Performance: mark() method
Baseline
Widely available
This feature is well established and works across many devices and browser versions. It’s been available across browsers since September 2017.
Note: This feature is available in Web Workers.
The mark() method creates a named PerformanceMark object representing a high resolution timestamp marker in the browser's performance timeline.
Syntax
mark(name)
mark(name, markOptions)
Parameters
name-
A string representing the name of the mark. Must not be the same name as one of the properties of the deprecated
PerformanceTiminginterface. markOptionsOptional-
An object for specifying a timestamp and additional metadata for the mark.
detailOptional-
Arbitrary metadata to include in the mark. Defaults to
null. Must be structured-cloneable. startTimeOptional-
DOMHighResTimeStampto use as the mark time. Defaults toperformance.now().
Return value
The PerformanceMark entry that was created.
Exceptions
SyntaxError: Thrown if thenameis one of the properties of the deprecatedPerformanceTiminginterface. See the example below.TypeError: Thrown ifstartTimeis negative.
Examples
>Creating named markers
The following example uses mark() to create named PerformanceMark entries. You can create several marks with the same name. You can also assign them, to have a reference to the PerformanceMark object that has been created.
performance.mark("login-started");
performance.mark("login-started");
performance.mark("login-finished");
performance.mark("form-sent");
const videoMarker = performance.mark("video-loaded");
Creating markers with details
The performance mark is configurable using the markOptions object where you can put additional information in the detail property, which can be of any type.
performance.mark("login-started", {
detail: "Login started using the login button in the top menu.",
});
performance.mark("login-started", {
detail: { htmlElement: myElement.id },
});
Creating markers with a different start time
The default timestamp of the mark() method is performance.now(). You can set it to a different time using the startTime option in markOptions.
performance.mark("start-checkout", {
startTime: 20.0,
});
performance.mark("login-button-pressed", {
startTime: myEvent.timeStamp,
});
Reserved names
Note in order to maintain backwards compatibility, names that are part of the deprecated PerformanceTiming interface can't be used. The following example throws:
performance.mark("navigationStart");
// SyntaxError: "navigationStart" is part of
// the PerformanceTiming interface,
// and cannot be used as a mark name
Specifications
| Specification |
|---|
| User Timing> # dom-performance-mark> |
Browser compatibility
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