Lighthouse CI configuration can be managed through a config file, environment variables, and CLI flag overrides.
Lighthouse CI will automatically look for a configuration file in the current working directory in the following priority order:
.lighthouserc.js
lighthouserc.js
.lighthouserc.json
lighthouserc.json
.lighthouserc.yml
lighthouserc.yml
.lighthouserc.yaml
lighthouserc.yaml
Note that upward traversal is not supported. If you'd like to keep your lighthouse configuration in a different location, you can explicitly pass in a configuration file path to any lhci
command using --config=./path/to/file
.
Any configuration option can also be set using environment variables prefixed with LHCI_
, following the yargs API (so LHCI_PROPERTY_NAME__SUBPROPERTY_NAME
is equivalent to --propertyName.subpropertyName
).
LHCI_SERVER_BASE_URL=https://example.com lhci upload
# is equivalent to...
lhci upload --serverBaseUrl=https://example.com
Of course CLI flags can set options as well in addition to nested properties!
lhci assert --preset=lighthouse:recommended --assertions.uses-webp-images=off
The structure of the config file is segmented by command. Any options you see for a particular command can be set by the property of the same name in the config file.
lighthouserc.js
:
module.exports = {
ci: {
collect: {
// collect options here
},
assert: {
// assert options here
},
upload: {
// upload options here
},
server: {
// server options here
},
wizard: {
// wizard options here
},
},
};
lighthouserc.json
:
{
"ci": {
"collect": {
// collect options here
},
"assert": {
// assert options here
},
"upload": {
// upload options here
},
"server": {
// server options here
},
"wizard": {
// wizard options here
}
}
}
lighthouserc.yml
:
ci:
collect:
# collect options here
assert:
# assert options here
upload:
# upload options here
server:
# server options here
wizard:
# wizard options here
--help Show help [boolean]
--version Show version number [boolean]
--no-lighthouserc Disables automatic usage of a .lighthouserc file. [boolean]
--config Path to JSON config file.
Runs diagnostics to ensure a valid configuration, useful when setting up Lighthouse CI for the first time to test your configuration.
Options:
--fatal Exit with a non-zero status code when a component fails the status check.
[boolean]
--checks The list of opt-in checks to include in the fatality check. [array]
Examples
lhci healthcheck --fatal --checks=githubToken
Automatically run, with sensible defaults, lhci collect
, lhci assert
and lhci upload
, depending on the options in your config. lhci autorun
does not have many specific options for itself. Options for individual commands can be set by prefixing the option with the command name.
Note: in autorun
all CLI flags for child commands must use the =
syntax for atomic arguments. i.e. use lhci autorun --collect.numberOfRuns=5
and NOT lhci autorun --collect.numberOfRuns 5
.
Examples
lhci autorun --collect.numberOfRuns=5
lhci autorun --upload.target=temporary-public-storage
Whether to consider failure to upload to the server a fatal error. By default, running upload through autorun
only warns to avoid noisy failures from temporary connectivity loss.
Autorun will attempt to automatically detect the directory of your static site files. If you're using a popular framework like gatsby, create-react-app, etc, then you shouldn't need to take any action. lhci autorun
will look for HTML files in the directories in the following order:
dist
(default name for vue-cli, parcel, and webpack)build
(default name for create-react-app and preact-cli)out
(default name for Next.js, note this will only be generated withnext export
)public
(default name for gatsby)
If your productionized static assets live in a different folder, you'd like to run Lighthouse CI on a specific subset of your static pages, your project does not use a build step at all or a different server, see the lhci collect
documentation for how to configure your project.
If no staticDistDir
could be automatically detected, autorun will attempt to automatically detect the collect.startServerCommand
based on our package.json
. To allow autorun to automatically start your webserver, add an npm script named serve:lhci
.
example package.json
excerpt:
{
"scripts": {
"serve:lhci": "NODE_ENV=production npm run server"
}
}
Runs Lighthouse n times and stores the LHRs in a local .lighthouseci/
folder.
Options:
--method [string] [choices: "node"] [default: "node"]
--headful Run with a headful Chrome [boolean]
--additive Skips clearing of previous collect data [boolean]
--url A URL to run Lighthouse on. Use this flag multiple times to evaluate
multiple URLs.
--staticDistDir The build directory where your HTML files to run Lighthouse on are
located.
--isSinglePageApplication If the application is created by Single Page Application, enable
redirect to index.html.
--chromePath The path to the Chrome or Chromium executable to use for collection.
[default: "/Applications/Google Chrome Canary.app/Contents/MacOS/Google Chrome Canary"]
--puppeteerScript The path to a script that manipulates the browser with puppeteer before
running Lighthouse, used for auth.
--puppeteerLaunchOptions The object of puppeteer launch options
--psiApiKey [psi only] The API key to use for PageSpeed Insights runner method.
