You can use XHR progress events (if your browser supports them):
https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/DOM/XMLHttpRequest/Using_XMLHttpRequest#Monitoring_progress
https://dvcs.w3.org/hg/progress/raw-file/tip/Overview.html#interface-progressevent
How to check in JavaScript if XMLHttpRequest object supports W3C Progress Events?
But your question is more than simply I have 1000 bytes out of a possible 9999. You want to know exactly how many rows you have read up to that point.
I think you can read xhr.responseText
on each progress event, but only if the request is parseable when incomplete (such as plain text), and also when not using an async request - https://stackoverflow.com/a/5319647/319878.
But for libraries like zip.js
that use non-text binary data with arraybuffer
s when requesting zip content, this will not work, as these requests must be async (http://www.w3.org/TR/XMLHttpRequest/#the-responsetype-attribute). If you try to use xhr.responseText
in this case, you will get an error like this (example from Firefox):
[Exception... "An attempt was made to use an object that is not, or is no longer, usable"
code: "11"
nsresult: "0x8053000b (InvalidStateError)"
location: "http://localhost/xhr-progress-test/test-xhr-on-progress.html Line: 1075"]
So for zipped content (using zip.js
) I think you would have to wait for all of the response to arrive before using it. This is not what you want.
Much simpler would be to modify your server code to return a selection of rows at a time. E.g. rows 1-100, then 101-200, etc.