This commit dramatically improves the performance of the hook names feature by replacing the source-map-js integration with custom mapping code built on top of sourcemap-codec. Based on my own benchmarking, this makes parsing 3-4 times faster. (The bulk of these changes are in SourceMapConsumer.js.)
While implementing this code, I also uncovered a problem with the way we were caching source-map metadata that was causing us to potential parse the same source-map multiple times. (I addressed this in a separate commit for easier reviewing. The bulk of these changes are in parseSourceAndMetadata.js.)
Altogether these changes dramatically improve the performance of the hooks parsing code.
One additional thing we could look into if the source-map download still remains a large bottleneck would be to stream it and decode the mappings array while it streams in rather than in one synchronous chunk after the full source-map has been downloaded.
This commit builds on PR #22260 and makes the following changes:
* Adds a DevTools feature flag for named hooks support. (This allows us to disable it entirely for a build via feature flag.)
* Adds a new Suspense cache for dynamically imported modules. (This allows a component to suspend while importing an external code chunk– like the hook names parsing code).
* DevTools supports a hookNamesModuleLoaderFunction param to import the hook names module. I wish this could be handles as part of the react-devtools-shared package, but I'm not sure how to configure Webpack (4) to serve the chunk from react-devtools-inline. This seemed like a reasonable workaround.
The PR also contains an additional unrelated change:
* Removes pre-fetch optimization (added in DevTools: Improve named hooks network caching #22198). This optimization was mostly only important for cases where sources needed to be re-downloaded, something which we can now avoid in most cases¹ thanks to using cached responses already loaded by the page. (I tested this locally on Facebook and this change has no negative performance impact. There is still some overhead from serializing the JS through the Bridge but that's constant between the two approaches.)
¹ The case where we don't benefit from cached responses is when DevTools are opened after the page has already loaded certain scripts. This seems uncommon enough that I don't think it justified the added complexity of prefetching.