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We are creating a Chrome application that we hope to release in the coming weeks. We have already distributed to a bunch of alpha testers, and, even though feedback is generally good, we have had complains by a bunch of users that our extensions is expensive in terms of RAM. We also had reports of a too high CPU consumption.

Now, we have improved what seemed obvious, but we are almost 'blind' in terms of execution.

What would be the good strategy to profile both memory and JS calls for our Chrome application?

Please note that this application is a full native application, so maybe we can apply some generic javascript profiling tips?

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  • All I have used are Chrome Dev panels: Timeline and Profiles - I assume that you have checked them thoroughly.
    – hamczu
    Mar 3, 2012 at 22:39
  • I did check them, but couldn't find the way to use them efficiently. Any resource that you think I could look at to get started? Mar 3, 2012 at 22:52
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    Did you look through the profile docs? They cover everything pretty well and there are a number of videos with good intros. code.google.com/chrome/devtools/docs/profiles.html
    – abraham
    Mar 4, 2012 at 0:03
  • Abraham's link is dead on. I'd point specifically to the heap profiling documentation as a good place for you to start determining exactly how your application is using memory.
    – Mike West
    Mar 6, 2012 at 13:02

1 Answer 1

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As people have mentioned, you can use the Chrome Developer Tools to profile memory usage.

For CPU and RAM, it's not particularily scientific, but you could get a broad gauge by having no applications open other than Chrome which has about:blank open and your OS' Activity Monitor or Task Manager.

Look at the CPU and RAM readings for Chrome on about:blank, which is about as idle as it will get - then compare that to the readings when your Application is running.

Disable all extensions too, to take them out of the equation.

Hope this helps.

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