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gridsome-plugin-service-worker

v0.2.8

Published

Registers a service worker and apply your file strategies to let you build a PWA.

Downloads

148

Readme

gridsome-plugin-service-worker

Registers a service worker and apply your file strategies to let you build a PWA.

npm npm peer dependency version NPM Build Status codecov Snyk Vulnerabilities for npm package Libraries.io dependency status for latest release Maintainability

Summary

About

I created this plugin because I needed a flexible way to add a service worker into my web app, and without having all the unpleasing setup (importing the library, registering my service worker, adding the files to the head, ...).

I wanted to have a drop-in way to tell which routes to capture and for each, to decide which specific network strategy.

Features

  • Generates the script that registers your service worker and the script that defines the service worker
  • Adds the necessary scripts to the head of each of your HTML files at build time
  • Let you choose how your routes should be fetched on the network among
    • Network-first
    • Network-only
    • Cache-first
    • Cache-only
    • Stale while revalidate
  • Let you chose, for each strategies, to cache files by their types (html, scripts, styles, ...)
  • Let you choose which route to cache ahead, a.k.a. precaching (very powerful with Cache-only)

Requirements

  • NPM or Yarn installed on your machine

Installation

With NPM

npm install --save-dev gridsome-plugin-service-worker

With Yarn

yarn add --dev gridsome-plugin-service-worker

Usage

This section assumes you already installed Gridsome.

Add the plugin to the list of your plugins in the file gridsome.config.js

module.exports = {
  siteName: "Gridsome",
  plugins: [
    {
      use: "gridsome-plugin-service-worker",
    },
  ],
};

Add a first network strategy, which will serve as an example that you will be able to tweak later.

module.exports = {
  siteName: "Gridsome",
  plugins: [
    {
      use: "gridsome-plugin-service-worker",
      options: {
        networkFirst: {
          routes: ["/", "/about"],
          fileTypes: ["document", "script", "style", "image"],
        },
      },
    },
  ],
};

Run this command to build your project.

With NPM

npm run build

With Yarn

yarn build

Serve the files locally, and navigate to the home page. Simulate a connection shutdown by going in the Chrome DevTools panel, in the "Network" tab, then choose "Offline" in the dropdown.

Reload your page: you should still see your home page, which means the service worker successfully fetched your resources from the cache as a fallback.

Whenever you use your CacheFirst (for example), but you still need your files to be fetched again because you made a change on these files, you should change the name of the cache (using the cacheName option in gridsome.config.js) in order for the service worker to "update" the cache.

Lastly (optional), configure your server (if your server architecture allow you to do so) to prevent the files /service-worker.js and /assets/js/service-worker.js to be cached by your server. Here is an example using Apache:

<Files /service-worker.js>
  FileETag None
  <ifModule mod_headers.c>
     Header unset ETag
     Header set Cache-Control "max-age=0, no-cache, no-store, must-revalidate"
     Header set Pragma "no-cache"
     Header set Expires "Wed, 11 Jan 1984 05:00:00 GMT"
  </ifModule>
</Files>

<Files /assets/js/service-worker.js>
  FileETag None
  <ifModule mod_headers.c>
     Header unset ETag
     Header set Cache-Control "max-age=0, no-cache, no-store, must-revalidate"
     Header set Pragma "no-cache"
     Header set Expires "Wed, 11 Jan 1984 05:00:00 GMT"
  </ifModule>
</Files>

The browsers now are configured to check every 24h at most for service worker changes, but this operations make sure the browser will not try to cache these files anyway.

Examples

1. Use a Network-First strategy

// gridsome.config.js
module.exports = {
  plugins: [
    {
      use: "gridsome-plugin-service-worker",
      options: {
        networkFirst: {
          cacheName: "nf-v1",
          routes: ["/", /\.(js|css|png)/],
        },
      },
    },
  ],
};

2. Cache resources ahead of time for offline browsing

// gridsome.config.js
module.exports = {
  plugins: [
    {
      use: "gridsome-plugin-service-worker",
      options: {
        precachedRoutes: ["/"],
        cacheOnly: {
          cacheName: "co-v1",
          routes: ["/"],
        },
      },
    },
  ],
};

3. Caching file types instead of routes

// gridsome.config.js
module.exports = {
  plugins: [
    {
      use: "gridsome-plugin-service-worker",
      options: {
        networkFirst: {
          cacheName: "nf-v1",
          fileTypes: [
            "document", // includes HTML files
            "image",
            "script",
            "style",
          ],
        },
      },
    },
  ],
};

You can mix file types and routes if you need.

For a list of available fileTypes, check the Mozilla Developer Network documentation on Service worker request destinations.

API

You will find the prototype of the Strategy type below.

  • options
    • cacheFirst: Strategy: Every time the browser requests these routes, if it is in the browser's cache, it will be used instead of fetching it from the network (even if the network is up). If it is not in the network, fetches it from the network, plus add it on the browser's cache. Used for low-priority resources that do not change often, or do not need to display an up-to-date response, like pictures. Workbox's Cache-first documentation
    • cacheOnly: Strategy Every time the browser requests these routes, if they are in the browser's cache, they will be fetched from the cache. If they are not in the cache, they will return no response. Note that this strategy works very well when you precache files using the precachedRoutes options. Workbox's Cache-only documentation
    • networkFirst: Strategy: Every time the browser requests these routes, they will be cached in the browser's cache. If the network is down, tries to fetch the request from the cache (if the resource have been cached). Used when you always need to present the most up-to-date resources to the user, and you also want to be able to display offline content as a fallback. Workbox's Network-first documentation
    • networkOnly: Strategy: This corresponds to the default behavior, like if you would not have used any strategy for your routes. Workbox's Network-only documentation
    • precachedRoutes: Array<String> A list of routes to cache ahead (right after the service worker is installed). This is very powerful to use with the cacheOnly option since you will be able to create Offline-ready apps without the user to browser the desired resources to cache. Workbox's precaching documentation
    • staleWhileRevalidate: Strategy Every time the browser requests these routes, if they are in the cache, they are returned from the cache to the browser, plus the service worker will still try to fetch the response from the network in the background and put this response in the cache. Used when the resource needs to be served the fastest possible, and when it is not a problem if the resource is not up-to-date when requested, like fonts, videos, static pages that do not display critical content, ... Workbox's Stale while revalidate documentation
interface Strategy {
  cacheName: string;
  routes: Array<String | RegExp>;
  fileTypes: Array<RequestDestination>;
}
type RequestDestination =
  | ""
  | "audio"
  | "audioworklet"
  | "document"
  | "embed"
  | "font"
  | "image"
  | "manifest"
  | "object"
  | "paintworklet"
  | "report"
  | "script"
  | "serviceworker"
  | "sharedworker"
  | "style"
  | "track"
  | "video"
  | "worker"
  | "xslt";

Run the tests

  1. Clone the project: git clone https://github.com/khalyomede/gridsome-plugin-service-worker.git

  2. Install the dependencies

    • With NPM: npm install
    • With Yarn: yarn install
  3. Run the tests

    • With NPM: npm run test
    • With Yarn: yarn test