PerformanceNavigationTiming: loadEventEnd property
Baseline Widely available
This feature is well established and works across many devices and browser versions. It’s been available across browsers since October 2021.
The loadEventEnd
read-only property returns a DOMHighResTimeStamp
representing the time immediately after the current document's load
event handler completes.
Value
A DOMHighResTimeStamp
representing the time immediately after the current document's load
event handler completes.
Examples
Measuring load
event handler time
The loadEventEnd
property can be used to measure how long it takes to process the load
event handler.
This is useful to measure the time of long running load
event handlers.
window.addEventListener("load", (event) => {
// Some long running code
});
Example using a PerformanceObserver
, which notifies of new navigation
performance entries as they are recorded in the browser's performance timeline. Use the buffered
option to access entries from before the observer creation.
const observer = new PerformanceObserver((list) => {
list.getEntries().forEach((entry) => {
const loadEventTime = entry.loadEventEnd - entry.loadEventStart;
if (loadEventTime > 0) {
console.log(`${entry.name}: load event handler time: ${loadEventTime}ms`);
}
});
});
observer.observe({ type: "navigation", buffered: true });
Example using Performance.getEntriesByType()
, which only shows navigation
performance entries present in the browser's performance timeline at the time you call this method:
const entries = performance.getEntriesByType("navigation");
entries.forEach((entry) => {
const loadEventTime = entry.loadEventEnd - entry.loadEventStart;
if (loadEventTime > 0) {
console.log(`${entry.name}:
load event handler time: ${loadEventTime}ms`);
}
});
Specifications
Specification |
---|
Navigation Timing Level 2 # dom-performancenavigationtiming-loadeventend |
Browser compatibility
BCD tables only load in the browser
See also
load
event