You do not need to use this unless you wrote a custom version.
--startServerCommand The command to run to start the server.
--startServerReadyPattern String pattern to listen for started server.
[string] [default: "listen|ready"]
--startServerReadyTimeout The number of milliseconds to wait for the server to start before
continuing [number] [default: 10000]
--settings The Lighthouse settings and flags to use when collecting
--numberOfRuns, -n The number of times to run Lighthouse. [number] [default: 3]
The method used to run Lighthouse. There are currently two options available, "node"
which runs Lighthouse locally via node
, and "psi"
which runs Lighthouse by making a request to the PageSpeed Insights API.
The PageSpeed Insights method has the major limitation that only sites publicly available over the internet can be tested and no other collection options will be respected.
Boolean that controls whether Chrome is launched in headless or headful mode. This flag does not apply when using puppeteerScript
.
Boolean that controls whether the .lighthouseci
directory is cleared before starting. By default, this directory is cleared on every invocation of lhci collect
to start fresh.
An array of the URLs that you'd like Lighthouse CI to collect results from.
When used with staticDistDir
:
- Automatic detection of URLs based on HTML files on disk will be disabled.
- URLs will have their port replaced with the port of the local server that Lighthouse CI starts for you. This allows you to write URLs as
http://localhost/my-static-page.html
without worrying about the chosen temporary port.
When used without staticDistDir
:
- URLs will be used as-is without modification.
The path to the directory where the project's productionized static assets are kept. Lighthouse CI uses this to spin up a static server on your behalf that will be used to load your site.
Use this option when the project is a static website to be hosted locally that does not require a separate server. DO NOT use this option if url
will point to an origin that isn't localhost
or the project uses startServerCommand
to start a separate server.
Boolean that controls whether the static server started in staticDistDir
should act like a single-page application that serves index.html
instead of a 404 for unrecognized paths. This flag has no function when staticDistDir
is not set.
The path of the Chrome executable to use for puppeteerScript
and running Lighthouse. Lighthouse CI will use Chrome installations in the following priority order:
chromePath
optionCHROME_PATH
Environment Variable- Executable path returned by
puppeteer
orpuppeteer-core
, if installed. - Highest priority installation returned by the
chrome-launcher
npm package.
An optional path to a JavaScript file that exports a function that uses puppeteer to login to your page, setup cache data, or otherwise manipulate the browser before Lighthouse is run.
NOTE: In order to use puppeteer scripts, you need to install puppeteer
yourself, i.e. npm install --save puppeteer
. Any version you like that has a .launch
method compatible with v1.x or v2.x and works with the Chrome version installed in your environment should work.
When running Lighthouse CI on a page behind authentication, you'll need to authorize the browser that Lighthouse CI will be using. While there are several different options to accomplish this, the puppeteerScript
option is one of the most flexible and convenient.
Here is the general flow when using puppeteer with LHCI:
|- puppeteer launches browser
|- LHCI runs the puppeteerScript
|- LHCI runs Lighthouse on URL A, run 1
|- LHCI runs Lighthouse on URL A, run 2
|- LHCI runs Lighthouse on URL A, run n
|- LHCI runs the puppeteerScript
|- LHCI runs Lighthouse on URL B, run 1
|- LHCI runs Lighthouse on URL B, run 2
...
Example puppeteer-script.js
/**
* @param {puppeteer.Browser} browser
* @param {{url: string, options: LHCI.CollectCommand.Options}} context
*/
module.exports = async (browser, context) => {
// launch browser for LHCI
const page = await browser.newPage();
await page.goto('http://localhost:8080/login');
await page.type('#username', 'admin');
await page.type('#password', 'password');
await page.click('[type="submit"]');
await page.waitForNavigation();
// close session for next run
await page.close();
};
Lighthouse CI will then use the browser that this script sets up when running Lighthouse. Keep in mind the browser is kept open across all URLs, so if you're keeping auth in cookies then everything should be remembered between runs. If you store your credentials in localStorage
or anything other than a cookie you might want to pair this option with --settings.disableStorageReset
to force Lighthouse to keep the cache state.
For more information on how to use puppeteer, read up on their API docs.
An object of options to pass to puppeteer's launch
method. Only used when puppeterScript
is set.
method=psi only
The API key to use for making PageSpeed Insights requests. Required if using method=psi
. You can obtain a PSI API key from Google APIs.
method=psi only
The API endpoint to hit for making a PageSpeed Insights request. It is very unlikely you should need to use this option. Only use this if you have self-hosted a custom version of the PSI API.
The shell command to use to start the project's webserver. LHCI will use this command to start the server before loading the url
s and automatically shut it down once collection is complete.
Use this option when your project requires a special webserver. DO NOT use this option when your project is just a collection of static assets. Use staticDistDir
instead to use the built-in static server.
