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Bump cacheable-request and lighthouse #67

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@dependabot dependabot bot commented on behalf of github Feb 11, 2023

Removes cacheable-request. It's no longer used after updating ancestor dependency lighthouse. These dependencies need to be updated together.

Removes cacheable-request

Updates lighthouse from 8.2.0 to 10.0.0

Release notes

Sourced from lighthouse's releases.

v10.0.0

Full Changelog Release article

We expect this release to ship in the DevTools of Chrome 112, and to PageSpeed Insights within 2 weeks.

New Contributors

Thanks to our new contributors 👽🐷🐰🐯🐻!

Notable Changes

Performance Score Changes

In the 8.0 release, we described TTI's waning role, and today we have the followup. Time to Interactive (TTI) no longer contributes to the performance score and is not displayed in the report. However, it is still accessible in the Lighthouse result JSON.

Without TTI, the weighting of Cumulative Layout Shift (CLS) has increased from 15% to 25%. See the docs for a complete breakdown of how the Performance score is calculated in 10.0, or play with the scoring calculator.

Types for the Node package

Lighthouse now includes type declarations! Our example TypeScript recipe demonstrates how to achieve proper type safety with Lighthouse.

Third-party Entity classification

Since Lighthouse 5.3, the community-driven third-party-web dataset has been used to summarize how every third-party found on a page contributes to the total JavaScript blocking time, via the third-party-summary audit. With Lighthouse 10.0, we are adding a new property to the JSON result (entities) to make further use of this dataset. Every origin encountered on a page is now classified as first-party or third-party within entities. In 10.0, this classification is used to power the existing third-party filter checkbox.

In a future version of Lighthouse, this will be used to group the table items of every audit based on the entity it originated from, and aggregate the impact of items from that specific entity.

🆕 New Audits

Back/forward cache

The Back/forward cache (bfcache for short) is a browser optimization that serves pages from fully serialized snapshots when navigating back or forwards in session history. There are over 100 different reasons why a page may not be eligible for this optimization, so to assist developers Lighthouse now attempts to trigger a bfcache response and will list anything that prevented the browser from using the bfcache. #14465

... (truncated)

Changelog

Sourced from lighthouse's changelog.

10.0.0 (2023-02-09)

Full Changelog

We expect this release to ship in the DevTools of Chrome 112, and to PageSpeed Insights within 2 weeks.

New Contributors

Thanks to our new contributors 👽🐷🐰🐯🐻!

Notable Changes

Performance Score Changes

Time to Interactive (TTI) no longer contributes to the performance score and is not displayed in the report. However, it is still accessible in the Lighthouse result JSON.

Without TTI, the weighting of Cumulative Layout Shift (CLS) has increased from 15% to 25%. See the docs for a complete breakdown of how the Performance score is calculated in 10.0, or play with the scoring calculator.

Types for the Node package

Lighthouse now includes type declarations! Our example TypeScript recipe demonstrates how to achieve proper type safety with Lighthouse.

Entity classification

Since Lighthouse 5.3, the third-party-web dataset has been used to summarize how every third-party found on a page contributes to the total JavaScript blocking time, via the third-party-summary audit. With Lighthouse 10.0, we are adding a new property to the JSON result (entities) to make further use of this dataset. Every origin encountered on a page is now classified as first-party or third-party within entities. In 10.0, this classification is used to power the existing third-party filter checkbox.

In a future version of Lighthouse, this will be used to group the table items of every audit based on the entity it originated from, and aggregate the impact of items from that specific entity.

New Audits

Back/forward cache

The Back/forward cache (bfcache for short) is a browser optimization that serves pages from fully serialized snapshots when navigating back or forwards in session history. There are over 100 different reasons why a page may not be eligible for this optimization, so to assist developers Lighthouse now attempts to trigger a bfcache response and will list anything that prevented the browser from using the bfcache.

... (truncated)

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Removes [cacheable-request](https://github.com/jaredwray/cacheable-request). It's no longer used after updating ancestor dependency [lighthouse](https://github.com/GoogleChrome/lighthouse). These dependencies need to be updated together.


Removes `cacheable-request`

Updates `lighthouse` from 8.2.0 to 10.0.0
- [Release notes](https://github.com/GoogleChrome/lighthouse/releases)
- [Changelog](https://github.com/GoogleChrome/lighthouse/blob/v10.0.0/changelog.md)
- [Commits](GoogleChrome/lighthouse@v8.2.0...v10.0.0)

---
updated-dependencies:
- dependency-name: cacheable-request
  dependency-type: indirect
- dependency-name: lighthouse
  dependency-type: direct:production
...

Signed-off-by: dependabot[bot] <support@github.com>
@dependabot dependabot bot added the dependencies Pull requests that update a dependency file label Feb 11, 2023
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