respondWith method

void respondWith(
  1. JSPromise<Response> r
)

The respondWith() method of FetchEvent prevents the browser's default fetch handling, and allows you to provide a promise for a Response yourself.

In most cases you can provide any response that the receiver understands. For example, if an img initiates the request, the response body needs to be image data. For security reasons, there are a few global rules:

  • You can only return Response objects of Response.type "opaque" if the fetchEvent.request object's request.mode is "no-cors". This prevents the leaking of private data.
  • You can only return Response objects of Response.type "opaqueredirect" if the fetchEvent.request object's request.mode is "manual".
  • You cannot return Response objects of Response.type "cors" if the fetchEvent.request object's request.mode is "same-origin".

Specifying the final URL of a resource

From Firefox 59 onwards, when a service worker provides a Response to FetchEvent.respondWith, the Response.url value will be propagated to the intercepted network request as the final resolved URL. If the Response.url value is the empty string, then the Request.url is used as the final URL.

In the past the Request.url was used as the final URL in all cases. The provided Response.url was effectively ignored.

This means, for example, if a service worker intercepts a stylesheet or worker script, then the provided Response.url will be used to resolve any relative or WorkerGlobalScope.importScripts subresource loads (Firefox bug 1222008).

For most types of network request this change has no impact because you can't observe the final URL. There are a few, though, where it does matter:

  • If a fetch is intercepted, then you can observe the final URL on the result's Response.url.
  • If a worker script is intercepted, then the final URL is used to set self.location and used as the base URL for relative URLs in the worker script.
  • If a stylesheet is intercepted, then the final URL is used as the base URL for resolving relative loads.

Note that navigation requests for Window and HTMLIFrameElement do NOT use the final URL. The way the HTML specification handles redirects for navigations ends up using the request URL for the resulting Window.location. This means sites can still provide an "alternate" view of a web page when offline without changing the user-visible URL.

Implementation

external void respondWith(JSPromise<Response> r);