Baseline Widely available
Note: This feature is only available in Service Workers.
The ExtendableEvent.waitUntil()
method tells the event dispatcher that work is ongoing. It can also be used to detect whether that work was successful. In service workers, waitUntil()
tells the browser that work is ongoing until the promise settles, and it shouldn't terminate the service worker if it wants that work to complete.
The install
events in service workers use waitUntil()
to hold the service worker in the installing
phase until tasks complete. If the promise passed to waitUntil()
rejects, the install is considered a failure, and the installing service worker is discarded. This is primarily used to ensure that a service worker is not considered installed until all of the core caches it depends on are successfully populated.
The activate
events in service workers use waitUntil()
to buffer functional events such as fetch
and push
until the promise passed to waitUntil()
settles. This gives the service worker time to update database schemas and delete outdated caches
, so other events can rely on a completely upgraded state.
The waitUntil()
method must be initially called within the event callback, but after that it can be called multiple times, until all the promises passed to it settle.
promise
A Promise
that extends the lifetime of the event.
None (undefined
).
Using waitUntil()
within a service worker's install
event:
addEventListener("install", (event) => {
const preCache = async () => {
const cache = await caches.open("static-v1");
return cache.addAll(["/", "/about/", "/static/styles.css"]);
};
event.waitUntil(preCache());
});
Specifications Browser compatibility See also
RetroSearch is an open source project built by @garambo | Open a GitHub Issue
Search and Browse the WWW like it's 1997 | Search results from DuckDuckGo
HTML:
3.2
| Encoding:
UTF-8
| Version:
0.7.4