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Port performance docs to new docs system. (#111063)
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--- | ||
id: kibDevPerformance | ||
slug: /kibana-dev-docs/performance | ||
title: Performance | ||
summary: Performance tips for Kibana development. | ||
date: 2021-09-02 | ||
tags: ['kibana', 'onboarding', 'dev', 'performance'] | ||
--- | ||
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## Keep Kibana fast | ||
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*tl;dr*: Load as much code lazily as possible. Everyone loves snappy | ||
applications with a responsive UI and hates spinners. Users deserve the | ||
best experience whether they run Kibana locally or | ||
in the cloud, regardless of their hardware and environment. | ||
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There are 2 main aspects of the perceived speed of an application: loading time | ||
and responsiveness to user actions. Kibana loads and bootstraps *all* | ||
the plugins whenever a user lands on any page. It means that | ||
every new application affects the overall _loading performance_, as plugin code is | ||
loaded _eagerly_ to initialize the plugin and provide plugin API to dependent | ||
plugins. | ||
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However, it’s usually not necessary that the whole plugin code should be loaded | ||
and initialized at once. The plugin could keep on loading code covering API functionality | ||
on Kibana bootstrap, but load UI related code lazily on-demand, when an | ||
application page or management section is mounted. | ||
Always prefer to import UI root components lazily when possible (such as in `mount` | ||
handlers). Even if their size may seem negligible, they are likely using | ||
some heavy-weight libraries that will also be removed from the initial | ||
plugin bundle, therefore, reducing its size by a significant amount. | ||
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```ts | ||
import type { Plugin, CoreSetup, AppMountParameters } from 'kibana/public'; | ||
export class MyPlugin implements Plugin<MyPluginSetup> { | ||
setup(core: CoreSetup, plugins: SetupDeps) { | ||
core.application.register({ | ||
id: 'app', | ||
title: 'My app', | ||
async mount(params: AppMountParameters) { | ||
const { mountApp } = await import('./app/mount_app'); | ||
return mountApp(await core.getStartServices(), params); | ||
}, | ||
}); | ||
plugins.management.sections.section.kibana.registerApp({ | ||
id: 'app', | ||
title: 'My app', | ||
order: 1, | ||
async mount(params) { | ||
const { mountManagementSection } = await import('./app/mount_management_section'); | ||
return mountManagementSection(coreSetup, params); | ||
}, | ||
}); | ||
return { | ||
doSomething() {}, | ||
}; | ||
} | ||
} | ||
``` | ||
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### Understanding plugin bundle size | ||
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Kibana Platform plugins are pre-built with `@kbn/optimizer` | ||
and distributed as package artifacts. This means that it is no | ||
longer necessary for us to include the `optimizer` in the | ||
distributable version of Kibana Every plugin artifact contains all | ||
plugin dependencies required to run the plugin, except some | ||
stateful dependencies shared across plugin bundles via | ||
`@kbn/ui-shared-deps`. This means that plugin artifacts _tend to | ||
be larger_ than they were in the legacy platform. To understand the | ||
current size of your plugin artifact, run `@kbn/optimizer` with: | ||
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```bash | ||
node scripts/build_kibana_platform_plugins.js --dist --profile --focus=my_plugin | ||
``` | ||
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and check the output in the `target` sub-folder of your plugin folder: | ||
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```bash | ||
ls -lh plugins/my_plugin/target/public/ | ||
# output | ||
# an async chunk loaded on demand | ||
... 262K 0.plugin.js | ||
# eagerly loaded chunk | ||
... 50K my_plugin.plugin.js | ||
``` | ||
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You might see at least one js bundle - `my_plugin.plugin.js`. This is | ||
the _only_ artifact loaded by Kibana during bootstrap in the | ||
browser. The rule of thumb is to keep its size as small as possible. | ||
Other lazily loaded parts of your plugin will be present in the same folder as | ||
separate chunks under `{number}.myplugin.js` names. If you want to | ||
investigate what your plugin bundle consists of, you need to run | ||
`@kbn/optimizer` with `--profile` flag to generate a | ||
[webpack stats file](https://webpack.js.org/api/stats/). | ||
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```bash | ||
node scripts/build_kibana_platform_plugins.js --dist --no-examples --profile | ||
``` | ||
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Many OSS tools allow you to analyze the generated stats file: | ||
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* [An official tool](https://webpack.github.io/analyse/#modules) from | ||
Webpack authors | ||
* [webpack-visualizer](https://chrisbateman.github.io/webpack-visualizer/) | ||
* [webpack-bundle-analyzer](https://github.com/webpack-contrib/webpack-bundle-analyzer) |