Faster Startup Times With Startup Tracing On Android

Jon

July 24th, 2019

One of the biggest pain points we’ve heard from you is startup times on Android.

Improving Startup Times

If you use AOT today, it improves startup times drastically, but you suffer in APK size bloat. This, unfortunately, is not a bargain that most Android applications can take in this modern-day as we must keep our users at the forefront of our decisions. They also ensure that they don’t have to download a large APK just to use our services. There must be a better way forward we thought.

We wanted to make sure we address this problem head-on by giving you the best of both worlds; a performant startup experience, and minimal increase to APK size.

Starting today, we’re announcing faster starter times using Startup Tracing on Android for all versions of Visual Studio.

What is Android AOT?

The Android runtime(ART) is a managed runtime used by applications and system services on Android. ART as the runtime executes Dalvik Executables (.dex files – Dalvik EXecutable) which is a compact format to store Dalvik bytecode.

ART introduced the use of ahead-of-time (AOT) compilation by compiling entire applications into native machine code upon the installation of the application. This brings faster execution of applications and improved memory allocation. As well as garbage collection mechanisms, more accurate profiling, and much more.

To accomplish this, ART uses a utility known as dex2oat (Dalvik Executable to Of Ahead Time) to create an ELF (Executable and Linkable Format) executable. The downside requires additional time to compile. Additionally, applications take up larger amounts of disk memory to store the compiled code.

What is Mono AOT?

The Mono runtime provides an ahead-of-time (AOT) feature. Which Mono will precompile assemblies to minimize JIT time and reduce memory usage.

Mono can generate an ELF .so file on platforms that support it such as Android. It then stores a precompiled image next to the original assembly.

i.e. Mono.Android.dll → libaot-Mono.Android.dll.so

These files can then be used by the Mono runtime and omit the JIT overhead alongside similar downsides such as Android AOT.

What is Startup Tracing?

Mono introduced a feature which allows one to use a built-in AOT profiler on an application to generate an AOT profile. The profiler conducts memory profiling, execution time profiling, and even a statistical-based sampling for profiling. This generates an AOT profile that can be used to optimize your application when using Mono’s AOT feature with a profile.

Getting Started

Startup Tracing can be used with Visual Studio 2019 Version 16.2 or Visual Studio for Mac 2019 Version 8.2.

You can get started with Startup Tracing by editing your Android project’s .csproj file and adding the following property inside your Release <PropertyGroup>:

<PropertyGroup Condition=" '$(Configuration)|$(Platform)' == 'Release|AnyCPU' "> <AndroidEnableProfiledAot>true</AndroidEnableProfiledAot> </PropertyGroup>

This can also be in the Android Options in your project settings starting with Visual Studio 2019 16.3 Preview 2:

For more documentation on Startup Tracing, see our release notes on this topic.

This will tell Mono’s AOT compiler to enable startup tracing which uses a default profile and speed up the startup time of your Android applications when deploying.

Differences in AOT Modes

Type Startup Speed APK Size Normal 2s914ms 16.1 MB AOT 1s18ms 34.6 MB Startup Tracing 1s518ms 20.1 MB

Feedback

Get the best of both worlds with startup tracing and use it in your Android apps today.

We’re continuously improving this experience and want to know your thoughts on it! For anything you believe is an issue with Startup Tracing with Android apps, please file an issue on Developer Community.

Additionally, let us know if you have any suggestions for how we can improve the Startup Tracing experience.