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Cross-origin IFRAME opting-in to sharing ResourceTiming data #210
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The analysis on missing resources and unattributed bytes definitely motivates the need for an investigation (and a solution :)) in this space. Thank you for the thorough job on the analysis! In terms of how we go about addressing this, my first reactions are:
|
Discussed at TPAC. I think browser vendors are interested in seeing concrete examples of interested parties who would use the API (from the embedded iframe to the embedder). It is already possible to polyfill this (via postMessage) so it's worth having strong use cases before diving deeper into this. |
Google Display and Video Ads would be likely to use an API to opt-in to sharing performance data, for ad iframes that we control. We have RUM for most ads we serve, and TAO on most resources we control. ResourceTiming data has been valuable for quantifying and prioritizing ads improvements, as well as catching regressions. Ad iframes are indeed frequently cross-origin, and often have cross-origin child iframes of their own. So even if we have code we control within the outermost ad iframe, we may not have visibility into the ad's total byte weight, and it would be useful to us, not just the base page, to have more visibility. We would be open to sharing most ResourceTiming data to parent frames, aside from full resource URLs, which could possibly leak sensitive personal information. I suspect that may be a concern for other third parties as well. To address that and make adoption more likely, there could be an additional option to either trim URLs to just the host portion, which should still allow attribution to specific third parties in most cases, or omit URLs entirely, which may still be useful to attribute total byte weight or other aggregate measurements to the iframe sharing ResourceTiming data. |
Both of those ideas (URL "rounding" to the host, or URL being hidden entirely) are great thoughts! My only concern is that some people may want to expose/capture full URLs, and others want host-only or hidden URLs, then we'd need a way to specify which that option. Through different HTTP header names? Could make this opt-in a bit more complex to specify and implement. |
What would be next steps here? Perhaps talk about it on the F2F? Or is there something we should be doing before then? |
@nicjansma - would you be interested in presenting on this to the group? |
Yes, I'm happy to chat about it again at the next meeting |
See w3c/performance-timeline#207 for a more general solution being discussed there, not restricted to just resource timing. |
I'd like to propose a way for cross-origin IFRAMEs to share their ResourceTiming data with their parent pages, if they choose.
Background
ResourceTiming is one of the cornerstones of RUM, and provides a lot of value to anyone using it. Unfortunately one of the key limitations of ResourceTiming is that not all resources fetched by the page are "visible" to ResourceTiming. There are several reasons for this, but it is primarily due to each frame only reporting on the resources fetched by itself, and not any child IFRAMEs.
One can gather ResourceTiming entries from all children/grandchildren+ IFRAMEs by crawling them (though the ergonomics are not ideal). Both PerformanceTimeline (
getEntries()
) andPerformanceObserver
need to do this crawling.Unfortunately, due to cross-origin DOM restrictions, one cannot "crawl" into a cross-origin IFRAME to query its
frames[n].performance.getEntries()
interface. Thus, all content loaded from cross-origin IFRAMEs (and below) are completely hidden to ResourceTiming.In an analysis I did of ResourceTiming Visibilty, I found that over 30% of all resources fetched by the browser on popular sites are missing from ResourceTiming's crawls, accounting for more than 50% of all bytes downloaded (Page Weight).
This is not ideal, and makes RUM analysis biased, especially compared to browser developer tools and synthetic tests, which report on 100% of all resources. RUM cannot report on Page Weight accurately today.
My guess, based on the common types of content typically loaded from cross-origin IFRAMEs, is that ads and social widgets are likely one of the biggest things completely flying under the radar for ResourceTiming/RUM. I'd really like to be able to shine a better light on both of those third-party components, so we can hold them accountable.
Video content is even worse, with 75% of videos missing from ResourceTiming, 97.3% by byte count.
Cross-origin IFRAMEs are restricted for a reason, as opening access has privacy, security, and probably other concerns. Hoping there's a way to get access to just their fetches, if they opt-in.
We've experimented with a way for third-parties (e.g. ad providers) to bubble up their content via a
postMessage()
handshake, but it takes JavaScript coordination in both pages to do so.Proposal
I'd like to figure out if there's a way for content-owners (third-parties that serve content in IFRAMEs) to opt-in to sharing some of their performance data to the base page. We'll need three pieces to make this work:
1. Opting-In
For cross-origin resources fetched from the base page, the content owner (e.g. third-party site, CDN, etc) can opt-in to sharing detailed performance data via the TAO HTTP header:
I think we could re-use this concept for cross-origin frames. Two options come to mind:
Timing-Allow-Origin
header: IfTiming-Allow-Origin
is available on a HTML page that is an IFRAME, it has "opted-in" to sharing not only the detailed performance data for that URL itself, but also anything it fetches. This expands the scope of TAO, so I'm not sure it would pass a security review, but would get us a lot more data quicker (the TAO header is on only around 15% of responses today).Timing-Allow-Origin-Resources
(or something) header, that would opt the IFRAME into sharing its performance data with the base page.2. Which Content is Shared?
The most interesting information I personally want from cross-origin IFRAMEs is ResourceTiming data, but I could see it being useful to share UserTiming data as well.
LongTasks already exposes its data to parent frames.
There is probably more performance data that would be useful to "share up", but we could also just scope this to ResourceTiming data for now.
3. Accessing the Shared Performance Data
I'm not sure of the best ergonomics of this. A couple options come to mind:
frames[n].performance
, but nothing else on theframes[n].*
. Seems like a tough sell.performance.getEntriesByType('resource', { frames: true })
. I know there's not much appetite for working on the "old" interfaces though.The third option would probably get my vote, but it would require bubbles support.
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