Working with service workers

This codelab shows you how to register a service worker from within your web application, and use the Chrome DevTools to observe its behavior. It also covers some debugging techniques that you might find useful when dealing with service workers.

The files in the sample project most relevant to this codelab are:

  • register-sw.js starts out empty, but it will contain the code used to register the service worker. It's already being loaded via a <script> tag inside of the project's index.html.
  • service-worker.js is similarly empty. It's the file that will contain the service worker for this project.

Add in the service worker registration code

A service worker (even an empty one, like the current service-worker.js file) won't be used unless it's registered first. You can do this via a call to:

navigator.serviceWorker.register(
  '/service-worker.js'
)

inside your register-sw.js file.

Before you add that code, though, there are a couple of points to take into account.

First, not every browser supports service workers. This is particularly true for older versions of browsers that don't automatically update. So it's a best practice to call navigator.serviceWorker.register() conditionally, after checking whether navigator.serviceWorker is supported.

Second, when you register a service worker, the browser runs the code in your service-worker.js file, and may potentially start downloading URLs to populate caches, depending on the code in your service worker's install and activate event handlers.

Running additional code and downloading assets can use up valuable resources that your browser could otherwise use to display the current web page. To help avoid this interference, it's a good practice to delay registering a service worker until the browser has finished rendering the current page. A convenient way of approximating this is to wait until the window.load event has been fired.

Putting those two points together, add this general-purpose service worker registration code to your register-sw.js file:

if ('serviceWorker' in navigator) {
  window.addEventListener('load', () => {
    navigator.serviceWorker.register('/service-worker.js');
  });
}

Add some service worker logging code

Your service-worker.js file is where all the logic for your service worker implementation would normally go. You'd use a mix of the service worker lifecycle events, the Cache Storage API, and knowledge about your web app's network traffic to create a perfectly crafted service worker, ready to handle all of your web app's requests.

But… that's all for learning later. At this stage, the focus is on observing various service worker events, and getting comfortable using Chrome's DevTools to debug the state of your service worker.

To that end, add in the following code to service-worker.js, which will log messages to the DevTools console in response to various events (but not do much else):

self.addEventListener('install', (event) => {
  console.log('Inside the install handler:', event);
});

self.addEventListener('activate', (event) => {
  console.log('Inside the activate handler:', event);
});

self.addEventListener(fetch, (event) => {
  console.log('Inside the fetch handler:', event);
});

Get familiar with the Service Workers panel in DevTools

Now that you've got the code added to register-sw.js and service-worker.js files, it's time to visit the Live version of your sample project, and observe the service worker in action.

  • To preview the site, press View App. Then press Fullscreen fullscreen.
  • Press `Control+Shift+J` (or `Command+Option+J` on Mac) to open DevTools.
  • Click the Console tab.

You should see something like the following log messages, showing that the service worker has been installed and activated:

Shows service worker is installed and activated.

Then visit the Applications tab, and select the Service Workers panel. You should see something like the following:

Shows service worker details in service worker panel.

This lets you know that there's a service worker with a source URL of service-worker.js, for the web app solar-donkey.glitch.me, that's currently activated and running. It also tells you that there's currently one client (open tab) that's being controlled by the service worker.

You can use the links on this panel, like Unregister, or stop, to make changes to the currently registered service worker for debugging purposes.

Trigger the service worker update flow

One of the key concepts to understand when developing with service workers is the idea of an update flow.

After your users visit a web app which registers a service worker, they'll end up with the code for the current copy of service-worker.js installed on their local browser. But what happens when you make updates to the version of service-worker.js that's stored on your web server?

When a repeat visitor returns to a URL that's within the scope of a service worker, the browser will automatically request the latest service-worker.js and check for any changes. If anything in the service worker script is different, then the new service worker will get a chance to install, activate, and eventually take control.

You can simulate this update flow by going back to the code editor for your project, and making any change to the code. One quick change would be to replace

self.addEventListener('install', (event) => {
  console.log('Inside the install handler:', event);
});

with

self.addEventListener('install', (event) => {
  console.log('Inside the UPDATED install handler:', event);
});

After making that change, return to the Live version of your sample app, and reload the page with the DevTools Application tab still open. You should see something like the following:

Shows two versions of service worker installed.

This shows that there are two versions of your service worker installed at this point. The previous version, which was already activated, is running and in control of the current page. The updated version of the service worker is listed right below. It's in the waiting state, and will remain waiting until all of the open tabs that are controlled by the old service worker are closed.

This default behavior ensures that if your new service worker has a fundamental difference in behavior from your old one—like a fetch handler which responds with resources that are incompatible with older versions of your web app—it won't go into effect until a user has shut down all previous instances of your web app.

Summing things up

You should now be comfortable with the process of registering a service worker and observing a service worker's behavior using Chrome's DevTools.

You're now in a good position to start implementing caching strategies, and all the good stuff that will help your web app load both reliably and reliably fast.