brightdata-performance-tuning

Optimize Bright Data API performance with caching, batching, and connection pooling. Use when experiencing slow API responses, implementing caching strategies, or optimizing request throughput for Bright Data integrations. Trigger with phrases like "brightdata performance", "optimize brightdata", "brightdata latency", "brightdata caching", "brightdata slow", "brightdata batch".

claude-code
3 Tools
brightdata-pack Plugin
saas packs Category

Allowed Tools

ReadWriteEdit

Provided by Plugin

brightdata-pack

Claude Code skill pack for Bright Data (18 skills)

saas packs v1.0.0
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Installation

This skill is included in the brightdata-pack plugin:

/plugin install brightdata-pack@claude-code-plugins-plus

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Instructions

Bright Data Performance Tuning

Overview

Optimize Bright Data API performance with caching, batching, and connection pooling.

Prerequisites

  • Bright Data SDK installed
  • Understanding of async patterns
  • Redis or in-memory cache available (optional)
  • Performance monitoring in place

Latency Benchmarks

Operation P50 P95 P99
Read 50ms 150ms 300ms
Write 100ms 250ms 500ms
List 75ms 200ms 400ms

Caching Strategy

Response Caching


import { LRUCache } from 'lru-cache';

const cache = new LRUCache<string, any>({
  max: 1000,
  ttl: 60000, // 1 minute
  updateAgeOnGet: true,
});

async function cachedBright DataRequest<T>(
  key: string,
  fetcher: () => Promise<T>,
  ttl?: number
): Promise<T> {
  const cached = cache.get(key);
  if (cached) return cached as T;

  const result = await fetcher();
  cache.set(key, result, { ttl });
  return result;
}

Redis Caching (Distributed)


import Redis from 'ioredis';

const redis = new Redis(process.env.REDIS_URL);

async function cachedWithRedis<T>(
  key: string,
  fetcher: () => Promise<T>,
  ttlSeconds = 60
): Promise<T> {
  const cached = await redis.get(key);
  if (cached) return JSON.parse(cached);

  const result = await fetcher();
  await redis.setex(key, ttlSeconds, JSON.stringify(result));
  return result;
}

Request Batching


import DataLoader from 'dataloader';

const brightdataLoader = new DataLoader<string, any>(
  async (ids) => {
    // Batch fetch from Bright Data
    const results = await brightdataClient.batchGet(ids);
    return ids.map(id => results.find(r => r.id === id) || null);
  },
  {
    maxBatchSize: 100,
    batchScheduleFn: callback => setTimeout(callback, 10),
  }
);

// Usage - automatically batched
const [item1, item2, item3] = await Promise.all([
  brightdataLoader.load('id-1'),
  brightdataLoader.load('id-2'),
  brightdataLoader.load('id-3'),
]);

Connection Optimization


import { Agent } from 'https';

// Keep-alive connection pooling
const agent = new Agent({
  keepAlive: true,
  maxSockets: 10,
  maxFreeSockets: 5,
  timeout: 30000,
});

const client = new BrightDataClient({
  apiKey: process.env.BRIGHTDATA_API_KEY!,
  httpAgent: agent,
});

Pagination Optimization


async function* paginatedBright DataList<T>(
  fetcher: (cursor?: string) => Promise<{ data: T[]; nextCursor?: string }>
): AsyncGenerator<T> {
  let cursor: string | undefined;

  do {
    const { data, nextCursor } = await fetcher(cursor);
    for (const item of data) {
      yield item;
    }
    cursor = nextCursor;
  } while (cursor);
}

// Usage
for await (const item of paginatedBright DataList(cursor =>
  brightdataClient.list({ cursor, limit: 100 })
)) {
  await process(item);
}

Performance Monitoring


async function measuredBright DataCall<T>(
  operation: string,
  fn: () => Promise<T>
): Promise<T> {
  const start = performance.now();
  try {
    const result = await fn();
    const duration = performance.now() - start;
    console.log({ operation, duration, status: 'success' });
    return result;
  } catch (error) {
    const duration = performance.now() - start;
    console.error({ operation, duration, status: 'error', error });
    throw error;
  }
}

Instructions

Step 1: Establish Baseline

Measure current latency for critical Bright Data operations.

Step 2: Implement Caching

Add response caching for frequently accessed data.

Step 3: Enable Batching

Use DataLoader or similar for automatic request batching.

Step 4: Optimize Connections

Configure connection pooling with keep-alive.

Output

  • Reduced API latency
  • Caching layer implemented
  • Request batching enabled
  • Connection pooling configured

Error Handling

Issue Cause Solution
Cache miss storm TTL expired Use stale-while-revalidate
Batch timeout Too many items Reduce batch size
Connection exhausted No pooling Configure max sockets
Memory pressure Cache too large Set max cache entries

Examples

Quick Performance Wrapper


const withPerformance = <T>(name: string, fn: () => Promise<T>) =>
  measuredBright DataCall(name, () =>
    cachedBright DataRequest(`cache:${name}`, fn)
  );

Resources

Next Steps

For cost optimization, see brightdata-cost-tuning.

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