfo() {
if (window.PerformanceNavigationTiming) {
const ntEntry = performance.getEntriesByType('navigation')[0];
return ntEntry.nextHopProtocol;
}
}
Removal plan
The chrome.loadTimes()
API will be deprecated in Chrome 64 and is targeted to be
removed in late 2018. Developers should migrate their code as soon as possible
to avoid any loss in data.