The regex pattern to look for in the server command's output before considering the server ready for requests. Only used when startServerCommand
is set.
For example, when using the default listen|ready
, Lighthouse would start collecting results once the the startServerCommand
process printed Listening on port 1337
to stdout.
The maximum amount of time in milliseconds to wait for startServerCommand
to print the startServerReadyPattern
before continuing anyway. Only used when startServerCommand
is set.
The Lighthouse settings object to pass along to Lighthouse. This can be used to change configuration of it Lighthouse itself.
Example:
{
"ci": {
"collect": {
"settings": {
// Don't run certain audits
"skipAudits": ["redirects-http"],
// Don't clear localStorage/IndexedDB/etc before loading the page.
"disableStorageReset": true,
// Wait up to 90s for the page to load
"maxWaitForLoad": 90000,
// Use applied throttling instead of simulated throttling
"throttlingMethod": "devtools"
}
}
}
}
The number of times to collect Lighthouse results on each url
. This option helps mitigate fluctations due to natural page variability.
# Basic usage
lhci collect --numberOfRuns=5 --url=https://example.com
# Have LHCI start a server before running
lhci collect --start-server-command="yarn serve" --url=http://localhost:8080/
# Have LHCI use the built-in server on a static directory
lhci collect --staticDistDir=./dist
# Have LHCI use the built-in server and audit a specific URL
lhci collect --staticDistDir=./public --url=http://localhost/products/pricing/
# Run on multiple URLs
lhci collect --url=https://example-1.com --url=https://example-2.com
# Have LHCI start a server and login with puppeteer before running
lhci collect --start-server-command="yarn serve" --url=http://localhost:8080/ --puppeteer-script=./path/to/login-with-puppeteer.js
Saves the runs in the .lighthouseci/
folder to desired target and sets a GitHub status check when the GitHub token is available.
Options:
--target The type of target to upload the data to. If set to anything other
than "lhci", some of the options will not apply.
[string] [choices: "lhci", "temporary-public-storage"] [default: "lhci"]
--token [lhci only] The Lighthouse CI build token for the project.[string]
--ignoreDuplicateBuildFailure [lhci only] Whether to ignore failures (still exit with code 0)
caused by uploads of a duplicate build. [boolean]
--githubToken The GitHub token to use to apply a status check. [string]
--githubApiHost The GitHub host to use for the status check API request. Modify
this when using on a GitHub Enterprise server.
[string] [default: "https://api.github.com"]
--githubAppToken The LHCI GitHub App token to use to apply a status check. [string]
--githubStatusContextSuffix The suffix of the GitHub status check context label. [string]
--extraHeaders [lhci only] Extra headers to use when making API requests to the
LHCI server.
--basicAuth.username [lhci only] The username to use on a server protected with HTTP
Basic Authentication. [string]
--basicAuth.password [lhci only] The password to use on a server protected with HTTP
Basic Authentication. [string]
--serverBaseUrl [lhci only] The base URL of the LHCI server where results will be
saved. [default: "http://localhost:9001/"]
--uploadUrlMap [temporary-public-storage only] Whether to post links to historical
base results to storage or not. Defaults to true only on master
branch. [boolean] [default: false]
--urlReplacementPatterns [lhci only] sed-like replacement patterns to mask non-deterministic
URL substrings. [array] [default:
["s#:[0-9]{3,5}/#:PORT/#","s/[0-9a-f]{8}-[0-9a-f]{4}-[0-9a-f]{4}-[0-9a-f]{4}-[0-9a-f]{12}/UUID/ig"
]]
--outputDir [filesystem only] The directory in which to dump Lighthouse results. [string]
--reportFilenamePattern [filesystem only] The pattern to use for naming Lighthouse reports.
[string] [default:
"%%HOSTNAME%%-%%PATHNAME%%-%%DATETIME%%.report.%%EXTENSION%%"]
The target location to which Lighthouse CI should upload the reports.
When to use target=temporary-public-storage
:
- You want to setup Lighthouse CI as quickly as possible without any costs.
- You're OK with your reports being available to anyone on the internet with the link.
- You're OK with your reports being automatically deleted after a few days.
- You're OK with your reports being stored on GCP Cloud Storage.
- You've read and agreed to the full terms of service and privacy policy of the service.
When to use target=lhci
:
- You want to store Lighthouse reports for longer than a few days.
- You want to control access to your Lighthouse reports.
- You've setup a Lighthouse CI server.
When to use target=filesystem
:
- You want to process the raw Lighthouse results yourself locally.
- You want access to the report files on the local filesystem.
