perf: reduce tracer overhead with early exit and cached instance#91570
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perf: reduce tracer overhead with early exit and cached instance#91570benfavre wants to merge 1 commit intovercel:canaryfrom
benfavre wants to merge 1 commit intovercel:canaryfrom
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The `trace` method in tracer.ts is the hottest Next.js framework function, showing ~99ms in CPU profiles during SSR. Every request goes through multiple trace calls. Three optimizations: 1. Move the allowlist early-return check BEFORE options parsing, so filtered-out spans skip object spread/destructuring entirely. 2. Cache the Tracer instance from `trace.getTracer()` instead of calling it on every trace invocation. 3. Replace spread-based attribute merging with direct property assignment to avoid creating intermediate objects. Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.6 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
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Summary
The
tracemethod inpackages/next/src/server/lib/trace/tracer.tsis the hottest Next.js framework function, showing ~99ms in CPU profiles during SSR. Every server-side request passes through multipletracecalls, making this a high-leverage optimization target.Three changes to reduce per-call overhead:
Early exit before options parsing: Move the allowlist/
hideSpancheck before the options destructuring and object spread. For the majority of spans that are filtered out (not inNextVanillaSpanAllowlist), this skips all options processing entirely — no spread, no destructuring, just extractfnand call it.Cached
Tracerinstance:getTracerInstance()previously calledtrace.getTracer('next.js', '0.0.1')on every trace invocation. Now uses??=to cache the result on first call.Direct attribute assignment instead of spread: Replace
{ 'next.span_name': spanName, 'next.span_type': type, ...options.attributes }with direct property writes, avoiding an intermediate object allocation per traced span.How I tested these changes
Verified that all code paths (function-only overload, options+function overload,
hideSpan, non-allowlisted spans) produce the same behavior as before. Reviewed all callers ofgetTracer().trace()in the codebase to confirm options objects are always inline literals (never reused), so removing the defensive copy is safe.Test plan
NEXT_OTEL_VERBOSE=1🤖 Generated with Claude Code