Debugging heavy single page application - javascript

We're developing quite heavy single page application (SPA). However, it recently started to crash from time to time and it appears almost impossible to debug it. The traditional tools such us firebug or chrome's tools were also not very useful (perhaps they were not used correctly?).
Is there any tool that would allow me to view a crash log of a tab where I could find what caused a memory leak (or whatever the reason for the crash was)?
Thanks

You can try to use Chromium which is kind of browser especially for developers.
It has a batch of plugins for debugging and testing websites and SPA.
For example for memory leaking you can try to use LeakSanitizer.

Related

Slow javascript execution in IE11 until developer tools are enabled

I have a very large javascript application, which contains mostly asm.js code (it's built upon urho3d c++ engine which is them compiled into asm.js).
It runs great on most browsers (chrome, firefox, safari, edge) but is extremely slow on IE11. The thing is, it is only slow until you open developer tools. With developer tools open, IE11 becomes ~10 times faster and is almost as fast as other browsers.
Here is a minimal example that reproduces the issue:
http://test.sebbia.com/urho3d/test.html
Open the page in any working browser, the time between "Run - start" message and "Run - finish" message should be around 1-2 seconds.
Open the page in IE11 without developer tools, time should be around 35-50 seconds.
Open developer tools and reload, time should be around 2-3 seconds.
Another important note is that if I start profiling session in developer tools, performance drops like if developer tools were closed. So I can actually profile the problem. But I've spent several hours profiling and I've tried inserting log messages in big functions but I haven't found no bottleneck. All functions take roughly the same time to execute and if I insert log message in a middle of a big functions, they'll usually break into 2 similar parts. So there is no single function that is responsible for slowdown, the code execution is just slow. Bit shifts, functions calls, arithmetic operations - it seems like they all just take way too much time compared to open developer tools.
I really need to make my app work on IE11 and the fact that it works with developer tools open drives me crazy. I'm trying to find a way to make IE think that tools are open even when they are not, or achieve good performance by any other means. So my questions is how can I achieve performance equal to IE11 with developer tools open without actually manually opening the tools?
This is a very broad question so I'd like to break it down into several smaller questions:
Is there a way to make IE11 think developer tools are open? Maybe there is something like x-ua-compatible meta tag I am missing?
What's causing the slowdown when developer tools are closed? I've heard that console.log function calls are slow without developer tools on IE8 and 9, maybe there is a similar thing on IE11? Maybe asm.js is not optimized? If I knew what's causing this I could at least try to rewrite code to avoid this.
Is there a way to open developer tools from javascript code? Maybe I could ask users to press a button on website to "make app faster". Asking them to press F12 or navigate settings seems too much.
When the debugger is enabled, asm.js compilation will be disabled and execution will fallback to be executed as normal JS - you can see the console.logs along these lines at the start of execution.
asm.js has been disabled as the script debugger is connected. Disconnect the debugger to enable asm.js. in Edge,
asm.js type error: Disabled by debugger in Firefox,
whilst Chrome will simply not open 01_HelloWorld.js in the debugger when you attempt to.
Disabling the debugger in IE (debugger tab, socket symbol; eighth from the left), and thus enabling asm.js will allow you to have dev tools open but see the slower execution. I have a horrible feeling that the slowdown when the debugger is closed is actually just IE11's speed issues with asm.js's optimisations.
There are a lot of references to IE11 being poorly optimised for asm.js. caniuse.com goes as far as listing IE11 as not supporting asm.js at all.
https://caniuse.com/#feat=asmjs
This appears to be backed up by Microsoft themselves:
https://developer.microsoft.com/en-us/microsoft-edge/platform/status/asmjs/
There would certainly appear to be some support for it, though clearly it has a number of speed issues as demonstrated in a number of benchmarks, for instance:
https://github.com/Kukunin/asm.js-benchmark/blob/master/README.md
Which shows IE11 around 10x slower than other browsers, or:
https://www.ghacks.net/2014/11/03/massive-benchmark-highlights-asm-js-performance-of-web-browsers/
Which is based on:
https://kripken.github.io/Massive/ - You can try it for yourself.
And many others. It may simply be that the IE11 implementation of asm.js is so poor that it is considerably slower with it, than without it.
EDIT: Added Microsoft platform status link.
There are two workaround for this issue:
to add setInterval(30000, () => {}) to your initialization function;
add MutationObserver=null to the beginning of the main html
You can also reference the discussion here:
https://github.com/OfficeDev/office-js/issues/521
This is just a guess but I had a similar problem in react-native then I found out about this:
When debugging remotely, your js bundle is using chrome's JSC and when
running on a device it's using the JSC provided by Apple on your phone.
Make sure that urho3d is not changing environment when developer tools are on/off.

Debug JS from a Browser within a Windows App

today I am asked to write some Javascript for a Website which runs within a Windows App. The app uses a browser internally (I guess some version of IE) to render its content on screen, what is represented by a static/local website.
The main Problem is, that there isn't any way to debug that, what is normally possible with the default developer tools of each browser.
So my question(s): Is there any way to start the developer tools by JS, in case the browser internally used is IE? Are the any other ways to pull some debug data out of the app, such that I could view that output anywhere else?
So in case somebody else has already dealt with a problem alike, I would really be interested to get some ideas, how to solve that properly.

Chrome DevTools: paused before potential out-of-memory crash

In latest Chrome DevTools I can see a new information:
Now, I'm not sure how to use this information. It seems to appear randomly in the app. How can I debug the app to avoid potential out-of-memory crashes? I checked in task manager that at the moment when this information appears the app uses about 55K memory which in case of this app is quite low (when it computes some data it can be much higher memory consumption).
So I'm wondering if this information is accurate and there is a risk of crashing. If so, what should I do with it?
Record a profile with memory tab in chrome dev tools. You can investigate there which functions consume memory
Here's a great guide:
https://developer.chrome.com/docs/devtools/memory-problems/
Maybe this is late and very obvious, but you can use the "Memory" tab in the Chrome developer tools to create a memory snapshot while loading/browsing your app in order to investigate what is eating up your memory (given that it actually is your app that is eating up the memory).

Chrome Dev Tools very slow to respond in large web app

I have a large, javascript heavy web app that I am working on. I am experiencing very slow response times from Chrome Dev Tools for XHR responses and console loggging (3-5 secs). The actual app is running fast and responsive, only dev tools looks like it is suffering.
Does anyone have any idea why Chrome Dev Tools is becoming sluggish as my app grows?
Devtools are like any other debugger; they hook into the normal processing flow of an application, and store quite a bit more information than is normally required. This is much more work than simply rendering the page without debugging enabled, so it will indeed be slower.
That said, 3 seconds to respond to console.log seems high. I'd suggest that you first test the application in a nightly version of WebKit. If it's responsive in WebKit, but not in Chrome, please file a bug against the inspector via http://new.crbug.com/ along with any information you can provide about what scenario causes the slowness.
If it's equally sluggish in WebKit, please file a bug against WebKit's Inspector component: https://bugs.webkit.org/enter_bug.cgi
Either way, post the bug ID here, and I'll see that it's triaged into the correct team.
I "fixed" the slow chrome developer tool by (under SOURCES tab)
clearing the "watch" list that accumulated over time...
clearing all the "snippets", i had dozens as well...
Not sure which of both made the most difference, but it certainly made a difference
This is an old question, but it may help someone landing here later like I did.
Using Chrome 46.x/47.x on Linux (RHEL 7), none of the proposed solutions worked for me. What did work was to disable the setting "Use hardware acceleration when available", in the advanced browser settings.
I noticed in the process monitor/list that the Chrome renderer was taking up a lot of CPU, even putting a breakpoint or stepping throught statements in the debugger would take 10+ seconds!
Might be worth a shot.
Undock the developer tools into separate window.
In my case, it's work.
I struggled with this also, to the point where stepping through code using the chrome debugger was just so slow it took hours away from my productive development time. In watching the CPU utilization when debugging in chrome I would see it use up to as much at 40% of all 4 cores of my processor. I tried everything to no avail. Finally, I tried making the browser window of the page I was debugging as small as I could without losing any of the required view and miraculously it solved the problem. So, now I keep my debugger window popped out in a separate window, and make the window of the page I am debugging as small as I can and my debugging experience is very fast again. I have tested this over a period of weeks and it has held out. Hope this helps someone.

browser (javascript) resource problems

I've lately been running into odd issues, which I'm starting to think are related to resource starvation in the browser.
In FF:
I'd been testing one of our web apps and suddenly things that should disappear after a couple seconds stopped disappearing. I tracked back to setTimeout just flat out refusing to work. After reloading the browser it was all clear, no issues.
In IE:
I regularly see issues where IE will refuse to do transparency all the sudden, simply reloading the page clears this up.
In both:
Though I can't say its related for sure, I see unexplainable behavior, things along the lines of variables not being available (undefined) when they should be.
Both browsers also show a steady increase in memory usage over time (memory leaks).
The javascript in the web app is heavy and it is a single load page (making those memory issues mentioned all the more painful). There are lots of in-efficiency, and various things that make one say "why would you do that?".
Has anyone encountered such things? Can you point out general resources that will help identify and resolve these issues?
You could try running your application against the Chrome Profiler http://code.google.com/chrome/devtools/docs/overview.html. You can profile the CPU and get snapshots of the browser heap, that should help locate any rogue stuff.
If your application is designed to work with the Internet Explorer: The Developer Toolbar also has a profiler.

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