Limited availability
Experimental: This is an experimental technology
Check the Browser compatibility table carefully before using this in production.
The config
property of the HTMLFencedFrameElement
contains a FencedFrameConfig
object, which represents the navigation of a <fencedframe>
, i.e., what content will be displayed in it. A FencedFrameConfig
is returned from a source such as the Protected Audience API.
The value of config
is initially null
.
When its value is set to a FencedFrameConfig
object instance, the FencedFrameConfig
's internal properties (for example mappedURL
) determine what is loaded inside the associated <fencedframe>
. In addition:
"replace"
(see NavigateEvent.navigationType
), meaning that the current history entry is replaced with the new entry, rather adding a new history entry for it.Referrer-Policy
is set to "no-referrer"
.To set what content will be shown in a <fencedframe>
, a utilizing API (such as Protected Audience or Shared Storage) generates a FencedFrameConfig
object, which is then set as the value of the <fencedframe>
's config
property.
The following example gets a FencedFrameConfig
from a Protected Audience API's ad auction, which is then used to display the winning ad in a <fencedframe>
:
const frameConfig = await navigator.runAdAuction({
// ⦠auction configuration
resolveToConfig: true,
});
const frame = document.createElement("fencedframe");
frame.config = frameConfig;
Note: resolveToConfig: true
must be passed in to the runAdAuction()
call to obtain a FencedFrameConfig
object. If it is not set, the resulting Promise
will resolve to a URN that can only be used in an <iframe>
.
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HTML:
3.2
| Encoding:
UTF-8
| Version:
0.7.4