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I have read that with dart your application can start up to 10x faster because of snapshots. Can anyone explain what it really is and how it works? In what kind of application would i be using snapshots?

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Dart's Snapshots are like Smalltalk images in the sense that they allow nearly instant application startup. However, unlike Smalltalk images, Snapshots don't store the program state.

This is especially helpful in slower mobile devices because they are inherently slower and also restricted by memory much more than a desktop system. That reason and the fact that battery usage begs us to close unnecessary programs makes startup speed important.

Dart addresses this issue of slow startup with the heap snapshot feature, which is similar to Smalltalk's image system. The heap of an application is traversed and all objects are written to a simple file. Note: at the moment, the Dart distribution ships with a tool that fires up a Dart VM, loads an application's code, and just before calling main, it takes a snapshot of the heap. The Dart VM can use such a snapshot file to quickly load an application.

The snapshot feature is also used to serialize object graphs that are being sent between Dart Isolates (serialized with SnapshotWriter).

Currently I do not know of any way to initiating a snapshot or dealing with them. In the future, I would expect it to be possible to serve a snapshot file from the web server and having that processed by the browser Dart VM instantaneously.

The snapshot format itself is cross-platform meaning that it works between 32-bit, 64-bit machines and so forth. The format has been made so that it's quick to read into memory with a emphasis on minimizing extra work like pointer fixups.

Here's the source code for snapshot.cc: http://code.google.com/p/dart/source/browse/trunk/dart/runtime/vm/snapshot.cc

and the tests: http://code.google.com/p/dart/source/browse/trunk/dart/runtime/vm/snapshot_test.cc

So the reason why it can speed up an application startup by a factor of 10 is because it's not a bunch of source code like JavaScript that is send as-is and slowly processed afterwards.

And where would you like to use it? Anywhere you possibly can. On the server side, it's basically already happening for you (and doesn't matter really). but on the client-side, that's not possible yet. As I understand it, it will be possible to serve these snapshots to the browser for instant startup, but you really have to wait since it's not available as of now.

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  • Should note that we've see a startup improvement of 10X when using snapshots to load dart2js.
    – Seth Ladd
    Oct 15, 2012 at 4:02
  • @SethLadd can you elaborate what you mean? Or perhaps edit my answer -- this is a wiki after all :) Oct 17, 2012 at 6:52
  • Initial tests show that starting dart2js from a snapshot are 10X faster than starting dart2js from source code. It's still early, but the data looks promising.
    – Seth Ladd
    Oct 17, 2012 at 16:21
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    Also, I don't think snapshots are like smalltalk images. A Dart snapshot is just a binary serialization of the token stream, generated from parsing the code. A snapshot is not a "snapshot of a running program", it's generated before the tokens are turned into machine code. So, no program state is captured in a snapshot. Disclaimer, I am not a smalltalk images expert.
    – Seth Ladd
    Oct 17, 2012 at 16:22
  • Yes, there is definitely no state saving going on there. The model just looks similar, that's all. Nice to hear about your early performance tests! Oct 17, 2012 at 18:04

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