Is it possible to run Google Page speed from the command line? If so, how? I'm interested in automating nightly or daily Google PageSpeed calls that will inform me after a commit or daily if I've caused a drop in the Google PageSpeed 'grade' (for a given page).
3 Answers
It's possible to use the PageSpeed Insights from the command line:
Install via:
$ npm install --global psi
Usage:
$ psi <url> --key=<key> --prettyprint=<true> --userIp=<userIp> --locale=<locale> --strategy=<desktop|mobile>
Run it like this: $ psi http://stackoverflow.com
Also for mobile insights: $ psi http://stackoverflow.com --strategy=mobile
UPDATE: You can use the PageSpeed Insights within your local development environment (internet connection required) with grunt + grunt-pagespeed + ngrok. Checkout the sample project for grunt-pagespeed and ngrok for further information.
Note: Run $ ngrok -authtoken <your-token> 80
and check the web interface parameters to make sure to set the right port in your Gruntfile.js
!
-
Darn, my original post isn't very clear. I'd rather test these things before they go to production or acceptance, say in a nightly build, or just locally. So no access via the internet to the instance unless it's ran from the command line, and can access localhost, ect. Sep 19, 2014 at 15:53
-
@lucidquiet I've updated my answer and added an option for using PageSpeed in a local development environment. Not sure if this will work for you as it requires Grunt and an internet connection, but maybe you can give it a try :)– SvenSep 19, 2014 at 18:22
There is a Google Page Speed API. It won't work directly from a command line but you can easily write a script in your language of choice that will interact with the API.
You can use curl to run PageSpeed from command line like so:
curl "https://www.googleapis.com/pagespeedonline/v1/runPagespeed?url=http://your_url/&prettyprint=true&strategy=mobile&key=your_api_key"
It will return human readable results in json. cmd-F "score" to locate the overall score.
Reference : Official Google api.
-
2