- You don't want to upload the results to a custom location that isn't supported by Lighthouse CI.
target=lhci only
The build token for your Lighthouse CI project. Required when using target=lhci
. This token should be given to you by lhci wizard --wizard=new-project
. If you've forgotten your token, connect directly to your server and run lhci wizard --wizard=reset-build-token
.
target=lhci only
Boolean that controls whether upload failures due to duplicate build hashes should be ignored. The build token only allows the creation of data on the server and not the editing or destruction of data on the LHCI server. When the CLI attempts to upload a Lighthouse report for a hash that already exists, the server will reject it.
Use this option when you don't run Lighthouse CI as the last step of your CI process or reruns are common.
The GitHub token to use when setting a status check on a GitHub PR. Use this when the project is hosted on GitHub and not using the official GitHub App.
The GitHub API host to use when attempting to set a status check. Use this when the project is hosted on a private GitHub enterprise server and not using the public GitHub API.
The GitHub App token returned when installing the GitHub App. Use this to set status checks on GitHub PRs when using the official GitHub App.
The suffix to use when setting the status check on a GitHub PR.
For example, by default lhci
is used as the root of the status check label, but this can be configured to lhci-app
by setting githubStatusContextSuffix
to -app
.
target=lhci only
A map of additional headers to add the requests made to the LHCI server. Useful for adding bespoke auth tokens.
target=lhci only
An object containing a username and password pair for authenicating with a Basic auth protected LHCI server. Use this setting when you've protected your LHCI server with Basic auth.
Example:
{
"ci": {
"upload": {
"basicAuth": {
"username": "myAdminUser",
"password": "LighthouseRocks!"
}
}
}
}
target=lhci only
The base URL of the LHCI server to upload to. Required when using target=lhci
.
target=temporary-public-storage only
Boolean that controls whether to update the latest build in temporary public storage associated with this repo. If you use master
as your default branch, DO NOT use this option. If you don't use master
as your default branch, set this option when you upload results from your actual default branch.
target=lhci only
A list of replacement patterns that will mask differences in tested URLs that you wish to hide for display or treat as the same. The urlReplacementPatterns
are used to identify the same URLs for diff comparisons and as preprocessing for GitHub status check labels.
For example, by default Lighthouse CI will automatically replace the port of tested URLs. A localhost static server port may change on each additional invocation, but with urlReplacementPatterns
the port number is replaced with PORT
so all builds
Format: s{DELIMITER}{SEARCH_REGEX}{DELIMITER}{REPLACEMENT}{DELIMITER}{SEARCH_REGEX_FLAGS}
Notes:
- There is no escape support for the delimiter, so you must choose a delimiter character that does not appear in your search regex or your replacement.
- Beware of double-escaping requirements. If you're passing a string in JS or an argument through a shell, you may need to use
\\
in order for a\
to be seen by Lighthouse CI. - If you set
urlReplacementPatterns
yourself, you will lose the defaults provided by Lighthouse CI. If you need the functionality provided by the defaults, be sure to copy them into your configuration as well.
Examples:
s/Foo/Bar/g
- Replace all occurrences ofFoo
withBar
, case-sensitive.s/v\d+/VERSION/i
- Replace the first sequence of a v followed by digits withVERSION
, case-insensitive.s#(//.*?)/.*$#$1/replaceThePath#
- Replace the entire URL following the origin with/replaceThePath
using#
as the delimiter character and a group reference.
target=filesystem only
The directory relative to the current working directory in which to output a manifest.json
along with the Lighthouse reports collected. Any existing manifest.json
in that directory will be overwritten.
Sample file structure for --outputDir=./lhci
on https://www.example.com/page
|- (cwd)
|- lhci
|- manifest.json
|- www_example_com-_page-2020_05_22_21_15_05.report.json
|- www_example_com-_page-2020_05_22_21_15_05.report.html
The manifest.json
has the following structure.
[
{
"url": "https://www.example.com/page",
"isRepresentativeRun": true, // whether it's the median run
"htmlPath": "/path/to/cwd/lhci/www_example_com-_page-2020_05_22_21_15_05.report.html",
"jsonPath": "/path/to/cwd/lhci/www_example_com-_page-2020_05_22_21_15_05.report.json",
"summary": {"performance": 0.95, "seo": 0.9, "best-practices": 1}
}
]
target=filesystem only
The pattern to use for report filenames when writing the reports to the filesystem. Basic string interpolation is supported replacing %%HOSTNAME%%
with the URL's hostname, %%PATHNAME%%
with the page path, %%DATETIME%%
with the ISO string of the UTC report generated timestamp, %%DATE%%
with the ISO-style string of the UTC report generated date, %%EXTENSION%%
with the extension of the file.
In the case of filename collisions between runs, the last written report wins and all others will be overwritten. Median reports are written to disk last.
When uploading to the Lighthouse CI server, the CLI will attempt to automatically infer the build context such as git hash, author, message, ancestor, etc. In most cases, there's nothing you need to change about this, but if you're running without a git repo, in a Jenkins environment, a CI provider we haven't documented yet, or are just running into errors, you can control the build context yourself.
