Optimizations & Best Practices

neq_assign

When a component receives props from its parent component, the change method is called. This, in addition to allowing you to update the component’s state, also allows you to return a ShouldRender boolean value that indicates if the component should re-render itself in response to the prop changes.

Re-rendering is expensive, and if you can avoid it, you should. As a general rule, you only want to re-render when the props actually changed. The following block of code represents this rule, returning true if the props differed from the previous props:

  1. use yew::ShouldRender;
  2. #[derive(PartialEq)]
  3. struct ExampleProps;
  4. struct Example {
  5. props: ExampleProps,
  6. };
  7. impl Example {
  8. fn change(&mut self, props: ExampleProps) -> ShouldRender {
  9. if self.props != props {
  10. self.props = props;
  11. true
  12. } else {
  13. false
  14. }
  15. }
  16. }

But we can go further! This is six lines of boilerplate can be reduced down to one by using a trait and a blanket implementation for anything that implements PartialEq. Check out the yewtil crate’s NeqAssign trait here.

Using smart pointers effectively

Note: if you’re unsure about some of the terms used in this section, the Rust Book has a useful chapter about smart pointers.

In an effort to avoid cloning large amounts of data to create props when re-rendering, we can use smart pointers to only clone a reference to the data instead of the data itself. If you pass references to the relevant data in your props and child components instead of the actual data you can avoid cloning any data until you need to modify it in the child component, where you can use Rc::make_mut to clone and obtain a mutable reference to the data you want to alter.

This brings further benefits in Component::change when working out whether prop changes require the component to re-render. This is because instead of comparing the value of the data the underlying pointer addresses (i.e. the position in a machine’s memory where the data is stored) can instead be compared; if two pointers point to the same data then the value of the data they point to must be the same. Note that the inverse might not be true! Even if two pointer addresses differ the underlying data might still be the same - in this case you should compare the underlying data.

To do this comparison you’ll need to use Rc::ptr_eq instead of just using PartialEq (which is automatically used when comparing data using the equality operator ==). The Rust documentation has more details about Rc::ptr_eq.

This optimization is most useful for data types that don’t implement Copy. If you can copy your data cheaply, then it isn’t worth putting it behind a smart pointer. For structures that can be data-heavy like Vecs, HashMaps, and Strings using smart pointers is likely to bring performance improvements.

This optimization works best if the values are never updated by the children, and even better, if they are rarely updated by parents. This makes Rc<_>s a good choice for wrapping property values in for pure components.

View functions

For code readability reasons, it often makes sense to migrate sections of html! to their own functions. Not only does this make your code more readable because it reduces the amount of indentation present, it also encourages good design patterns – particularly around building composable applications because these functions can be called in multiple places which reduces the amount of code that has to be written.

Pure Components

Pure components are components that don’t mutate their state, only displaying content and propagating messages up to normal, mutable components. They differ from view functions in that they can be used from within the html! macro using the component syntax (<SomePureComponent />) instead of expression syntax ({some_view_function()}), and that depending on their implementation, they can be memoized (this means that once a function is called its value is “saved” so that if it’s called with the same arguments more than once it doesn’t have to recompute its value and can just return the saved value from the first function call) - preventing re-renders for identical props using the aforementioned neq_assign logic.

Yew doesn’t natively support pure or function components, but they are available via external crates.

Functional components (a.k.a hooks)

Functional components are still in development! There’s a project board detailing their status.

Keyed DOM nodes when they arrive

Reducing compile time using workspaces

Arguably, the largest drawback to using Yew is the long time it takes to compile Yew apps. The time taken to compile a project seems to be related to the quantity of code passed to the html! macro. This tends to not be much of an issue for smaller projects, but for larger applications it makes sense to split code across multiple crates to minimize the amount of work the compiler has to do for each change made to the application.

One possible approach is to make your main crate handle routing/page selection, and then make a different crate for each page, where each page could be a different component, or just a big function that produces Html. Code which is shared between the crates containing different parts of the application could be stored in a separate crate which is depended on throughout the project. In the best case scenario, you go from rebuilding all of your code on each compile to rebuilding only the main crate, and one of your page crates. In the worst case, where you edit something in the “common” crate, you will be right back to where you started: compiling all code that depends on that commonly shared crate, which is probably everything else.

If your main crate is too heavyweight, or you want to rapidly iterate on a deeply nested page (eg. a page that renders on top of another page), you can use an example crate to create a simplified implementation of the main page and render the component you are working on on top of that.

Reducing binary sizes

  • optimize Rust code
    • wee_alloc ( using tiny allocator )
    • cargo.toml ( defining release profile )
  • optimize wasm code using wasm-opt

Note: more information about reducing binary sizes can be found in the Rust Wasm Book.

wee_alloc

wee_alloc is a tiny allocator that is much smaller than the allocator that is normally used in Rust binaries. Replacing the default allocator with this one will result in smaller Wasm file sizes, at the expense of speed and memory overhead.

The slower speed and memory overhead are minor in comparison to the size gains made by not including the default allocator. This smaller file size means that your page will load faster, and so it is generally recommended that you use this allocator over the default, unless your app is doing some allocation-heavy work.

  1. // Use `wee_alloc` as the global allocator.
  2. #[global_allocator]
  3. static ALLOC: wee_alloc::WeeAlloc = wee_alloc::WeeAlloc::INIT;

Cargo.toml

It is possible to configure release builds to be smaller using the available settings in the [profile.release] section of your Cargo.toml.

  1. [profile.release]
  2. # less code to include into binary
  3. panic = 'abort'
  4. # optimization over all codebase ( better optimization, slower build )
  5. codegen-units = 1
  6. # optimization for size ( more aggressive )
  7. opt-level = 'z'
  8. # optimization for size
  9. # opt-level = 's'
  10. # link time optimization using using whole-program analysis
  11. lto = true

wasm-opt

Further more it is possible to optimize size of wasm code.

The Rust Wasm Book has a section about reducing the size of Wasm binaries: Shrinking .wasm size

  • using wasm-pack which by default optimizes wasm code in release builds
  • using wasm-opt directly on wasm files.
  1. wasm-opt wasm_bg.wasm -Os -o wasm_bg_opt.wasm

Build size of ‘minimal’ example in yew/examples/

Note: wasm-pack combines optimization for Rust and Wasm code. wasm-bindgen is used in this example without any Rust size optimization.

used toolsize
wasm-bindgen158KB
wasm-bindgen + wasm-opt -Os116KB
wasm-pack99 KB

Further reading: