Resource Timing

W3C Candidate Recommendation Snapshot

More details about this document
This version:
https://www.w3.org/TR/2022/CR-resource-timing-20221004/
Latest published version:
https://www.w3.org/TR/resource-timing/
Latest editor's draft:
https://w3c.github.io/resource-timing/
History:
https://www.w3.org/standards/history/resource-timing
Implementation report:
https://w3c.github.io/test-results/resource-timing/all.html
Editors:
Yoav Weiss (Google)
(Google)
Former editors:
Ilya Grigorik (Google) (Until January 2021)
(Microsoft Corp.) (Until January 2021)
(Google Inc.) (Until December 2014)
(Microsoft Corp.) (Until February 2014)
Zhiheng Wang (Google Inc.) (Until July 2012)
Anderson Quach (Microsoft Corp.) (Until March 2011)
Feedback:
GitHub w3c/resource-timing (pull requests, new issue, open issues)
[email protected] with subject line [ResourceTiming] (archives)
Browser support:
caniuse.com

Abstract

This specification defines an interface for web applications to access the complete timing information for resources in a document.

Status of This Document

This section describes the status of this document at the time of its publication. A list of current W3C publications and the latest revision of this technical report can be found in the W3C technical reports index at https://www.w3.org/TR/.

This document was published by the Web Performance Working Group as a Candidate Recommendation Snapshot using the Recommendation track.

Publication as a Candidate Recommendation does not imply endorsement by W3C and its Members. A Candidate Recommendation Snapshot has received wide review, is intended to gather implementation experience, and has commitments from Working Group members to royalty-free licensing for implementations.

This Candidate Recommendation is not expected to advance to Proposed Recommendation any earlier than 15 November 2022.

This document was produced by a group operating under the W3C Patent Policy. W3C maintains a public list of any patent disclosures made in connection with the deliverables of the group; that page also includes instructions for disclosing a patent. An individual who has actual knowledge of a patent which the individual believes contains Essential Claim(s) must disclose the information in accordance with section 6 of the W3C Patent Policy.

This document is governed by the 2 November 2021 W3C Process Document.

1. Introduction

This section is non-normative.

User latency is an important quality benchmark for Web Applications. While JavaScript-based mechanisms can provide comprehensive instrumentation for user latency measurements within an application, in many cases, they are unable to provide a complete end-to-end latency picture. This document introduces the PerformanceResourceTiming interface to allow JavaScript mechanisms to collect complete timing information related to resources on a document. Navigation Timing 2 [NAVIGATION-TIMING-2] extends this specification to provide additional timing information associated with a navigation.

For example, the following JavaScript shows a simple attempt to measure the time it takes to fetch a resource:

<!doctype html>
<html>
  <head>
  </head>
  <body onload="loadResources()">
    <script>
        function loadResources()
        {
          var start = new Date().getTime();
          var image1 = new Image();
          var resourceTiming = function() {
              var now = new Date().getTime();
              var latency = now - start;
              alert("End to end resource fetch: " + latency);
          };

          image1.onload = resourceTiming;
          image1.src = 'https://www.w3.org/Icons/w3c_main.png';
        }
    </script>
    <img src="https://www.w3.org/Icons/w3c_home.png">
  </body>
</html>

Though this script can measure the time it takes to fetch a resource, it cannot break down the time spent in various phases. Further, the script cannot easily measure the time it takes to fetch resources described in markup.

To address the need for complete information on user experience, this document introduces the PerformanceResourceTiming interface. This interface allows JavaScript mechanisms to provide complete client-side latency measurements within applications. With this interface, the previous example can be modified to measure a user's perceived load time of a resource.

The following script calculates the amount of time it takes to fetch every resource in the page, even those defined in markup. This example assumes that this page is hosted on https://www.w3.org. One could further measure the amount of time it takes in every phase of fetching a resource with the PerformanceResourceTiming interface.

<!doctype html>
<html>
  <head>
  </head>
  <body onload="loadResources()">
    <script>
      function loadResources()
      {
          var image1 = new Image();
          image1.onload = resourceTiming;
          image1.src = 'https://www.w3.org/Icons/w3c_main.png';
      }

      function resourceTiming()
      {
          var resourceList = window.performance.getEntriesByType("resource");
          for (i = 0; i < resourceList.length; i++)
          {
              if (resourceList[i].initiatorType == "img")
              {
                alert("End to end resource fetch: " + (resourceList[i].responseEnd - resourceList[i].startTime));
              }
          }
      }
    </script>
    <img id="image0" src="https://www.w3.org/Icons/w3c_home.png">
  </body>
</html>

2. Conformance

As well as sections marked as non-normative, all authoring guidelines, diagrams, examples, and notes in this specification are non-normative. Everything else in this specification is normative.

