JavaScript Optimization Patterns (Part 1)

It's been a while since my last blog post, mostly because I didn't really have the time or the energy to sit down and write up all the stuff that I wanted to write about. Part of it was because I have been pretty busy with the Ignition and TurboFan launch in Chrome 59, which fortunately was a huge success thus far. But also partly because I took some time off with my family. And last but not least I went to JSConf EU and Web Rebels, and at the time of this writing I'm at enterJS, procastinating on doing the final tweaking for my talk.

Meanwhile I just got back from a very interesting dinner discussion with Brian Terlson, Ada Rose Edwards and Ashley Williams about good optimization patterns for JavaScript that we can give as advice safely, and in particular how hard it is to come up with those. One particular point that I made was that ideal performance often depends on the context in which the code is running, and that's oftentimes the most difficult part. So I thought it's probably worth sharing this information with everyone. I'll start this as a series of blog posts. In this first part I'll try to highlight the impact that the concrete execution context can have on the performance of your JavaScript code.

Consider the following artificial Point class, which has a method distance that computes the Manhatten distance of two such points.

class Point {

constructor ( x , y ) {

this . x = x ;

this . y = y ;

}



distance ( other ) {

const dx = Math . abs ( this . x - other . x ) ;

const dy = Math . abs ( this . y - other . y ) ;

return dx + dy ;

}

}

In addition to that consider the following test driver function, which creates a couple of Point instances, and computes the distance between them several million times, summing up the result (yeah I know it's a micro-benchmark, but bear with me for a second):

function test ( ) {

const points = [ new Point ( 10 , 10 ) , new Point ( 1 , 1 ) , new Point ( 8 , 9 ) ] ;

let result = 0 ;

for ( let i = 0 ; i < 10000000 ; ++ i ) {

for ( const point1 of points ) {

for ( const point2 of points ) {

result += point1 . distance ( point2 ) ;

}

}

}

return result ;

}

Now we have a proper benchmarkfor the Point class and in particular its distance method. Let's do a couple of runs of the test driver to see what the performance is, using the following HTML snippet:

< script >

function test ( ) {

class Point {

constructor ( x , y ) {

this . x = x ;

this . y = y ;

}



distance ( other ) {

const dx = Math . abs ( this . x - other . x ) ;

const dy = Math . abs ( this . y - other . y ) ;

return dx + dy ;

}

}



const points = [ new Point ( 10 , 10 ) , new Point ( 1 , 1 ) , new Point ( 8 , 9 ) ] ;

let result = 0 ;

for ( let i = 0 ; i < 10000000 ; ++ i ) {

for ( const point1 of points ) {

for ( const point2 of points ) {

result += point1 . distance ( point2 ) ;

}

}

}

return result ;

}



for ( let i = 1 ; i <= 5 ; ++ i ) {

console . time ( "test " + i ) ;

test ( ) ;

console . timeEnd ( "test " + i ) ;

}

</ script >

If you run this in Chrome 61 (canary), you'll see the following output in the Chrome Developer Tools Console:

test 1: 595.248046875ms test 2: 765.451904296875ms test 3: 930.452880859375ms test 4: 994.2890625ms test 5: 3894.27392578125ms

The performance of the individual runs is very inconsistent. You can see that the performance get's worse with each subsequent run. The reason for the performance regression is that the Point class sits inside the test function.

< script >

class Point {

constructor ( x , y ) {

this . x = x ;

this . y = y ;

}



distance ( other ) {

const dx = Math . abs ( this . x - other . x ) ;

const dy = Math . abs ( this . y - other . y ) ;

return dx + dy ;

}

}



function test ( ) {

const points = [ new Point ( 10 , 10 ) , new Point ( 1 , 1 ) , new Point ( 8 , 9 ) ] ;

let result = 0 ;

for ( let i = 0 ; i < 10000000 ; ++ i ) {

for ( const point1 of points ) {

for ( const point2 of points ) {

result += point1 . distance ( point2 ) ;

}

}

}

return result ;

}



for ( let i = 1 ; i <= 5 ; ++ i ) {

console . time ( "test " + i ) ;

test ( ) ;

console . timeEnd ( "test " + i ) ;

}

</ script >

If we change the snippet slightly such that the Point class is defined outside of the test function, we'll get different results:

test 1: 598.794921875ms test 2: 599.18115234375ms test 3: 600.410888671875ms test 4: 608.98388671875ms test 5: 605.36376953125ms

The performance is pretty much stable now with the usual noise. Notice that in both cases, we used exactly the same code for the Point class and exactly the same code for the test driver logic. The only difference is where exactly we place the Point class in the code.

It's also worth noting that this has nothing to do with the new ES2015 class syntax; using old style ES5 syntax for the Point class yields the same performance results:

function Point ( x , y ) {

this . x = x ;

this . y = y ;

}

Point . prototype . distance = function ( other ) {

var dx = Math . abs ( this . x - other . x ) ;

var dy = Math . abs ( this . y - other . y ) ;

return dx + dy ;

} ;

The underlying reason for the performance difference when the Point class lives inside the test function is that the class literal is then executed multiple times (exactly 5 times in my example above), whereas if it lives outside the test function, it's only executed once. Everytime the class definition is executed, a new prototype object is created, which carries all the methods of the class. In addition to that a new constructor function is created, which corresponds to the class , and has the prototype object set as it's "prototype" property.

New instances of the class are created using this "prototype" as their prototype object. But since V8 tracks the prototype of an instance as part of the object shape or hidden class (see Setting up prototypes in V8 for some details on this) in order to optimize access to properties on the prototype chain, having different prototypes automatically implies having different object shapes. And as such the generated code get's ever more polymorphic if the class definition is executed multiple times, and eventually V8 gives up on polymorphism after it has seen more than 4 different object shapes, and enters the so-called megamorphic state, which means it kind of gives up on generating highly optimized code.

So takeaway from this exercise: Identical code put into a slightly different place can easily lead to a 6.5x difference in performance! This is especially important since popular benchmarking frameworks and sites like esbench.com tend to execute code in a different context than your application (i.e. wrap code in functions under the hood that are run multiple times) and thus the results from benchmarking that way can be highly misleading.