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sync-message

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NPM

A small library for synchronous communication between the main browser thread and web workers using Atomics and/or service workers. In particular you can use the readMessage function inside a web worker to synchronously receive data from the browser thread.

Usage outline

  1. Setup your application to support at least one of the two types of channel:
    • To enable channels using Atomics and SharedArrayBuffer, enable cross-origin isolation. Note that even with cross-origin isolation, browser support is still shaky.
    • To enable channels using service workers, register a service worker script which uses this library's serviceWorkerFetchListener.
  2. Create a channel object with makeChannel.
  3. Send the channel object to your web worker via the standard postMessage or your favourite wrapper library such as Comlink.
  4. When the worker needs to get data from the main thread:
    1. In the worker, send a unique messageId string back to the main thread, again with the usual postMessage etc. The function uuidv4 is provided to make this easy.
    2. Still in the worker, call readMessage(channel, messageId, options) which will block until it receives and returns a message.
    3. In the main thread, use the messageId sent in step 1 to call writeMessage(channel, message, messageId). message will be encoded and decoded using JSON.

So your code in the main thread should look something like this:

import {makeChannel, writeMessage} from "sync-message";

const channel = makeChannel();

// If you want to use a service worker channel
navigator.serviceWorker.register("service-worker.js");

// Send the channel to the web worker
worker.postMessage({channel});

// Receive a messageId from the worker and write a message when you're ready
writeMessage(channel, message, messageId);

In your web worker:

import {readMessage, uuidv4} from "sync-message";

// Generate a unique messageId string
const messageId = uuidv4();

// Send it to the main thread so that they can call writeMessage as above
postMessage({messageId});

// Receive the message passed to  writeMessage
const message = readMessage(channel, messageId);

In your service worker script if you have one:

import {serviceWorkerFetchListener} from "sync-message";

const fetchListener = serviceWorkerFetchListener();

addEventListener("fetch", function (e) {
  if (fetchListener(e)) {
    // This event has been handled by this library
    return;
  }
  // Otherwise, add your own service worker logic here,
  // e.g. passthrough to a normal network request:
  e.respondWith(fetch(e.request));
});

Reference

makeChannel

Accepts one optional argument options with two optional keys for configuring the different types of channel:

  • atomics has one option:
    • bufferSize: number of bytes to allocate for the SharedArrayBuffer. Defaults to 128KiB. writeMessage will throw an error if the message is larger than the buffer size.
  • serviceWorker has the following options:
    • scope: a string representing the prefix of a path/URL, defaulting to "/". Both readMessage and writeMessage will make requests that start with this value so make sure that your service worker is controlling the page and can intercept those requests. The scope property of the registration object returned by navigator.serviceWorker.register should work.
    • timeout: number of milliseconds representing a grace period for the service worker to start up. If requests made by readMessage and writeMessage fail, they will be retried until this timeout is exceeded, at which point they will throw an error.

If SharedArrayBuffer is available, makeChannel will use it to create an atomics type channel. Otherwise, if navigator.serviceWorker is available, it will create a serviceWorker type channel, but registering the service worker is up to you. If that's not available either, it'll return null.

Channel objects have a type property which is either "atomics" or "serviceWorker". The other properties are for internal use.

If you want to control the type of channel, you can call makeAtomicsChannel({bufferSize?}) or makeServiceWorkerChannel({scope?, timeout?}) directly.

A single channel object shouldn't be used by multiple workers simultaneously, i.e. you should only read/write one message at a time.

writeMessage

Call this in the browser's main UI thread to send a message to the worker reading from the channel with readMessage. Takes three arguments:

  • channel: a non-null object returned by makeChannel, makeAtomicsChannel, or makeServiceWorkerChannel.
  • message: any object that can be safely passed to JSON.stringify and then decoded with JSON.parse.
  • messageId: a unique string identifying the message that the worker is waiting for. Currently only used by service worker channels.

readMessage

Call this in a web worker to synchronously receive a message sent by the main thread with writeMessage. Takes three arguments:

  • channel: a non-null object returned by makeChannel, makeAtomicsChannel, or makeServiceWorkerChannel. Should be created once in the main thread and then sent to the worker.
  • messageId: a unique string identifying the message that the worker is waiting for. Currently only used by service worker channels. Typically created in the worker using the uuidv4 function and then sent to the main thread before calling readMessage.
  • options: an optional object with the following optional keys:
    • timeout: a number of milliseconds. If this much time elapses without receiving a message, readMessage will return null.
    • checkInterrupt: a function which may be called regularly while readMessage is checking for messages on the channel. If it returns true, then readMessage will return null.

serviceWorkerFetchListener

Call this once in a service worker script. Returns a function which accepts a fetch event and responds to requests made by readMessage and writeMessage. If you don't need to use a service worker for anything else, you can simply write:

addEventListener("fetch", serviceWorkerFetchListener());

Otherwise, create a listener function once and then reuse it:

import {serviceWorkerFetchListener} from "sync-message";

const fetchListener = serviceWorkerFetchListener();

addEventListener("fetch", function (e) {
  if (fetchListener(e)) {
    // This event has been handled by this library
    return;
  }
  // Otherwise, add your own service worker logic here,
  // e.g. passthrough to a normal network request:
  e.respondWith(fetch(e.request));
});

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