The key words MAY, MUST, and SHOULD in this document are to be interpreted as described in BCP 14 [RFC2119] [RFC8174] when, and only when, they appear in all capitals, as shown here.

Requirements phrased in the imperative as part of algorithms (such as "strip any leading space characters" or "return false and abort these steps") are to be interpreted with the meaning of the key word ("MUST", "SHOULD", "MAY", etc) used in introducing the algorithm.

Some conformance requirements are phrased as requirements on attributes, methods or objects. Such requirements are to be interpreted as requirements on user agents.

Conformance requirements phrased as algorithms or specific steps may be implemented in any manner, so long as the end result is equivalent. (In particular, the algorithms defined in this specification are intended to be easy to follow, and not intended to be performant.)

3. Terminology

The construction "a Foo object", where Foo is actually an interface, is sometimes used instead of the more accurate "an object implementing the interface Foo.

Throughout this work, all time values are measured in milliseconds since the start of navigation of the document [HR-TIME-2]. For example, the start of navigation of the document occurs at time 0.

Note

This definition of time is based on the High Resolution Time specification [HR-TIME-2] and is different from the definition of time used in the Navigation Timing specification [NAVIGATION-TIMING-2], where time is measured in milliseconds since midnight of January 1, 1970 (UTC).

4. Resource Timing

4.1 Introduction

This section is non-normative.

The PerformanceResourceTiming interface facilitates timing measurement of fetched http(s) resources. For example, this interface is available for XMLHttpRequest objects [XHR], HTML elements [HTML] such as iframe, img, script, object, embed and link with the link type of stylesheet, SVG elements [SVG11] such as svg, and EventSource.

4.2 Resources Included in the PerformanceResourceTiming Interface

This section is non-normative.

Resource Requests fetched by a non-null client are included as PerformanceResourceTiming objects in the client's global object's Performance Timeline, unless excluded from the timeline as part of the fetching process. Resources that are retrieved from HTTP cache are included as PerformanceResourceTiming objects in the Performance Timeline. Resources for which the fetch was initiated, but was later aborted (e.g. due to a network error) are included as PerformanceResourceTiming objects in the Performance Timeline, with their start and end timing.

Examples:

4.3 The PerformanceResourceTiming Interface

WebIDL[Exposed=(Window,Worker)]
interface PerformanceResourceTiming : PerformanceEntry {
    readonly attribute DOMString initiatorType;
    readonly attribute ByteString nextHopProtocol;
    readonly attribute DOMHighResTimeStamp workerStart;
    readonly attribute DOMHighResTimeStamp redirectStart;
    readonly attribute DOMHighResTimeStamp redirectEnd;
    readonly attribute DOMHighResTimeStamp fetchStart;
    readonly attribute DOMHighResTimeStamp domainLookupStart;
    readonly attribute DOMHighResTimeStamp domainLookupEnd;
    readonly attribute DOMHighResTimeStamp connectStart;
    readonly attribute DOMHighResTimeStamp connectEnd;
    readonly attribute DOMHighResTimeStamp secureConnectionStart;
    readonly attribute DOMHighResTimeStamp requestStart;
    readonly attribute DOMHighResTimeStamp responseStart;
    readonly attribute DOMHighResTimeStamp responseEnd;
    readonly attribute unsigned long long  transferSize;
    readonly attribute unsigned long long  encodedBodySize;
    readonly attribute unsigned long long  decodedBodySize;
    readonly attribute RenderBlockingStatusType renderBlockingStatus;
    [Default] object toJSON();
};

A PerformanceResourceTiming has an associated DOMString initiator type.

A PerformanceResourceTiming has an associated DOMString requested URL.

A PerformanceResourceTiming has an associated DOMString cache mode (the empty string, "local", or "validated").

A PerformanceResourceTiming has an associated fetch timing info timing info.

A PerformanceResourceTiming has an associated response body info resource info.

A PerformanceResourceTiming has an associated RenderBlockingStatusType render-blocking status.

