Window: fetchLater() method
Limited availability
This feature is not Baseline because it does not work in some of the most widely-used browsers.
Experimental: This is an experimental technology
Check the Browser compatibility table carefully before using this in production.
The fetchLater() method of the Window interface creates a deferred fetch.
A fetchLater() request is sent once the page is navigated away from (it is destroyed or enters the bfcache), or after a provided activateAfter timeout — whichever comes first.
The fetchLater() methods returns a FetchLaterResult object containing a single activated value stating whether the request has been sent yet. Note the method does not return the result of the actual fetch when that happens (since it is often sent after the document has been destroyed) and the whole response of the fetch, including body and headers, is ignored.
Requests whose body is a ReadableStream cannot be deferred.
The fetchLater() method is controlled by the connect-src Content Security Policy directive rather than the directive of the retrieved resources.
Syntax
fetchLater(resource)
fetchLater(resource, options)
Parameters
The fetchLater() method takes all the same parameters as fetch(), but with one additional activateAfter option.
resource-
This defines the resource that you wish to fetch. Identical to
fetch(), this can either be:- A string or any other object with a stringifier — including a
URLobject — that provides the URL of the resource you want to fetch. The URL may be relative to the base URL, which is the document'sbaseURIin a window context. - A
Requestobject.
- A string or any other object with a stringifier — including a
optionsOptional-
A
DeferredRequestInitobject containing any custom settings that you want to apply to the request, including anactivateAftertimeout value that defines how long the result should be deferred for before sending.
Exceptions
The same exceptions for fetch() can be raised for fetchLater(), along with the following additional exceptions:
QuotaExceededError-
Use of this feature was blocked due to exceeding the available quota. See
fetchLater()quotas for more details. Callers offetchLater()should be defensive and catchQuotaExceededErrorerrors in almost all cases, especially if they are embedding third-party JavaScript. RangeErrorDOMException-
Thrown when a negative
activateAftervalue is specified. TypeErrorDOMException-
In addition to the reasons for
fetch(), this exception will also be thrown for aReadableStreamrequest (which cannot be deferred) or for use of untrustworthy URLs (such ashttp://).
Return value
A FetchLaterResult containing an activated boolean property indicating if the request has been sent yet.
Note: Once the fetch request is sent, its response — including the body and headers — is not made available and will be ignored.
Examples
The fetchLater() quotas article provides examples of how the quotas are applied.
Defer a GET request until the page is navigated away from or closed
fetchLater("/send_beacon");
Defer a POST request for around one minute
In this example we create a Request, and provide an activateAfter value to delay sending the request for 60,000 milliseconds (or one minute):
fetchLater("/send_beacon", {
method: "POST",
body: getBeaconData(),
activateAfter: 60000, // 1 minute
});
Note: The actual sending time is unknown, as the browser may wait for a longer or shorter period of time, for example to optimize batching of deferred fetches.
Defer a POST request for around one minute with a try/catch
The same example as above, but the best practice is to enclose this in a try/catch:
try {
fetchLater("/send_beacon", {
method: "POST",
body: getBeaconData(),
activateAfter: 60000, // 1 minute
});
} catch (e) {
if (e instanceof QuotaExceededError) {
// Handle the quota error
} else {
// Handle other errors
}
}
Defer a POST request for around one minute and create a function to check if sent
const result = fetchLater("https://report.example.com", {
method: "POST",
body: JSON.stringify(myReport),
activateAfter: 60000 /* 1 minute */,
});
function checkIfFetched() {
return result.activated;
}
Update a pending request
In this example we use an AbortController to cancel and recreate the request:
let beaconResult = null;
let beaconAbort = null;
function updateBeacon(data) {
const pending = !beaconResult || !beaconResult.activated;
if (pending && beaconAbort) {
beaconAbort.abort();
}
createBeacon(data);
}
function createBeacon(data) {
if (beaconResult && !beaconResult.activated) {
// Avoid creating duplicated beacon if the previous one is still pending.
return;
}
beaconAbort = new AbortController();
beaconResult = fetchLater({
url: data,
signal: beaconAbort.signal,
});
}
Invalid examples
Any of the following calls to fetchLater() would throw:
// Only potentially trustworthy URLs are supported
fetchLater("http://untrusted.example.com");
// The length of the deferred request has to be known
fetchLater("https://origin.example.com", { body: someDynamicStream });
// Deferred fetching only works on active windows
const detachedWindow = iframe.contentWindow;
iframe.remove();
detachedWindow.fetchLater("https://origin.example.com");
Specifications
| Specification |
|---|
| Fetch> # deferred-fetch> |
Browser compatibility
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