Telemetry is the performance testing framework used by Chrome. It allows you to perform arbitrary actions on a set of web pages (or any android application!) and report metrics about it. The framework abstracts:
- Launching a browser with arbitrary flags on any platform.
- Opening a tab and navigating to the page under test.
- Launching an Android application with intents through ADB.
- Fetching data via the Inspector timeline and traces.
- Using Web Page Replay to cache real-world websites so they don’t change when used in benchmarks.
- Write one performance test that runs on major platforms - Windows, Mac, Linux, Chrome OS, and Android for both Chrome and ContentShell.
- Run on browser binaries, without a full Chromium checkout, and without having to build the browser yourself.
- Use Web Page Replay to get repeatable test results.
- Clean architecture for writing benchmarks that keeps measurements and use cases separate.
Telemetry is designed for measuring performance rather than checking correctness. If you want to check for correctness, browser tests are your friend.
If you are a Chromium developer looking to add a new Telemetry benchmark to
src/tools/perf/
,
please make sure to read our
Benchmark Policy
first.
Telemetry provides two major functionality groups: those that provide test automation, and those that provide the capability to collect data.
The test automation facilities of Telemetry provide Python wrappers for a number of different system concepts.
- Platforms use a variety of libraries & tools to abstract away the OS specific logic.
- Browser wraps Chrome's DevTools Remote Debugging Protocol to perform actions and extract information from the browser.
- Android App is a Python wrapper around
adb shell
.
The Telemetry framework lives in
src/third_party/catapult/telemetry/
and performance benchmarks that use Telemetry live in
src/tools/perf/
.
Telemetry offers a framework for collecting metrics that quantify the performance of automated actions in terms of benchmarks, measurements, and story sets.
- A
benchmark
combines a measurement together with a story set, and optionally a set
of browser options.
- We strongly discourage benchmark authors from using command-line flags to specify the behavior of benchmarks, since benchmarks should be cross-platform.
- Benchmarks are discovered and run by the
benchmark runner,
which is wrapped by scripts like
run_benchmark
intools/perf
.
- A measurement (called
StoryTest
in the code) is responsible for setting up and tearing down the testing platform, and for collecting metrics that quantify the application scenario under test.- Measurements need to work with all story sets, to provide consistency and prevent benchmark rot.
- You probably don't need to override
StoryTest
(see "Timeline Based Measurement" below). If you think you do, please talk to us.
- A story set is a set of stories together with a shared state that describes application-level configuration options.
- A story is an application scenario and a set of actions to run in that scenario. In the typical Chromium use case, this will be a web page together with actions like scrolling, clicking, or executing JavaScript.
- A metric describes how to collect data about the story run and compute
results.
- New metrics should generally be timeline-based.
- Metrics can specify many different types of results, including numbers, histograms, traces, and failures.
- Timeline Based Measurement is a built-in
StoryTest
that runs all available timeline-based metrics, and benchmarks that use it can filter relevant results.
- Run Telemetry benchmarks locally
- Record a story set with Web Page Replay
- Feature guidelines
- Profile generation
- Telemetry unittests
If you have questions, please email [email protected].
You can keep up with Telemetry related discussions by joining the telemetry group.
The recordings are not included in the Chromium source tree. If you are a Google
partner, run gsutil config
to authenticate, then try running the test again.
If you don't have gsutil
installed on your machine, you can find it in
build/third_party/gsutil/gsutil
.
If you are not a Google partner, you can run on live sites with --use-live-sites` or record your own story set archive.
Your forwarder binary may be outdated. If you have built the forwarder in
src/out that one will be used. if there isn't anything there Telemetry will
default to downloading a pre-built binary. Try re-building the forwarder, or
alternatively wiping the contents of src/out/
and running run_benchmark
,
which should download the latest binary.
Make sure that your keychain is correctly configured.