The PerformanceResourceTiming interface participates in the Performance Timeline and extends the following attributes of the PerformanceEntry interface:

name
The name getter steps are to return this's requested URL.
entryType
The entryType getter steps are to return the DOMString "resource".
startTime

The startTime getter steps are to convert fetch timestamp for this's timing info's start time and this's relevant global object.

Note

startTime is measured right at the start of the fetch, before any redirects. See fetching.

duration

The duration getter steps are to return this's timing info's end time minus this's timing info's start time.

When toJSON is called, run [WEBIDL]'s default toJSON operation.

initiatorType getter steps are to return the initiator type for this.

Note

initiatorType returns one of the following values:

  • "navigation", if the request is a navigation request;
  • "css", if the request is a result of processing a CSS url() directive such as @import url() or background: url(); [CSS-VALUES]
  • "script", if the request is a result of loading any script (a classic script, a module script, or a Worker).
  • "xmlhttprequest", if the request is a result of processing an XMLHttpRequest;
  • "fetch", if the request is the result of processing the fetch() method;
  • "beacon", if the request is the result of processing the sendBeacon() method; [BEACON]
  • "video", if the request is the result of processing the video element's poster or src.
  • "audio", if the request is the result of processing the audio element's src.
  • "track", if the request is the result of processing the track element's src.
  • "img", if the request is the result of processing the img element's src or srcset.
  • "image", if the request is the result of processing the image element. [SVG2]
  • "input", if the request is the result of processing an input element of type image.
  • "a", if the request is the result of processing an a element's download or ping.
  • "iframe", if the request is the result of processing an iframe's src.
  • "frame", if the request is the result of loading a frame.
  • "other", if none of the above conditions match.
Note

The setting of initiatorType is done at the different places where a resource timing entry is reported, such as the fetch standard.

The workerStart getter steps are to convert fetch timestamp for this's timing info's final service worker start time and the relevant global object for this. See HTTP fetch for more info.

The redirectStart getter steps are to convert fetch timestamp for this's timing info's redirect start time and the relevant global object for this. See HTTP-redirect fetch for more info.

The redirectEnd getter steps are to convert fetch timestamp for this's timing info's redirect end time and the relevant global object for this. See HTTP-redirect fetch for more info.

The fetchStart getter steps are to convert fetch timestamp for this's timing info's post-redirect start time and the relevant global object for this. See HTTP fetch for more info.

The domainLookupStart getter steps are to convert fetch timestamp for this's timing info's final connection timing info's domain lookup start time and the relevant global object for this. See Recording connection timing info for more info.

The domainLookupEnd getter steps are to convert fetch timestamp for this's timing info's final connection timing info's domain lookup end time and the relevant global object for this. See Recording connection timing info for more info.

The connectStart getter steps are to convert fetch timestamp for this's timing info's final connection timing info's connection start time and the relevant global object for this. See Recording connection timing info for more info.

The connectEnd getter steps are to convert fetch timestamp for this's timing info's final connection timing info's connection end time and the relevant global object for this. See Recording connection timing info for more info.

The secureConnectionStart getter steps are to convert fetch timestamp for this's timing info's final connection timing info's secure connection start time and the relevant global object for this. See Recording connection timing info for more info.

The nextHopProtocol getter steps are to isomorphic decode this's timing info's final connection timing info's ALPN negotiated protocol. See Recording connection timing info for more info.

Note

Issue 221 suggests to remove support for nextHopProtocol, as it can reveal details about the user's network configuration.

The requestStart getter steps are to convert fetch timestamp for this's timing info's final network-request start time and the relevant global object for this. See HTTP fetch for more info.

The responseStart getter steps are to convert fetch timestamp for this's timing info's final network-response start time and the relevant global object for this. See HTTP fetch for more info.

The responseEnd getter steps are to convert fetch timestamp for this's timing info's end time and the relevant global object for this. See fetch for more info.

The encodedBodySize getter steps are to return this's resource info's encoded size.

The decodedBodySize getter steps are to return this's resource info's decoded size.

The transferSize getter steps are to perform the following steps:

  1. If this's cache mode is "local", then return 0.

  2. If this's cache mode is "validated", then return 300.

  3. Return this's response body info's encoded size plus 300.

    Note

    The constant number added to transferSize replaces exposing the total byte size of the HTTP headers, as that may expose the presence of certain cookies. See this issue.

The renderBlockingStatus getter steps are to return blocking if this's timing info's render-blocking is true; otherwise non-blocking.

Note

A user agent implementing PerformanceResourceTiming would need to include "resource" in supportedEntryTypes. This allows developers to detect support for Resource Timing.

