Book Image

Hands-On JavaScript High Performance

By : Justin Scherer
1 (1)
Book Image

Hands-On JavaScript High Performance

1 (1)
By: Justin Scherer

Overview of this book

High-performance web development is all about cutting through the complexities in different layers of a web app and building services and APIs that improve the speed and performance of your apps on the browser. With emerging web technologies, building scalable websites and sustainable web apps is smoother than ever. This book starts by taking you through the web frontend, popular web development practices, and the latest version of ES and JavaScript. You'll work with Node.js and learn how to build web apps without a framework. The book consists of three hands-on examples that help you understand JavaScript applications at both the server-side and the client-side using Node.js and Svelte.js. Each chapter covers modern techniques such as DOM manipulation and V8 engine optimization to strengthen your understanding of the web. Finally, you’ll delve into advanced topics such as CI/CD and how you can harness their capabilities to speed up your web development dramatically. By the end of this web development book, you'll have understood how the JavaScript landscape has evolved, not just for the frontend but also for the backend, and be ready to use new tools and techniques to solve common web problems.
Table of Contents (15 chapters)

Utilizing the network

While building applications that can talk among themselves on the same machine can be cool, eventually, we'll need to talk to external systems. Most of these systems will be browsers in our case, but they may be other servers. Since we can't use named pipes/Unix domain sockets over these channels, we need to use various protocols of a network.

Technically, we could still use the preceding two concepts across servers by utilizing shared drives/filesystem sharing, but this isn't a good idea. We've already shown that we can change the listen method from pointing to a file to pointing to a port. In the worst case, we can use a shared filesystem, but it is nowhere near optimal and it should be converted into utilizing one of the protocols we'll cover here.

The protocols that we will focus on are the two low-level protocols known as Transmission...