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Lightweight Android library for collecting basic app performance metrics

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PerformanceSuite Android

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Lightweight library designed to measure and collect performance metrics for Android applications in production.

Unlike other SaaS solutions (like Firebase Performance) it focuses only on collecting pure metrics and not enforces you to use specific reporting channel and monitoring infrastructure, so you're flexible with re-using the monitoring approaches already existing in your product.

Getting started

Library supports collecting following performance metrics:

  • App Cold Startup Time
  • Rendering performance per Activity
  • Time to Interactive & Time to First Render per screen

We recommend to read our blogpost "Measuring mobile apps performance in production" first to get some idea on what are these performance metrics, how they work and why those were chosen.

NOTE: You can also refer to the SampleApp in this repo to see a simplified example of how the library can be used in the real app

Dependency

The library is available on Maven Central:

implementation("com.booking:perfsuite:0.3")

Collecting Startup Times

Implement the callback invoked once Startup Time is collected:

class MyStartupTimeListener : AppStartupTimeTracker.Listener {

    override fun onColdStartupTimeIsReady(
        startupTime: Long,
        firstActivity: Activity,
        isActualColdStart: Boolean
    ) {
        // Log or report Startup Time metric in a preferable way
    }
}

Then register your listener as early in Application#onCreate as possible:

class MyApplication : Application() {

    override fun onCreate() {
        super.onCreate()
        AppStartupTimeTracker.register(this, MyStartupTimeListener())
    }
}

Collecting Frame Metrics

Implement the callback invoked every time when the foreground Activity is paused (we can call it "the end of the screen session") and use RenderingMetricsMapper to represent rendering performance metrics in a convenient aggregated format:

class MyFrameMetricsListener : ActivityFrameMetricsTracker.Listener {

    override fun onFramesMetricsReady(
        activity: Activity,
        frameMetrics: Array<SparseIntArray>,
        foregroundTime: Long?
    ) {
        val data = RenderingMetricsMapper.toRenderingMetrics(frameMetrics, foregroundTime) ?: return
        // Log or report Frame Metrics for current Activity's "session" in a preferable way
    }
}

Then register your listener in Application#onCreate before any activity is created:

class MyApplication : Application() {

    override fun onCreate() {
        super.onCreate()
        ActivityFrameMetricsTracker.register(this, MyFrameMetricsListener)
    }
}

As per the code sample above you can use RenderingMetricsMapper to collect frames metics in the aggreated format which is convenient for reporting to the backend. Then metrics will be represented as RenderingMetrics instance, which will provide data on:

  • totalFrames - total amount of frames rendered during the screen session
  • totalFreezeTimeMs - total accumulated time of the UI being frozen during the screen session
  • slowFrames - amount of slow frames per screens session
  • frozenFrames - amount of frozen frames per screens session

Even though we support collecting widely used slow & frozen frames we strongly recommend relying on totalFreezeTimeMs as the main rendering metric

Collecting Screen Time to Interactive (TTI)

Implement the callbacks invoked every time when screen's Time To Interactive (TTI) & Time To First Render (TTFR) metrics are collected:

object MyTtiListener : BaseTtiTracker.Listener {

    override fun onScreenCreated(screen: String) {}

    override fun onFirstFrameIsDrawn(screen: String, duration: Long) {
        // Log or report TTFR metrics for specific screen in a preferable way
    }
    override fun onFirstUsableFrameIsDrawn(screen: String, duration: Long) {
        // Log or report TTI metrics for specific screen in a preferable way
    }
}

Then instantiate TTI tracker in Application#onCreate before any activity is created and using this listener:

// keep instances globally accessible or inject as singletons using any preferable DI framework
val ttiTracker = BaseTtiTracker(AppTtiListener)
val viewTtiTracker = ViewTtiTracker(ttiTracker)

class MyApplication : Application() {

    override fun onCreate() {
        super.onCreate()
        ActivityTtfrHelper.register(this, viewTtiTracker)
    }
}

That will enable automatic TTFR collection for every Activity in the app. For TTI collection you'll need to call viewTtiTracker.onScreenIsUsable(..) manually from the Activity, when the meaningful data is visible to the user e.g.:

// call this e.g. when the data is received from the backend,
// progress bar stops spinning and screen is fully ready for the user
viewTtiTracker.onScreenIsUsable(activity.componentName, rootContentView)

See the SampleApp for a full working example

Collecting TTI/TTFR for Fragment-based screens in single-Activity apps

The example above works for Activity-based screens, however if you use the "Single-Activity" approach you also need to enable TTI/TTFR tracking for the Fragments inside you main Activity:

class MyMainActivity : Activity() {

    override fun onCreate() {
        super.onCreate()
        val fragmentHelper = FragmentTtfrHelper(viewTtiTracker)
        supportFragmentManager.registerFragmentLifecycleCallbacks(fragmentHelper, true)
    }
}

Then you can call viewTtiTracker.onScreenIsUsable(..) in Fragments the same way as described above.

Additional documentation

ACKNOWLEDGMENT

This software was originally developed at Booking.com. With approval from Booking.com, this software was released as open source, for which the authors would like to express their gratitude.

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