4.3.1 RenderBlockingStatusType enum

WebIDLenum RenderBlockingStatusType {
    "blocking",
    "non-blocking"
};

The values are defined as follows:

blocking
The resource can potentially block rendering.
non-blocking
The resource will not block rendering.

4.4 Extensions to the Performance Interface

The user agent MAY choose to limit how many resources are included as PerformanceResourceTiming objects in the Performance Timeline [PERFORMANCE-TIMELINE]. This section extends the Performance interface to allow controls over the number of PerformanceResourceTiming objects stored.

The recommended minimum number of PerformanceResourceTiming objects is 250, though this may be changed by the user agent. setResourceTimingBufferSize can be called to request a change to this limit.

Each ECMAScript global environment has:

WebIDLpartial interface Performance {
          undefined clearResourceTimings ();
          undefined setResourceTimingBufferSize (unsigned long maxSize);
          attribute EventHandler onresourcetimingbufferfull;
        };

The Performance interface is defined in [HR-TIME-2].

The method clearResourceTimings runs the following steps:

  1. Remove all PerformanceResourceTiming objects in the performance entry buffer.
  2. Set resource timing buffer current size to 0.

The setResourceTimingBufferSize method runs the following steps:

  1. Set resource timing buffer size limit to the maxSize parameter. If the maxSize parameter is less than resource timing buffer current size, no PerformanceResourceTiming objects are to be removed from the performance entry buffer.

The attribute onresourcetimingbufferfull is the event handler for the resourcetimingbufferfull event described below.

To check if can add resource timing entry, run the following steps:

  1. If resource timing buffer current size is smaller than resource timing buffer size limit, return true.
  2. Return false.

To add a PerformanceResourceTiming entry into the performance entry buffer, run the following steps:

  1. Let new entry be the input PerformanceEntry to be added.
  2. If can add resource timing entry returns true and resource timing buffer full event pending flag is false, run the following substeps:
    1. Add new entry to the performance entry buffer.
    2. Increase resource timing buffer current size by 1.
    3. Return.
  3. If resource timing buffer full event pending flag is false, run the following substeps:
    1. Set resource timing buffer full event pending flag to true.
    2. Queue a task on the performance timeline task source to run fire a buffer full event.
  4. Add new entry to the resource timing secondary buffer.
  5. Increase resource timing secondary buffer current size by 1.

To copy secondary buffer, run the following steps:

  1. While resource timing secondary buffer is not empty and can add resource timing entry returns true, run the following substeps:
    1. Let entry be the oldest PerformanceResourceTiming in resource timing secondary buffer.
    2. Add entry to the end of performance entry buffer.
    3. Increment resource timing buffer current size by 1.
    4. Remove entry from resource timing secondary buffer.
    5. Decrement resource timing secondary buffer current size by 1.

To fire a buffer full event, run the following steps:

  1. While resource timing secondary buffer is not empty, run the following substeps:
    1. Let number of excess entries before be resource timing secondary buffer current size.
    2. If can add resource timing entry returns false, then fire an event named resourcetimingbufferfull at the Performance object.
    3. Run copy secondary buffer.
    4. Let number of excess entries after be resource timing secondary buffer current size.
    5. If number of excess entries before is lower than or equals number of excess entries after, then remove all entries from resource timing secondary buffer, set resource timing secondary buffer current size to 0, and abort these steps.
  2. Set resource timing buffer full event pending flag to false.
    Note

    This means that if the resourcetimingbufferfull event handler does not add more room in the buffer than it adds resources to it, excess entries will be dropped from the buffer. Developers should make sure that resourcetimingbufferfull event handlers call clearResourceTimings or extend the buffer sufficiently (by calling setResourceTimingBufferSize).

4.5 Cross-origin Resources

Note

As detailed in Fetch, requests for cross-origin resources are included as PerformanceResourceTiming objects in the Performance Timeline. If the timing allow check algorithm fails for a cross-origin resource, the entry will be an opaque entry. Such entries have most of their attributes masked in order to prevent leaking cross-origin data that isn't otherwise exposed. So, for an opaque entry, the following attributes will be set to zero: redirectStart, redirectEnd, workerStart, domainLookupStart, domainLookupEnd, connectStart, connectEnd, requestStart, responseStart, secureConnectionStart, transferSize, encodedBodySize, and decodedBodySize. Further, the nextHopProtocol attribute will be set to the empty string.

