Wasmphobia analyzes a WebAssembly file and gives you a breakdown of what contributed to the module’s size. This is only really useful when the WebAssembly binary has DWARF debugging data embedded.
You can use Wasmphobia interactively on the website or install it locally as a CLI
cargo install --git https://github.com/surma/wasmphobia
If you care about file size, make sure you compile your code with optimizations (like -O3
and -flto
) enabled. In most languages, doing a “release” build should enable these settings for you. However, at the same time, doing a release build often strips debug information from the binary. Here’s a short list of how to do release build with debug symbols.
You can add --config "profile.release.debug=true"
to your cargo invocation. If your release profile strips symbols, you will also need to disable this with --config "profile.release.strip=false"
. For example, to make a release build targeting WASI, you’d run:
cargo build --config "profile.release.debug=true" --config "profile.release.strip=false" --release --target wasm32-wasi
$(CPP) -O3 -gfull ...
- Gimli for parsing DWARF
- addr2line for converting addresses to source locations.
- Inferno to render flame graphs
- Primer for the website
- Bundlephobia for the name
License Apache-2.0