The following environment variables override the inferred build context settings.
Name | Example Format |
---|---|
LHCI_BUILD_CONTEXT__GIT_REMOTE |
[email protected]:GoogleChrome/lighthouse-ci.git |
LHCI_BUILD_CONTEXT__GITHUB_REPO_SLUG |
GoogleChrome/lighthouse-ci |
LHCI_BUILD_CONTEXT__CURRENT_HASH |
e7f1b0fa3aebb6ef95e44c0d0b820433ffdd2e63 |
LHCI_BUILD_CONTEXT__ANCESTOR_HASH |
78bafdcaf40e204c0d0b81b90bb76b9aa5834e11 |
LHCI_BUILD_CONTEXT__COMMIT_TIME |
2019-11-29T16:43:39-05:00 |
LHCI_BUILD_CONTEXT__CURRENT_BRANCH |
dev_branch_1234 |
LHCI_BUILD_CONTEXT__COMMIT_MESSAGE |
Daily run of Lighthouse |
LHCI_BUILD_CONTEXT__AUTHOR |
Patrick Hulce <[email protected]> |
LHCI_BUILD_CONTEXT__AVATAR_URL |
https://example.com/patrickhulce.jpg |
LHCI_BUILD_CONTEXT__EXTERNAL_BUILD_URL |
https://my-jenkins.example.com/jobs/123 |
lhci upload --config=./lighthouserc.json
lhci upload --target=temporary-public-storage
lhci upload --serverBaseUrl=http://lhci.my-custom-domain.com/
lhci upload --extraHeaders.Authorization='Bearer X92sEo3n1J1F0k1E9'
lhci upload --basicAuth.username="customuser" --basicAuth.password="LighthouseRocks"
lhci upload --githubToken="$MY_ENTERPRISE_GITHUB_TOKEN" --githubApiHost="https://custom-github-server.example.com/api/v3"
Asserts the conditions in the Lighthouse CI config and exits with the appropriate status code if there were any failures.
Options:
--preset The assertions preset to extend
[choices: "lighthouse:all", "lighthouse:recommended", "lighthouse:no-pwa"]
--assertions The assertions to use.
--budgetsFile The path (relative to cwd) to a budgets.json file.
--includePassedAssertions Whether to include the results of passed assertions in the output.
[boolean]
The result of any audit in Lighthouse can be asserted. Assertions are keyed by the Lighthouse audit ID and follow an eslint-style format of level | [level, options]
. For a reference of the audit IDs in each category, you can take a look at the default Lighthouse config. When no options are set, the default options of {"aggregationMethod": "optimistic", "minScore": 1}
are used.
{
"ci": {
"assert": {
"assertions": {
"first-contentful-paint": "off",
"works-offline": ["warn", {"minScore": 1}],
"uses-responsive-images": ["error", {"maxLength": 0}]
}
}
}
}
The score of any category in Lighthouse can also be asserted. Assertions are keyed by categories:<categoryId>
and follow the same eslint-style format as audit assertions. Note that this just affects the category score and will not affect any assertions on individual audits within the category.
{
"ci": {
"assert": {
"assertions": {
"categories:performance": ["warn", {"minScore": 0.9}],
"categories:accessibility": ["error", {"minScore": 1}]
}
}
}
}
There are three Lighthouse CI assertion levels.
off
- The audit result will not be checked. If an audit is not found in theassertions
object, it is assumed to beoff
.warn
- The audit result will be checked, and the result will be printed to stderr, but failure will not result in a non-zero exit code.error
- The audit result will be checked, the result will be printed to stderr, and failure will result in a non-zero exit code.
The score
, details.items.length
, and numericValue
properties of audit results can all be checked against configurable thresholds. Use minScore
, maxLength
, and maxNumericValue
properties, respectively, in the options object to control the assertion.
{
"ci": {
"assert": {
"assertions": {
"audit-id-1": ["warn", {"maxNumericValue": 4000}],
"audit-id-2": ["error", {"minScore": 0.8}],
"audit-id-3": ["warn", {"maxLength": 0}]
}
}
}
}
When checking the results of multiple Lighthouse runs, there are multiple strategies for aggregating the results before asserting the threshold.
median
- Use the median value from all runs.optimistic
- Use the value that is most likely to pass from all runs.pessimistic
- Use the value that is least likely to pass from all runs.median-run
Use the value of the run that was determined to be "most representative" of all runs based on key performance metrics. Note that this differs frommedian
because the audit you're asserting might not be the performance metric that was used to select themedian-run
.
Your custom user timings using performance.mark
and performance.measure
can be asserted against as well.
