npm workbox-routing 4.0.0
Workbox v4.0.0

latest releases: 7.1.0, 7.0.0, 6.6.1...
5 years ago

Overview of Workbox v4

We're happy to announce the release of Workbox version 4! This release introduces a lot of great new features, as well as some breaking changes.

You can read the full list of changes here; we've also published a guide on migrating from v3 to v4.

🎉 What's New?

workbox-window

The workbox-window package is a set of modules that are intended to run in the window context, which is to say, inside of your web pages. They're a complement to the other workbox packages that run in the service worker.

The key features/goals of workbox-window are:

You can use workbox-window by importing it into your code from our CDN as show in the following example:

<script type="module">
import {Workbox} from 'https://storage.googleapis.com/workbox-cdn/releases/4.0.0/workbox-window.prod.mjs';

if ('serviceWorker' in navigator) {
  const wb = new Workbox('/sw.js');

  wb.register();
}
</script>

To learn more, see the workbox-window usage guide or the Workbox class reference documentation.

workbox-routing

  • Logging has improved for workbox.routing.NavigationRoute when a URL matches the blacklist. Now a message with higher priority is logged when using the development builds. [#1741]

  • workbox.routing.Router now includes a routes getter method, giving developers access to the underlying Map of routes that have been registered for a given router. [#1714]

  • The Router#handleRequest() method no longer requires an event be passed, which allows routing logic to be used programmatically, outside of the context of a fetch event. This can be useful as a way to cache URLs using the same strategies and plugins that you've already defined in your routing logic. [#1682]

workbox-google-analytics

  • If you use Google Tag Manager (GTM) to load Google Analytics on your site, Workbox will now cache the gtm.js library so it will work offline as well [#1869].

workbox-broadcast-update

  • The workbox-broadcast-update plugin now works in browsers that don't support the BroadcastChannel API by iterating over all the open window clients and sending them the update message via postMessage() API. In addition, the channel parameter is no longer required. If no channel is given the default channel name workbox is used (no channle is used for browsers that don't support the BroadcastChannel API). [#1673]

Build tools

  • Support for a new boolean configuration option, cleanupOutdatedCaches, has been added to the GenerateSW mode of all of the build tools. It defaults to false. When set to true, a call to workbox.precaching.cleanupOutdatedCaches() will automatically be added to your generated service worker, which will in turn delete any out-of-date precaches no longer used by Workbox. Workbox v4 introduced a breaking change to the precache format, so developers upgrading from Workbox v3 or earlier might find this useful. [#1863]

MIT Licensing

🐛 What's Fixed?

workbox-precaching

  • A bug in workbox-precaching previously could have caused URLs that lead to a HTTP 30x redirect to be cached incorrectly. This is now fixed. [#1678]

workbox-expiration

  • The workbox-expiration documentation states that the maxAgeSeconds option will expire entires based on the time they were last accessed. But due to a bug in the logic, it would actually expire entries based on the time they were originally cached. This has been fixed, and the behavior now matches the documentation [#1883].

workbox-strategies

  • The default check for whether a response is cacheable now looks explicitly for a status code of 200, rather than checking for response.ok (which is true for any status code in the range 200-209). In practice, this means that partial responses with a status code of 206 won't be inadvertently cached by default. [#1805]

workbox-webpack-plugin

  • In addition to swSrc being a file on the file system, it can now be a webpack generated asset as well. This allows users to compile their service worker with webpack and then give it as a source to inject-manifest plugin. [#1763]

workbox-core

  • To work around an issue that could lead to failed navigations, fetchOptions are no longer set when request.mode is 'navigate'. [#1862]

  • A new fetchDidSucceed({request, response}) lifecycle callback has been added, allowing developers to inspect and potentially modify a response that's been retrieved from the network, prior to it being passed back to the page. [#1772]

Build tools

  • The default injectionPointRegexp option value has been updated to exclude a leading . character, making it friendlier to developers who are bundling their own service worker files. [#1834]

  • Support has been added for including JavaScript functions when configuring runtimeCaching in the various build tools. [#1770, #1778]

  • workbox-cli now supports a --watch parameter. When used, it will re-run the service worker build whenever any of the files in the precache manifest change. [#1776]

  • The workbox-webpack-plugin will append to, rather than overwrite, any existing self.__precacheManifest value, making it easier to combine a precache manifest with the manifest generated by the plugin. [#1775]

  • As a byproduct of updating our projects various npm dependencies to the latest releases, we've fixed and issue that preventing the workbox-cli's wizard command from properly completing when run on a Windows command line environment. [#1658]

workbox-google-analytics

  • Some content blocking browser extensions would block requests for script files containing the substring analytics. When these requests are blocked, and error is thrown which causes the service worker installation to fail. To prevent this failure from affecting all service worker functionality, we've renamed the workbox-google-analytics.prod.js and workbox-google-analytics.dev.js to workbox-offline-ga.prod.js and workbox-offline-ga.dev.js. [#1688]

    Note: This change is not an attempt to get around content blockers preventing Google Analytics tracking, as requests to all Google Analytics endponts will still be blocked. This change is just to prevent the entire service worker from breaking.

