http-timer
Timings for HTTP requests
Inspired by the request
package.
Usage
'use strict';
const https = require('https');
const timer = require('@szmarczak/http-timer');
const request = https.get('https://httpbin.org/anything');
const timings = timer(request);
request.on('response', response => {
response.on('data', () => {}); // Consume the data somehow
response.on('end', () => {
console.log(timings);
});
});
// { start: 1535708511443,
// socket: 1535708511444,
// lookup: 1535708511444,
// connect: 1535708511582,
// upload: 1535708511887,
// response: 1535708512037,
// end: 1535708512040,
// phases:
// { wait: 1,
// dns: 0,
// tcp: 138,
// request: 305,
// firstByte: 150,
// download: 3,
// total: 597 } }
API
timer(request)
Returns: Object
-
start
- Time when the request started. -
socket
- Time when a socket was assigned to the request. -
lookup
- Time when the DNS lookup finished. -
connect
- Time when the socket successfully connected. -
upload
- Time when the request finished uploading. -
response
- Time when the request fired theresponse
event. -
end
- Time when the response fired theend
event. -
error
- Time when the request fired theerror
event. -
phases
-
wait
-timings.socket - timings.start
-
dns
-timings.lookup - timings.socket
-
tcp
-timings.connect - timings.lookup
-
request
-timings.upload - timings.connect
-
firstByte
-timings.response - timings.upload
-
download
-timings.end - timings.response
-
total
-timings.end - timings.start
ortimings.error - timings.start
-
Note: The time is a number
representing the milliseconds elapsed since the UNIX epoch.
License
MIT