Google recently launched Lighthouse, an open-source tool to audit your website manually and automatically.

What metrics are tested by Google Lighthouse?

There are more than 75 metrics it tests and gives you overall scoring. You might be interested in some of the following popular ones as a site owner, SEO analyst, and webmaster.

Performance – time to interactive, latency, speed index, resources optimization, TTFB, asset delivery, scripts execution time, DOM size, etc.SEO – Mobile friendly, meta, crawling, canonical, structure, etc.Best Practices – Image optimization, JS libraries, browser error logging, accessible over HTTPS, known JS vulnerabilities, etcAccessibility  – Page elements, language, ARIA attributes, etc.PWA (Progressive Web Application) – redirect HTTP to HTTPS, response code ok, fast loading on 3G, splash screen, viewport, etc.

It’s a fantastic tool, and you can use it in multiple ways. That’s right – so many ways. If you are a developer, you can use Node.js to run a test programmatically. There are already a few tools in the market powered by Lighthouse that offer continuous site performance monitoring. Let’s find out how you run the lighthouse test against your site. Start from the easiest one.

Measure by web.dev

Google released web.dev a few months back and gained good popularity. Testing online is easy. Go to Measure page and enter the URL to run the audit. It will take a few seconds, and you should see the detailed reporting with the overall scoring. Results also show the success metrics test for the passed audits and work on those needs attention. Consider them as guidelines and try to improve as much you can. Note: web.dev emulates a test using a Mobile device, and while writing, I don’t see an option to test using Desktop.

Chrome

Do you know Lighthouse is available in your Chrome browser? And, the great news is, you can choose to test using Mobile or Desktop, and it’s available in Developer tools.

Open Chrome browserAccess your site to testOpen Developer tools (Press F12 if using Windows) or right-click on the page and click Inspect.Go to the audits tab.

As you can see above, you have an option to choose what you want to test. This is great to focus on your goal and get the audit results faster. Results look and feel from Chome and web.dev is almost similar. But if you look at it carefully, there is one additional metrics group here – Progressive Web App. So another reason to audit using Chrome.

Geekflare Lighthouse API

You can also get the web-performance data with Geekflare Lighthouse API. This extracts Lighthouse metrics for mobile or desktop with just a click in HTML, JSON, or CSV format. You can also customize the report by changing the output format and/or focusing on a particular metric like SEO. And luckily, we have one no-strings-attached free tier that comes with 3000 API calls per month. However, the paid ones add multi-location support, residential proxy and higher request rates, starting with just $5 a month.

Node.js

Lighthouse is available as a Node module. You can install it on your server and use it programmatically or command line. Let’s quickly check out how to install Lighthouse to run some tests.

Installing Lighthouse on Ubuntu 18.x

The following, I’ve tested on the DigitalOcean server. Lighthouse requires Node LTS 8.9 or later, and I assume you already have it installed. If not, refer to this Node.js installation guide. You will also require a chromium browser to be installed on the server. I covered the installation instruction here. Installing Lighthouse is straightforward, as you do other modules.

Login to your serverRun the following command to install

I am using -g here, so it gets installed as a global module. Once installed, run lighthouse command to ensure it has been installed correctly. Good, the lighthouse is ready to run the audit. Let’s try some test options. To run a test using a headless browser You need to provide an absolute URL, including HTTP or HTTPS. Ex: In the second last line, you can see it has printed the path to find the report. By default, it will generate a report in HTML format, which you can view either by downloading on your PC or serving it through some web server. But, what if you have to generate a report in JSON format? It’s doable as the following. By using Lighthouse CLI, you are in full control to use it the way you want it. I would strongly recommend checking out the GitHub repository to learn more about using CLI or programmatically.

Conclusion

Google Lighthouse looks like a promising tool to perform a continuity test to improve site performance and usability. If you are using WordPress and looking to make your site load faster, check out Rocket.

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