Today I was in a Wikibase Stakeholder group call, and one of the discussions was around Wikibase importing speed, data loading, and the APIs. My previous blog post covering what happens when you make a new Wikibase item was raised, and we also got onto the topic of profiling.
So here comes another post looking at some of the internals of Wikibase, through the lens of profiling on test.wikidata.org.
The tools used to write this blog post for Wikimedia infrastructure are both open source, and also public. You can do similar profiling on both your own Wikibase, or for your requests that you suspect are slow on Wikimedia sites such as Wikidata.
Wikimedia Profiling
Profiling of Wikimedia sites is managed and maintained by the Wikimedia performance team. They have a blog, and one of the most recent posts was actually covering profiling PHP at scale in production, so if you want to know the details of how this is achieved give it a read.
Throughout this post I will be looking at data collected from a production Wikimedia request, by setting the X-Wikimedia-Debug header in my request. This header has a few options, and you can find the docs on wikitech.wikimedia.org. There are also browser extensions available to easily set this header on your requests.
I will be using the Wikimedia hosted XHGui to visualize the profile data. Wikimedia specific documentation for this interface also exists on wikitech.wikimedia.org. This interface contains a random set of profiled requests, as well as any requests that were specifically requested to be profiled.
Profiling PHP & MediaWiki
If you want to profile your own MediaWiki or Wikibase install, or PHP in general, then you should take a look at the mediawiki.org documentation page for this. You’ll likely want to use either Tideways or XDebug, but probably want to avoid having to setup any extra UI to visualize the data.
This profiling only covered the main PHP application (MediaWiki & Wikibase extension). Other services such as the query service would require separate profiling.