⚠️ Breaking Changes

Global changes

  • Various public interfaces and options have been renamed to standardize on capitalization. Most noticeably, 'Url' is now 'URL', 'Sw' is now 'SW', and the various strategyName handler values in runtimeCaching are now StrategyName (e.g. 'cacheFirst' is now 'CacheFirst'). The previous capitalization will remain supported until Workbox v5, but using the old variation will lead to deprecation warnings. All developers are encouraged to update their configuration to match the new, consistent capitalization. [#1833, #1841]

  • The npm names of the following two packages has change to reflect their browser namespace:

    • workbox-cache-expiration ➡️ workbox-expiration
    • workbox-broadcast-cache-update ➡️ workbox-broadcast-update

    This change only affects developers who bundle their service worker from npm dependencies. Developers who load Workbox using workbox-sw should not have to change their code. [#1879]

  • Our @babel/preset-env transpilation targets have been updated to >= node 6 for node libraries and >= Chrome 56 for service worker libraries. Note: we chose Chrome 56 because it matches the capabilities of Samsung Internet v6 and higher. This means we've dropped compatibility with any browser based on Chrome versions earlier than 56, like Samsung Internet v5. [#1655]

workbox-core

  • Workbox log levels have been removed since now all developer tools support filtering visible logs by level. As a result, workbox.core.setLogLevel(), workbox.core.logLevel, and workbox.core.LOG_LEVELS have all been removed. [#1831]

workbox-strategies

  • Workbox previously allowed developers to use workbox-strategies in one of two ways: by calling a workbox.strategies.strategyName() factory method, or by explicitly constructing new workbox.strategies.StrategyName(). To avoid confusion, the workbox.strategies.strategyName() approach is deprecated, and will be removed in v5. We encourage all developers to move to the new workbox.strategies.StrategyName() syntax. [#1831, #1842]

  • Previously, the various workbox-strategies would behave differently in failure scenarios. Some, like networkFirst, would resolve with an undefined value when there was a network failure and a cache miss. Other strategies would reject with a NetworkError under a similar failure. Starting in v4, we've standardized how all of the workbox-strategies behave when they can't return a response due to some combination of network failure and/or cache miss: the promise that they return will consistently reject with a WorkboxError. This makes it much easier to think about handling failures with "fallback content," making patterns using custom handlers like the following work consistently, regardless of the strategy being used. [#1657]

workbox-precaching

  • workbox-precaching will default to confirming that all Responses cached during installation have a non-error (less than 400) HTTP status code. If any Responses have an error code, the install phase will now fail. (The next time the service worker starts up, installation will be re-attempted.) Developers who need to precache Responses that have a 4xx or 5xx status code (e.g., precaching a /not-found.html URL that is served with a status code of 404) can opt-in to allowing that by passing in a custom cacheWillUpdate plugin to the workbox.precaching.PrecacheController's install method.

  • workbox-precaching has undergone a major rewrite [#1820] to address the issues detailed in #1793. As a result, existing precached data used by Workbox prior to this beta release can't be reused, and upon registering a service worker that uses this new code, all precached data will be downloaded again. There is more information in our migration guide detailing specific changes you might need to make to account for the new precaching behavior.

workbox-sw

  • workbox.skipWaiting() has been renamed to workbox.core.skipWaiting(), and workbox.clientsClaim() has been renamed to workbox.core.clientsClaim(). If you are using the skipWaiting or clientsClaim build configuration options, the new method names will be used in your generated service worker automatically.

workbox-expiration

  • The underlying IndexedDB data model for cached entry metadata has changed from using IndexedDB database names that match the cache name (one database per cache name) to a single database named workbox-expiration. If you had code that was manually inspected this metadata, you'll need to update it to check the new database [#1883].

workbox-background-sync

  • The workbox.backgroundSync.Queue class has been updated to give developers more control over how failed requests are replayed when a sync event occurs. Previously, developers could only add requests to the queue (there was no option to remove them). Now they have low-level methods to push, pop, shift, and unshift requests. For the full list of changes and use cases, see #1710.

workbox-range-requests

  • workbox-range-requests will now check to see if the Response object it's processing already has an HTTP status code of 206 (indicating that it contains partial content). If so, it will just pass it through unmodified. [#1721]

workbox-webpack-plugin

  • workbox-webpack-plugin will now precache manifest.json by default. Previously, the default configuration would cause workbox-webpack-plugin to exclude files named manfiest.json from the list of files to precache. Because some browsers do in fact make use of the service worker cache when reading the web app manifest data, it makes more sense to default to including, rather than excluding, that file. [#1679]

Thanks!

Special thanks to @tanhauhau, @xMokAx, and @tomayac for contributions that went into this release, and to @webmaxru and @jadjoubran for help testing all the pre-releases!

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