Server-side applications may return the Timing-Allow-Origin HTTP response header to allow the User Agent to fully expose, to the document origin(s) specified, the values of attributes that would have been zero due to those cross-origin restrictions.

4.5.1 Timing-Allow-Origin Response Header

The Timing-Allow-Origin HTTP response header field can be used to communicate a policy indicating origin(s) that are allowed to see values of attributes that would have been zero due to the cross-origin restrictions. The header's value is represented by the following ABNF [RFC5234] (using List Extension, [RFC7230]):

Timing-Allow-Origin = 1#( origin-or-null / wildcard )

The sender MAY generate multiple Timing-Allow-Origin header fields. The recipient MAY combine multiple Timing-Allow-Origin header fields by appending each subsequent field value to the combined field value in order, separated by a comma.

The Timing-Allow-Origin headers are processed in FETCH to compute the attributes accordingly.

Note

The Timing-Allow-Origin header may arrive as part of a cached response. In case of cache revalidation, according to RFC 7234, the header's value may come from the revalidation response, or if not present there, from the original cached resource.

Note

Issues 222 and 223 suggest to remove wildcard support from Timing-Allow-Origin in order to restrict its use.

4.5.2 IANA Considerations

This section registers Timing-Allow-Origin as a Provisional Message Header.

Header field name:
Timing-Allow-Origin
Applicable protocol:
http
Status:
provisional
Author/Change controller:
W3C
Specification document:
4.5.1 Timing-Allow-Origin Response Header

4.6 Resource Timing Attributes

This section is non-normative.

The following graph illustrates the timing attributes defined by the PerformanceResourceTiming interface. Attributes in parenthesis may not be available when fetching cross-origin resources. User agents may perform internal processing in between timings, which allow for non-normative intervals between timings.

Figure 1 This figure illustrates the timing attributes defined by the PerformanceResourceTiming interface. Attributes in parenthesis indicate that they may not be available if the resource fails the timing allow check algorithm.
Resource Timing attributes

4.7 Creating a resource timing entry

To mark resource timing given a fetch timing info timingInfo, a DOMString requestedURL, a DOMString initiatorType a global object global, a string cacheMode, and a response body info bodyInfo, perform the following steps:

  1. Create a PerformanceResourceTiming object entry in global's realm.
  2. Setup the resource timing entry for entry, given initiatorType, requestedURL, timingInfo, cacheMode, and bodyInfo.
  3. Queue entry.
  4. Add entry to global's performance entry buffer.

To setup the resource timing entry for PerformanceResourceTiming entry given DOMString initiatorType, DOMString requestedURL, fetch timing info timingInfo, a DOMString cacheMode, and a response body info bodyInfo, perform the following steps:

  1. Assert that cacheMode is the empty string, "local", or "validated".
  2. Set entry's initiator type to initiatorType.
  3. Set entry's requested URL to requestedURL.
  4. Set entry's timing info to timingInfo.
  5. Set entry's response body info to bodyInfo.
  6. Set entry's cache mode to cacheMode.

To convert fetch timestamp given DOMHighResTimeStamp ts and global object global, do the following:

  1. If ts is zero, return zero.
  2. Otherwise, return the relative high resolution coarse time given ts and global.

4.8 Security Considerations

This section is non-normative.

The PerformanceResourceTiming interface exposes timing information for a resource to any web page or worker that has requested that resource. To limit the access to the PerformanceResourceTiming interface, the same origin policy is enforced by default and certain attributes are set to zero, as described in HTTP fetch. Resource providers can explicitly allow all timing information to be collected for a resource by adding the Timing-Allow-Origin HTTP response header, which specifies the domains that are allowed to access the timing information.

4.9 Privacy Considerations

This section is non-normative.

Statistical fingerprinting is a privacy concern where a malicious web site may determine whether a user has visited a third-party web site by measuring the timing of cache hits and misses of resources in the third-party web site. Though the PerformanceResourceTiming interface gives timing information for resources in a document, the load event on resources can already measure timing to determine cache hits and misses in a limited fashion, and the cross-origin restrictions in HTTP Fetch prevent the leakage of any additional information.

4.10 Acknowledgments

Thanks to Anne Van Kesteren, Annie Sullivan, Arvind Jain, Boris Zbarsky, Darin Fisher, Jason Weber, Jonas Sicking, James Simonsen, Karen Anderson, Kyle Scholz, Nic Jansma, Philippe Le Hegaret, Sigbjørn Vik, Steve Souders, Todd Reifsteck, Tony Gentilcore and William Chan for their contributions to this work.

