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I was given the following formulas to measure Time To First Byte (TTFB), TTFB to DOM Ready and Page Load.

TTFB

window.performance.timing.responseStart - window.performance.timing.navigationStart

TTFB to DOM Ready

window.performance.timing.domComplete - window.performance.timing.navigationStart

Page Load

window.performance.timing.loadEventStart - window.performance.timing.navigationStart

Are these formulas correct? And how would I be able to check them? I've heard you can measure them in Firebug's Network panel, but it seems overall cumbersome in retrieving the values. Not sure where you get the values in Chrome.

So, how to determine those measurements?

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2 Answers 2

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Firebug actually makes it very easy to see those timings. You just need to execute window.performance.timing in its command line and it will display a graph and lists all timings below like this:

<code>window.performance.timing</code> display in Firebug

Also, according to the description on MDN, I'd say your calculation should start at fetchStart, as that is the moment in time when the browser is ready to fetch the document using an HTTP request. Depending on your definition of DOM Ready the end time of that measurement may also be the domInteractive or domContentLoadedEventStart time.

So, I'd say the correct measurements would be:

TTFB

window.performance.timing.responseStart - window.performance.timing.fetchStart

TTFB to DOM Ready

window.performance.timing.domInteractive - window.performance.timing.fetchStart

Page Load

window.performance.timing.loadEventStart - window.performance.timing.fetchStart
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    That Firebug timing chart doesn't look accurate - I doubt the browser waited until the whole html was received, to start DOM parsing it.
    – NoBugs
    Feb 12, 2016 at 4:47
  • You're right, the graph is incorrect regarding the DOM Processing. It currently (Firebug 2.0.14) refers to the time from responseEnd to loadEventStart, while it should actually be the time between domLoading and domInteractive or domComplete. I've filed issue 7993 for that. Non-the-less you can read the correct timings from the table. Feb 12, 2016 at 6:57
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This can be confirmed using Chrome's network tab:

Example TTFB:

window.performance.timing.responseStart - window.performance.timing.requestStart

enter image description here

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