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About the benchmark

The Web Latency Benchmark is a new kind of benchmark that tests your browser's responsiveness by directly measuring latency and jank. Visit the homepage at http://google.github.io/latency-benchmark for examples of the kinds of latency and jank that are measured.

New: Oculus Latency Tester support

The Oculus Latency Tester is a hardware device with a light sensor that can measure end-to-end latency from USB input to pixels changing on the screen. This kind of hardware-based measurement accounts for all possible sources of latency. It's the most complete and accurate measurement possible, and it's now supported by the Web Latency Benchmark. Just plug it in and you'll see a special test page.

New: Automated testing

Thanks to jmaher, the benchmark now accepts command-line arguments that enable fully automated benchmark runs, with results reported in JSON format to a server of your choosing.

How it works

The Web Latency Benchmark works by programmatically sending input events to a browser window, and using screenshot APIs to detect when the browser has finished drawing its response.

There are two main components: the latency-benchmark server (written in C/C++) and the HTML/JavaScript benchmark page. The HTML page draws a special pattern of pixels to the screen using WebGL or Canvas 2D, then makes an XMLHTTPRequest to the server to start the latency measurement. The server locates the browser window by searching a screenshot for the special pattern. Once the browser window is located, the server starts sending input events. Each time the HTML page receives an input event it encodes that information into pixels in the on-screen pattern, drawn using the canvas element. Meanwhile the server is taking screenshots every few milliseconds. By decoding the pixel pattern the server can determine to within a few milliseconds how long it takes the browser to respond to each input event.

The native reference test is special because it requires extra support from the server. Using the native APIs of each platform, the server creates a special benchmark window that draws the same pattern as the test webpage, and responds to keyboard input in the same way. To ensure fairness when compared with the browser, this window is opened in a separate process and uses OpenGL to draw the pattern on the screen. The benchmark window opens as a popup window, only 1 pixel tall and without a border or title bar, so it's almost unnoticeable.

License and distribution

The Web Latency Benchmark is licensed under the Apache License version 2.0. This is an open source project; it is not an official Google product.

Build prerequisites

Python 2.x is required on all platforms for GYP, which generates the build files.

  • Windows: GYP is currently configured to generate project files for Visual Studio 2012 (Express works). 2010 might work too if you edit generate-project-files.bat to change the version. The Windows 8 SDK is required due to the use of DXGI 1.2. It can be installed on Windows 7 and Windows Vista.
  • Mac: XCode 4 is required.
  • Linux: Clang is required. The benchmark does not compile with GCC. Other build dependencies are development headers for OpenGL, X11, and udev (for the Oculus SDK). The corresponding Debian/Ubuntu packages are libgl1-mesa-dev, xorg-dev, and libudev-dev.

Build steps

First, you need to git submodule init && git submodule update to fetch the submodules in third_party. Then, you need to run generate-project-files, which will run GYP and generate platform-specific project files in build/.

  • Windows: Open build/latency-benchmark.sln.
  • Mac: Open build/latency-benchmark.xcodeproj. For debugging you will need to edit the default scheme to change the working directory of the latency-test executable to $(PROJECT_DIR) so it can find the HTML files. You will also want to configure the debugger to ignore SIGPIPE.
  • Linux: Run the script linux-build to compile with Clang. The binary will be built at build/out/Debug/latency-benchmark. Run it in the top-level directory so it can find the HTML files. You can build the release version by defining the environment variable BUILDTYPE=Release.

You shouldn't make any changes to the XCode or Visual Studio project files directly. Instead, you should edit latency-benchmark.gyp to reflect the changes you want, and re-run the generate-project-files script to update the project files with the changes. This ensures that the project files stay in sync across platforms.

TODO

  • Bookmarklet or browser extension for injecting a hardware latency test into any web page.
  • Support for more operating systems:
    • Android
    • iOS
    • Chrome OS
  • Support jank measurement with the Oculus Latency Tester, in addition to latency measurement.
  • Fix non-Firefox browsers in automated testing mode on Windows (mousewheel scroll events not sent properly).
  • Fix IE11 in high DPI mode (test pattern scrolls off screen).
  • Disable mouse and keyboard input during the test to avoid interference.
  • Hide the mouse cursor during the test.
  • Find a way to share constants like the test timeout between JS and C.
  • Test more possible causes of jank:
    • audio/video loading
    • plugins
    • JavaScript parsing
    • GC
    • WebGL shader compilation
    • Web Worker JavaScript parsing/execution
    • GC in a worker
    • HTML parsing
    • CSS parsing
    • layout
    • DNS resolution
    • window resizing
    • image resizing
    • XHR starting/ending
    • All of the above in an iframe or popup.

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Tests web browser input latency and jank

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  • C 37.4%
  • JavaScript 20.8%
  • C++ 20.2%
  • Objective-C 9.6%
  • Python 7.5%
  • HTML 3.2%
  • Other 1.3%