38

I am very intrigued by the excessive number of "composite layers", "recalculate style" and then "update layer tree" events in one of our webapps. I'm wondering what's causing them here.

If you point your Chrome to one of our fast moving streams, say https://choir.io/player/beachmonks/github, and turn on your "FPS meter", you can see that the app can achieve about 60fps most of the times when we are on the top.

However, as soon as I scroll down a few messages and leave the screen as it is, the FPS rate drops dramatically down to around 10 or even lower. What the code is doing here is that it renders each incoming message, prepends it to the top and scroll the list up Npx, which is the height of the new message, to keep the viewport position intact.

(I understand that scrollTop will invalidate the screen but I have carefully ordered the operations to avoid layout thrashings. I am also aware of the synchronous repaint that happens every second, it's caused by the jquery.sparkline but it's not relevant to this discussion.)

Here is what I see when I tried to profile it. low fps profiling result.

What do you think might be causing the large number of layer operations?

3
  • 2
    Perhaps this will be of use for you, Scrolling Performance by performance guru Paul Lewis
    – pilau
    Aug 19, 2014 at 8:57
  • @AlexDong did you ever end up finding an answer to your question? I'm looking through my scroll performance and i'm wondering the same thing.
    – Clark Pan
    Dec 9, 2014 at 2:21
  • @ClarkPan not at all. Actually Paul Lewis, whose link was quoted above, thought this was a bug in Chrome and the Chrome team is actively improving it: twitter.com/aerotwist/status/498886055391952897
    – Alex Dong
    Dec 15, 2014 at 21:36

3 Answers 3

18

The CSS property will-change: transform on all elements needing a repaint solved the problem with too many Composite Layers for me.

1
  • 3
    Where can i see what elements needs a repaint?
    – user14766510
    Mar 21, 2021 at 22:13
6

I had the same issue. I fixed it by reducing the size of the images.

There was some thumbnails in the scrollable list. The size of each thumbnail was 3000x1800 but they were resized by CSS to 62x44. Using 62x44 images reduced the time consumed for "Composite layers".

-4

Some info about the Composite Layers that can help

from what I see here it says

event: Composite Layers

Description: Chrome's rendering engine composited image layers.

for the meaning of the word composite from wikipedia

Compositing is the combining of visual elements from separate sources into single images, often to create the illusion that all those elements are parts of the same scene

so this the process of making the page we actually see by taking the output of coding/resizing images, parse HTML and parse CSS to make the final page we see

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  • 2
    No idea how this answer relates to issue posted by @Alex
    – Vinay
    Jun 27, 2017 at 12:01
  • 1
    @Vinay i don't remember this question or this answer but back then i thought that the composite layers is the process that is responsible for the issue so i explained to him what that process is
    – Robert
    Jun 27, 2017 at 13:47
  • 3
    did not mean to be negative and you are actually right about the composite thing but what i actually meant is that you can change your answer saying this does not answer the question but i have some info which might give you pointers.
    – Vinay
    Jun 27, 2017 at 14:08

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