The general format for asserting against a user timing value is "user-timings:<kebab-cased-name>": ["<level>", {maxNumericValue: <value in milliseconds>}]
. For example, if you wanted to assert that a mark with name My Custom Mark
started within the first 2s of page load and that a measure my:custom-@-Measure
lasted fewer than 50 ms you would use the following assertions config.
Note that only the first matching entry with the name will be used from each run and the rest will be ignored.
{
"ci": {
"assert": {
"assertions": {
"user-timings:my-custom-mark": ["warn", {"maxNumericValue": 2000}],
"user-timings:my-custom-measure": ["error", {"maxNumericValue": 50}]
}
}
}
}
assertMatrix
can be used to assert against multiple URLs at the same time. When checking the results of runs against multiple URLs, different assertions can be made for different URL patterns.
The below example warns when FCP is above 2 seconds on all pages and warns when TTI is above 5 seconds on all secure pages whose path starts with /app
. Assertion matrix configurations can be used to differentiate production from development, landing pages from single-page apps, and more.
{
"ci": {
"assert": {
"assertMatrix": [
{
"matchingUrlPattern": ".*",
"assertions": {
"first-contentful-paint": ["warn", {"maxNumericValue": 2000}]
}
},
{
"matchingUrlPattern": "https://[^/]+/app",
"assertions": {
"interactive": ["warn", {"maxNumericValue": 5000}]
}
}
]
}
}
}
There are three presets available to provide a good starting point. Presets can be extended with manual assertions.
lighthouse:all
- Asserts that every audit received a perfect score. This is extremely difficult to do. Only use as a base on very high quality, greenfield projects and lower the tresholds as needed.lighthouse:recommended
- Asserts that every audit outside performance received a perfect score, that no resources were flagged for performance opportunities, and warns when metric values drop below a score of90
. This is a more realistic base that disables hard failures for flaky audits.lighthouse:no-pwa
-lighthouse:recommended
but without any of the PWA audits enabled.
The below example uses the lighthouse:no-pwa
preset but disables a few audits we're not quite ready to pass yet and increases the limit on an audit with a numericValue
.
{
"ci": {
"assert": {
"preset": "lighthouse:no-pwa",
"assertions": {
"dom-size": ["error", {"maxNumericValue": 3000}],
"offscreen-images": "off",
"color-contrast": "off",
"tap-targets": "off"
}
}
}
}
Instead of configuring using Lighthouse CI assertions against Lighthouse audits, a budget.json file can be used instead. This option cannot be used in conjunction with any other assert option.
{
"ci": {
"assert": {
"budgetsFile": "path/from/cwd/to/budget.json"
}
}
}
If you'd like to consolidate multiple assertion configuration files and avoid multiple calls to lhci assert
, you can also configure your budgets alongside your other Lighthouse CI assertions instead. Budget assertions follow the form resource-summary:<resourceType>:(size|count)
.
Note: when using the Lighthouse CI style assertions the maxNumericValue
unit for file size is in bytes while the budget.json unit for file size is in kilobytes.
{
"ci": {
"assert": {
"assertions": {
"first-contentful-paint": ["warn", {"maxNumericValue": 4000}],
"viewport": "error",
"resource-summary:document:size": ["error", {"maxNumericValue": 14000}],
"resource-summary:font:count": ["warn", {"maxNumericValue": 1}],
"resource-summary:third-party:count": ["warn", {"maxNumericValue": 5}]
}
}
}
}
Boolean that controls whether passed assertions should be included in the output. Only assertions that didn't pass are shown normally.
lhci assert --config=./lighthouserc.json
lhci assert --budgetsFile=./budgets.json
lhci assert --preset=lighthouse:recommended --assertions.speed-index=off
lhci assert --preset=lighthouse:recommended --includePassedAssertions
Open a local lighthouse report that has been created using collect
. There is no configuration for this command.
lhci open
Runs an interactive step-by-step wizard to accomplish various Lighthouse CI tasks. Resetting tokens will require a server configuration file and running on a device that has direct write access to the server's database.
lhci wizard
? Which wizard do you want to run? (Use arrow keys)
❯ new-project
reset-build-token
reset-admin-token
Starts the LHCI server. This command is unique in that it is likely run on infrastructure rather than in your build process. Learn more about the LHCI server and how to setup your personal LHCI server accessible over the internet.
Run Lighthouse CI server
Options:
--logLevel [string] [choices: "silent", "verbose"] [default: "verbose"]
--port, -p [number] [default: 9001]
--storage.storageMethod [string] [choices: "sql"] [default: "sql"]
--storage.sqlDialect [string] [choices: "sqlite", "postgres", "mysql"] [default: "sqlite"]
--storage.sqlDatabasePath The path to a SQLite database on disk.
--storage.sqlConnectionUrl The connection url to a postgres or mysql database.
