Instant navigation experiences

Complementing traditional prefetching techniques with service workers.

Demián Renzulli
Demián Renzulli
Gilberto Cocchi
Gilberto Cocchi

Performing a task on a site commonly involves several steps. For example, purchasing a product in an e-commerce website might involve searching for a product, picking an item from the list of results, adding the item to the cart, and completing the operation by checking out.

In technical terms, moving through different pages means making a navigation request. As a general rule, you don't want to use long-lived Cache-Control headers to cache the HTML response for a navigation request. They should normally be satisfied via the network, with Cache-Control: no-cache, to ensure that the HTML, along with the chain of subsequent network requests, is (reasonably) fresh. Having to go against the network each time the user navigates to a new page unfortunately means that each navigation might be slow—at the very least, it means that it won't be reliably fast.

To speed up these requests, if you can anticipate the user's action, you can request these pages and assets beforehand and keep them in the cache for a short period of time until the user clicks on these links. This technique is called prefetching and it's commonly implemented by adding <link rel="prefetch"> tags to pages, indicating the resource to prefetch.

In this guide we'll explore different ways in which service workers can be used as a complement of traditional prefetching techniques.

Production cases

MercadoLibre is the biggest e-commerce site in Latin America. To speed up navigations, they dynamically inject <link rel="prefetch"> tags in some parts of the flow. For example, in listing pages, they fetch the next result page as soon as the user scrolls to the bottom of the listing:

Screenshot of MercadoLibre's listing pages one and two and a Link Prefetch tag connecting both.

Prefetched files are requested at the "Lowest" priority and stored in the HTTP cache or the memory cache (depending on whether the resource is cacheable or not), for an amount of time that varies by browsers. For example, as of Chrome 85, this value is 5 minutes. Resources are kept around for five minutes, after which the normal Cache-Control rules for the resource apply.

Using service worker caching can help you extend the lifetime of prefetch resources beyond the five-minute window.

For example, Italian sports portal Virgilio Sport uses service workers to prefetch the most popular posts in their home page. They also use the Network Information API to avoid prefetching for users that are on a 2G connection.

Virgilio Sport logo.

As a result of this, over 3 weeks of observation Virgilio Sport witnessed load times for navigation to articles improve 78%, and the number of article impressions increase 45%.

A screenshot of Virgilio Sport home and article pages, with impact metrics after prefetching.

Implement precaching with Workbox

In the following section we'll use Workbox to show how to implement different caching techniques in the service worker that can be used as a complement to <link rel="prefetch">, or even a replacement for it, by delegating this task completely to the service worker.

1. Precache static pages and page subresources

Precaching is the ability of the service worker to save files to the cache while it's installing.

In the following cases precaching is used to achieve a similar goal as prefetching: making navigations faster.

Precaching static pages

For pages that are generated at build time (e.g. about.html, contact.html), or in completely static sites, one can just add the site's documents to the precache list, so they are already available in the cache every time the user accesses them:

workbox.precaching.precacheAndRoute([
 
{url: '/about.html', revision: 'abcd1234'},
 
// ... other entries ...
]);

Precaching page subresources

Precaching static assets that the different sections of the site might use (e.g. JavaScript, CSS, etc.), is a general best practice and can give an extra boost in prefetching scenarios.

To speed up navigations in an e-commerce site, you can use <link rel="prefetch"> tags in listing pages to prefetch product detail pages for the first few products of a listing page. If you have already precached the product page subresources, this can make the navigation even faster.

To implement this:

  • Add a <link rel="prefetch"> tag to the page:
 <link rel="prefetch" href="/phones/smartphone-5x.html" as="document">
  • Add the page subresources to the precache list in the service worker:
workbox.precaching.precacheAndRoute([
 
'/styles/product-page.ac29.css',
 
// ... other entries ...
]);

2. Extend the lifetime of prefetch resources

As mentioned earlier, <link rel="prefetch"> fetches and keeps resources in the HTTP cache for a limited amount of time, after which point the Cache-Control rules for a resource apply. As of Chrome 85, this value is 5 minutes.

Service workers allow you to extend the lifetime of the prefetch pages, while providing the added benefit of making those resources available for offline usage.

In the previous example, one could complement the <link rel="prefetch"> used to prefetch a product page with a Workbox runtime caching strategy.

To implement that:

  • Add a <link rel="prefetch"> tag to the page:
 <link rel="prefetch" href="/phones/smartphone-5x.html" as="document">
  • Implement a runtime caching strategy in the service worker for these types of requests:
new workbox.strategies.StaleWhileRevalidate({
  cacheName
: 'document-cache',
  plugins
: [
   
new workbox.expiration.Plugin({
      maxAgeSeconds
: 30 * 24 * 60 * 60, // 30 Days
   
}),
 
],
});

In this case, we have opted to use a stale-while-revalidate strategy. In this strategy, pages can be requested from both the cache and the network, in parallel. The response comes from the cache if available, otherwise from the network. The cache is always kept up to date with the network response with each successful request.

3. Delegate prefetching to the service worker

In most cases the best approach is to use <link rel="prefetch">. The tag is a resource hint designed to make prefetching as efficient as possible.

In some cases, though, it might be better to delegate this task completely to the service worker. For example: to prefetch the first few products in a client-side rendered product listing page, one might need to inject several <link rel="prefetch"> tags dynamically in the page, based on an API response. This can momentarily consume time on the page's main thread and make the implementation more difficult.

In cases like this, use a "page to service worker communication strategy", to delegate the task of prefetching completely to the service worker. This type of communication can be achieved by using worker.postMessage():

An icon of a page making two way communication with a service worker.

The Workbox Window package simplifies this type of communication, abstracting many details of the underlying call being done.

Prefetching with Workbox Window can be implemented in the following way:

  • In the page: call the service worker passing it the type of message, and the list of URLs to prefetch:
const wb = new Workbox('/sw.js');
wb
.register();

const prefetchResponse = await wb.messageSW({type: 'PREFETCH_URLS', urls: […]});
  • In the service worker: implement a message handler to issue a fetch() request for each URL to prefetch:
addEventListener('message', (event) => {
 
if (event.data.type === 'PREFETCH_URLS') {
   
// Fetch URLs and store them in the cache
 
}
});