A. References

A.1 Normative references

[dom]
DOM Standard. Anne van Kesteren. WHATWG. Living Standard. URL: https://dom.spec.whatwg.org/
[FETCH]
Fetch Standard. Anne van Kesteren. WHATWG. Living Standard. URL: https://fetch.spec.whatwg.org/
[HR-TIME-2]
High Resolution Time Level 2. Ilya Grigorik. W3C. 21 November 2019. W3C Recommendation. URL: https://www.w3.org/TR/hr-time-2/
[hr-time-3]
High Resolution Time. Yoav Weiss. W3C. 20 September 2022. W3C Working Draft. URL: https://www.w3.org/TR/hr-time-3/
[HTML]
HTML Standard. Anne van Kesteren; Domenic Denicola; Ian Hickson; Philip Jägenstedt; Simon Pieters. WHATWG. Living Standard. URL: https://html.spec.whatwg.org/multipage/
[infra]
Infra Standard. Anne van Kesteren; Domenic Denicola. WHATWG. Living Standard. URL: https://infra.spec.whatwg.org/
[NAVIGATION-TIMING-2]
Navigation Timing Level 2. Yoav Weiss; Noam Rosenthal. W3C. 7 September 2022. W3C Working Draft. URL: https://www.w3.org/TR/navigation-timing-2/
[PERFORMANCE-TIMELINE]
Performance Timeline. Nicolas Pena Moreno. W3C. 2 December 2021. W3C Candidate Recommendation. URL: https://www.w3.org/TR/performance-timeline/
[RFC2119]
Key words for use in RFCs to Indicate Requirement Levels. S. Bradner. IETF. March 1997. Best Current Practice. URL: https://www.rfc-editor.org/rfc/rfc2119
[RFC2397]
The "data" URL scheme. L. Masinter. IETF. August 1998. Proposed Standard. URL: https://www.rfc-editor.org/rfc/rfc2397
[RFC5234]
Augmented BNF for Syntax Specifications: ABNF. D. Crocker, Ed.; P. Overell. IETF. January 2008. Internet Standard. URL: https://www.rfc-editor.org/rfc/rfc5234
[RFC7230]
Hypertext Transfer Protocol (HTTP/1.1): Message Syntax and Routing. R. Fielding, Ed.; J. Reschke, Ed.. IETF. June 2014. Proposed Standard. URL: https://httpwg.org/specs/rfc7230.html
[RFC8174]
Ambiguity of Uppercase vs Lowercase in RFC 2119 Key Words. B. Leiba. IETF. May 2017. Best Current Practice. URL: https://www.rfc-editor.org/rfc/rfc8174
[WEBIDL]
Web IDL Standard. Edgar Chen; Timothy Gu. WHATWG. Living Standard. URL: https://webidl.spec.whatwg.org/

A.2 Informative references

[BEACON]
Beacon. Ilya Grigorik; Alois Reitbauer. W3C. 3 August 2022. W3C Candidate Recommendation. URL: https://www.w3.org/TR/beacon/
[CSS-VALUES]
CSS Values and Units Module Level 3. Tab Atkins Jr.; Elika Etemad. W3C. 6 June 2019. W3C Candidate Recommendation. URL: https://www.w3.org/TR/css-values-3/
[css-values-4]
CSS Values and Units Module Level 4. Tab Atkins Jr.; Elika Etemad. W3C. 16 December 2021. W3C Working Draft. URL: https://www.w3.org/TR/css-values-4/
[SVG11]
Scalable Vector Graphics (SVG) 1.1 (Second Edition). Erik Dahlström; Patrick Dengler; Anthony Grasso; Chris Lilley; Cameron McCormack; Doug Schepers; Jonathan Watt; Jon Ferraiolo; Jun Fujisawa; Dean Jackson et al. W3C. 16 August 2011. W3C Recommendation. URL: https://www.w3.org/TR/SVG11/
[SVG2]
Scalable Vector Graphics (SVG) 2. Amelia Bellamy-Royds; Bogdan Brinza; Chris Lilley; Dirk Schulze; David Storey; Eric Willigers. W3C. 4 October 2018. W3C Candidate Recommendation. URL: https://www.w3.org/TR/SVG2/
[XHR]
XMLHttpRequest Standard. Anne van Kesteren. WHATWG. Living Standard. URL: https://xhr.spec.whatwg.org/