These benchmarks are informal and only intended to give us a general sense of the benefit Dart Sass could provide relative to other implementations.
This was tested against:
- libsass 45f50873 and sassc 2c2d264 compiled with g++ (Debian 7.3.0-5) 7.3.0.
- Dart Sass ad3feff on Dart 2.0.0-dev.62.0 and Node v9.5.0.
- Ruby Sass 36b0a0ba on ruby 2.4.1p111 (2017-03-22 revision 58053) [x86_64-linux].
on Debian x64 with Intel Xeon E5-1650 v3 @ 3.50GHz. The Dart Sass
application snapshot was trained on the tool/app-snapshot-input.scss
file.
I ran five instances of each configuration and recorded the fastest time.
Running on a file containing 4 instances of .foo {a: b}
:
- sassc: 0.002s
- Dart Sass from a script snapshot: 0.309s
- Dart Sass from an app snapshot: 0.072s
- Dart Sass on Node.js: 0.276s
- Ruby Sass with a hot cache: 0.141s
Based on these numbers, Dart Sass from an app snapshot is approximately:
- 36.0x slower than libsass
- 3.8x faster than Dart Sass on Node
- 2.0x faster than Ruby Sass
Running on a file containing 2^17 instances of .foo {a: b}
:
- sassc: 2.052s
- Dart Sass from a script snapshot: 2.132s
- Dart Sass from an app snapshot: 1.993s
- Dart Sass on Node.js: 4.957s
- Ruby Sass with a hot cache: 11.623s
Based on these numbers, Dart Sass from an app snapshot is approximately:
- identical to libsass
- 2.5x faster than Dart Sass on Node
- 5.8x faster than Ruby Sass
Running on a file containing .x {@extend .y}
, 2^17 instances of .foo {a: b}
, and then .y {a: b}
:
- sassc: 2.171s
- Dart Sass from a script snapshot: 2.170s
- Dart Sass from an app snapshot: 2.007s
- Dart Sass on Node.js: 4.995s
- Ruby Sass with a hot cache: 17.434s
Based on these numbers, Dart Sass from an app snapshot is approximately:
- 1.1x faster than libsass
- 2.5x faster than Dart Sass on Node
- 8.7x faster than Ruby Sass
Running on a file containing .y {a: b}
, 2^17 instances of .foo {a: b}
, and then .x {@extend .y}
:
- sassc: 2.078s
- Dart Sass from a script snapshot: 2.153s
- Dart Sass from an app snapshot: 2.044s
- Dart Sass on Node.js: 4.925s
- Ruby Sass with a hot cache: 17.260s
Based on these numbers, Dart Sass from an app snapshot is approximately:
- identical to libsass
- 2.4x faster than Dart Sass on Node
- 8.4x faster than Ruby Sass
Running on a file containing .bar {@extend .foo}
followed by 2^17 instances of .foo {a: b}
:
- sassc: 2.212s
- Dart Sass from a script snapshot: 2.940s
- Dart Sass from an app snapshot: 2.906s
- Dart Sass on Node.js: 10.824s
- Ruby Sass with a hot cache: 33.666s
Based on these numbers, Dart Sass from an app snapshot is approximately:
- 1.3x slower than libsass
- 3.7x faster than Dart Sass on Node
- 11.6x faster than Ruby Sass
Running on a file containing 2^17 instances of .foo {a: b}
followed by .bar {@extend .foo}
:
- sassc: 2.136s
- Dart Sass from a script snapshot: 2.834s
- Dart Sass from an app snapshot: 2.722s
- Dart Sass on Node.js: 10.590s
- Ruby Sass with a hot cache: 33.264s
Based on these numbers, Dart Sass from an app snapshot is approximately:
- 1.3x slower than libsass
- 3.9x faster than Dart Sass on Node
- 23.2x faster than Ruby Sass
Since the last measurement, both Dart Sass and LibSass performance numbers have improved. LibSass has made major strides particularly in processing dense extends, to the point that it's now faster than Dart Sass in those cases.
Overall, Dart Sass on the Dart VM is still neck-and-neck with LibSass in terms of performance, and both are faster than they were at the time of Dart Sass's initial release. They're well within the parameters for highly usable systems.
It's still the case that Dart Sass falls behind LibSass when processing small files—it's difficult for any VM to beat the startup speed of C++. But the app snapshot model means that it stays beneath the crucial 100ms limit for trivial files, which means it will look effectively instantaneous to humans.
Dart Sass on Node lags behind, particularly when many extends are in use. It's still faster than it was last measurement, but it would probably pay dividends to do some JS-specific benchmarking and optimization to try to bring the speed closer to that of the Dart VM. The majority of our users run Dart Sass through JS, so while it's good that they have a path to better performance with the same semantics, improving the baseline performance is important.
It's also still worth investigating the possibility of driving Dart Sass on the Dart VM through Node.js, ideally supporting the standard JS API surface. While this may add considerable overhead for custom functions, the gains in pure-Sass processing times may well be worth it for some users.