--storage.sqlConnectionSsl Whether the SQL connection should force use of SSL [boolean] [default: false]
--storage.sqlDangerouslyResetDatabase Whether to force the database to the required schema. WARNING: THIS WILL
DELETE ALL DATA [boolean] [default: false]
--basicAuth.username The username to protect the server with HTTP Basic Authentication. [string]
--basicAuth.password The password to protect the server with HTTP Basic Authentication. [string]
The port for the server to listen on. A value of 0
will use a random available port.
Options that control how the historical Lighthouse data is stored. Currently only SQL-based storage mechanisms are supported.
One of mysql
, postgres
, or sqlite
. sqlite
in a local file on disk has been sufficient for most use cases.
sqlDialect=sqlite only
The path to the sqlite database on the local filesystem relative to the current working directory.
sqlDialect=mysql or sqlDialect=postgres only
The database connection URL string for the MySQL or PostgreSQL database of the form <dialect>://<user>:<password>@<host>/<database>
.
WARNING: this option will delete all data in the database
Boolean flag useful during setup if things have gone wrong. This flag will reset the schema of all LHCI tables to factory fresh, deleting all data in the process.
Additional raw options object to pass to sequelize. Refer to the sequelize documentation for more information on available settings.
The configuration to automatically collect results using the PageSpeed Insights API.
The API key to use with the PSI API. You can obtain a PSI API Key by following the official documentation.
The array of sites to collect results for. This configuration will only be possible once the server has been setup and project have been created.
The array of URLs on which to run Lighthouse. These URLs must be publicly accessible to anyone on the internet in order for PSI to be able to run.
The cron-style schedule on which to collect results.
Examples
Every 10 minutes, 24/7 - */10 * * * *
Daily at midnight - 0 0 * * *
Monday-Friday at 11:30 AM - 30 11 * * 1-5
The unique slug identifer of the project in which results should be saved. The easiest way to tell the project slug is to open the project on the server and look at the URL bar. The project slug for the URL below is debugger-protocol-viewer
.
You can also list projects from the API to find the projectSlug
.
curl http://localhost:9001/v1/projects | jq '.[] |.name,.slug'
Optional The number of reports to collect for each URL on each iteration of the schedule. Defaults to 5.
Optional The human friendly label for this set of URLs to use when logging status to stdout/stderr. Not used for anything other than logging.
Optional The "branch" on which to report the results. Defaults to the base branch of the project referenced by projectSlug
.
Protects the server from casual snooping by using single-user HTTP Basic auth. When enabled, all requests to the server UI and API will require HTTP Basic authentication with the specified credentials.
Read more about protecting the server in the server security documentation.
Many server examples require more advanced configuration than the CLI flags allow. See the common examples section for more complete usage examples using a config file.
lhci server --storage.sqlDatabasePath=./lhci.db
lhci server --storage.sqlDialect=postgres --storage.sqlConnectionUrl="postgres://user@localhost/lighthouse_ci_db"
lhci server --storage.sqlDatabasePath=./lhci.db --basicAuth.username="customuser" --basicAuth.password="LighthouseRocks"
Recommended for those new to Lighthouse.
If you're just beginning to measure your project with Lighthouse, start slowly and manually monitor your scores first by only configuring upload
. Once you're comfortable, consider moving up to Intermediate.
Combine this with GitHub App to get convenient links to your reports.
{
"ci": {
"upload": {
"target": "temporary-public-storage"
}
}
}
Recommended for those familiar with Lighthouse, but new to performance measurement in CI.
If you're used to running Lighthouse on your project but still have some work to do, assert the recommended preset but disable the audits you're currently failing. Consider setting up the Lighthouse CI server to track your scores over time.
{
"ci": {
"assert": {
"preset": "lighthouse:recommended",
"assertions": {
"offscreen-images": "off",
"uses-webp-images": "off",
"color-contrast": "off"
// ...
}
},
"upload": {
"target": "temporary-public-storage"
}
}
}
Recommended for seasoned Lighthouse users who are used to measuring performance in CI.
If you're a Lighthouse pro, assert the recommended preset, increase the number of runs, and set budgets for your performance metrics. Set up the Lighthouse CI server to track your scores over time and receive build diffs when your metrics regress.
{
"ci": {
"collect": {
"numberOfRuns": 5
},
"assert": {
"preset": "lighthouse:recommended",
"assertions": {
"first-contentful-paint": [
"error",
{"maxNumericValue": 2000, "aggregationMethod": "optimistic"}
],
"interactive": ["error", {"maxNumericValue": 5000, "aggregationMethod": "optimistic"}]
// ...
}
},
"upload": {
"target": "lhci",
"serverBaseUrl": "https://lhci.example.com"
}
}
}
{
"ci": {
"collect": {
"staticDistDir": "./_site"
}
}
}
{
"ci": {
"collect": {
"settings": {
"configPath": "./path/to/lighthouse/config.js",
"plugins": ["lighthouse-plugin-field-performance"],
"disableStorageReset": true
}
}
}
}
{
"ci": {
"collect": {
"settings": {
"chromeFlags": "--disable-gpu --no-sandbox"
}
}
}
}
{
"ci": {
"collect": {
"settings": {
"extraHeaders": "{\"Cookie\": \"token=1234\"}"
}
}
}
}
module.exports = {
ci: {
collect: {
settings: {
extraHeaders: JSON.stringify({Cookie: 'token=1234'}),
},
},
},
};
{
"ci": {
"collect": {
"startServerCommand": "rails server -e production",
"url": [
"http://localhost:3000/",
"http://localhost:3000/pricing",
"http://localhost:3000/support"
]
}
}
}
{
"ci": {
"collect": {
"settings": {
// This setting makes the budgets section appear in the Lighthouse report itself
"budgetPath": "./path/to/budgets.json"
}
},
"assert": {
"assertions": {
// This setting asserts that the budgets audit passed in Lighthouse CI
"performance-budget": "error"
}
}
}
}
{
"ci": {
"upload": {
"basicAuth": {
"username": "myusername",
"password": "LighthouseRocks"
}
}
}
}
{
"ci": {
"server": {
"basicAuth": {
"username": "myusername",
"password": "LighthouseRocks"
},
"storage": {
// ...
}
}
}
}
{
"ci": {
"server": {
"storage": {
"sqlDialect": "mysql",
"sqlDialectOptions": {
"socketPath": "/var/lib/mysql/mysql.sock"
},
"sequelizeOptions": {
"database": "reports",
"username": "admin",
"password": "password"
}
}
}
}
}
const fs = require('fs');
module.exports = {
ci: {
server: {
storage: {
storageMethod: 'sql',
sqlDialect: 'postgres',
sqlConnectionSsl: true,
sqlConnectionUrl: process.env.DATABASE_URL,
sqlDialectOptions: {
ssl: {
ca: fs.readFileSync('./certs/ca.crt', 'utf8'),
key: fs.readFileSync('./certs/client.foo.key', 'utf8'),
cert: fs.readFileSync('./certs/client.foo.crt', 'utf8'),
},
},
},
},
},
};
See the sequelize docs for more information on available settings.
module.exports = {
ci: {
server: {
storage: {
storageMethod: 'sql',
sqlDialect: 'postgres',
sqlConnectionSsl: true,
sqlConnectionUrl: process.env.DATABASE_URL,
sequelizeOptions: {
pool: {
acquire: 30000,
},
},
},
},
},
};
module.exports = {
ci: {
server: {
psiCollectCron: {
psiApiKey: process.env.PSI_API_KEY,
sites: [
{
label: 'Production',
projectSlug: 'the-project',
schedule: '0 * * * *', // at the top of the hour, every hour
numberOfRuns: 5,
urls: ['http://example.com', 'http://example.com/pricing'],
},
{
label: 'Development',
branch: 'dev',
projectSlug: 'the-project',
schedule: '*/10 * * * *', // every 10 minutes
numberOfRuns: 3,
urls: ['http://staging.example.com', 'http://staging.example.com/pricing'],
},
],
},
storage: {
storageMethod: 'sql',
sqlDialect: 'postgres',
sqlConnectionSsl: true,
sqlConnectionUrl: process.env.DATABASE_URL,
sequelizeOptions: {
pool: {
acquire: 30000,
},
},
},
},
},
};
If you're running the lhci server
behind a reverse proxy or any other component that requires some extra headers you can configure them in the wizard section extraHeaders
.
{
"ci": {
"wizard": {
"extraHeaders": "{\"Authorization\": \"Basic content\"}"
}
}
}
NOTE: The
wizard
options will be overwritten by theupload
options, to be sure that the wizard options will be used, create a separate config file.
If you're running the lhci wizard
multiple times, you can configure a default serverBaseUrl
to avoid typing it in at each lhci wizard
run.
{
"ci": {
"wizard": {
"serverBaseUrl": "https://localhost:3000/"
}
}
}
NOTE: The
wizard
options will be overwritten by theupload
options, to be sure that the wizard options will be used, create a separate config file.
ci:
collect:
numberOfRuns: 5
startServerCommand: rails server -e production
url:
- http://localhost:3000/
- http://localhost:3000/pricing
- http://localhost:3000/support
assert:
preset: lighthouse:recommended
assertions:
offscreen-images: 'off'
uses-webp-images: 'off'
color-contrast: 'off'
first-contentful-paint:
- error
- maxNumericValue: 2000
aggregationMethod: optimistic
interactive:
- error
- maxNumericValue: 5000
aggregationMethod: optimistic
upload:
target: lhci
serverBaseUrl: https://lhci.example.com