237

So now that HTML5 introduces history.pushState to change the browsers history, websites start using this in combination with Ajax instead of changing the fragment identifier of the URL.

Sadly that means that those calls cannot be detect anymore by onhashchange.

My question is: Is there a reliable way (hack? ;)) to detect when a website uses history.pushState? The specification does not state anything about events that are raised (at least I couldn't find anything).
I tried to create a facade and replaced window.history with my own JavaScript object, but it didn't have any effect at all.

Further explanation: I'm developing a Firefox add-on that needs to detect these changes and act accordingly.
I know there was a similar question a few days ago that asked whether listening to some DOM events would be efficient but I would rather not rely on that because these events can be generated for a lot of different reasons.

Update:

Here is a jsfiddle (use Firefox 4 or Chrome 8) that shows that onpopstate is not triggered when pushState is called (or am I doing something wrong? Feel free to improve it!).

Update 2:

Another (side) problem is that window.location is not updated when using pushState (but I read about this already here on SO I think).

1

17 Answers 17

250
+400

5.5.9.1 Event definitions

The popstate event is fired in certain cases when navigating to a session history entry.

According to this, there is no reason for popstate to be fired when you use pushState. But an event such as pushstate would come in handy. Because history is a host object, you should be careful with it, but Firefox seems to be nice in this case. This code works just fine:

(function(history){
    var pushState = history.pushState;
    history.pushState = function(state) {
        if (typeof history.onpushstate == "function") {
            history.onpushstate({state: state});
        }
        // ... whatever else you want to do
        // maybe call onhashchange e.handler
        return pushState.apply(history, arguments);
    };
})(window.history);

Your jsfiddle becomes:

window.onpopstate = history.onpushstate = function(e) { ... }

You can monkey-patch window.history.replaceState in the same way.

Note: of course you can add onpushstate simply to the global object, and you can even make it handle more events via add/removeListener

21
  • You said you replaced the whole history object. That may be unnecessary in this case.
    – gblazex
    Jan 3, 2011 at 14:04
  • @galambalazs: Yes probably. Maybe (don't know) window.history is readonly but the properties of the history object are not... Thanks a bunch for this solution :) Jan 3, 2011 at 14:07
  • According to the spec there is a "pagetransition" event, it seems its not Implemented yet. Jan 11, 2011 at 0:08
  • 2
    @user280109 - I would tell you if I knew. :) I think there's no way to do this in Opera atm.
    – gblazex
    Jan 25, 2011 at 12:23
  • 1
    @cprcrack It is for keeping the global scope clean. You have to save the native pushState method for later use. So instead of a global variable I chose to encapsulate the whole code into an IIFE: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Immediately-invoked_function_expression
    – gblazex
    Nov 16, 2013 at 14:55
46

I do this with simple proxy. This is an alternative to prototype

window.history.pushState = new Proxy(window.history.pushState, {
  apply: (target, thisArg, argArray) => {
    // trigger here what you need
    return target.apply(thisArg, argArray);
  },
});
3
  • This worked for me, only had to add my trigger to window.onpopstate to cover the user pressing the back button. Aug 1, 2021 at 22:19
  • 4
    This worked perfectly for me. (I do not need to support IE.) However, just a heads up: this is TypeScript. To convert to pure JavaScript, you'll need to remove the : any on each argument. I'd also note that : any is redundant in TypeScript as well.
    – trlkly
    Dec 18, 2021 at 23:44
  • 4
    I have since found that a slight change. As written, the "triggered" code fires before the change to the page history. This makes it hard to test the new URL. I've since changed the code inside the apply: let output = target.apply(thisArg, argArray); /* trigger code */ return output;
    – trlkly
    Mar 19, 2022 at 10:10
20

Finally found the "correct" (no monkeypatching, no risk of breaking other code) way to do this! It requires adding a privilege to your extension (which, yes person who helpfully pointed this out in the comments, it's for the extension API which is what was asked for) and using the background page (not just a content script), but it does work.

The event you want is browser.webNavigation.onHistoryStateUpdated, which is fired when a page uses the history API to change the URL. It only fires for sites that you have permission to access, and you can also use a URL filter to further cut down on the spam if you need to. It requires the webNavigation permission (and of course host permission for the relevant domain(s)).

The event callback gets the tab ID, the URL that is being "navigated" to, and other such details. If you need to take an action in the content script on that page when the event fires, either inject the relevant script directly from the background page, or have the content script open a port to the background page when it loads, have the background page save that port in a collection indexed by tab ID, and send a message across the relevant port (from the background script to the content script) when the event fires.

2
  • 26
    that API is only available to web extensions and add-ons and is not a normal DOM API, unfortunately
    – ccnokes
    Jan 5, 2021 at 17:35
  • 6
    Correct, but that's what the OP was trying to build as per the question. For purely web stuff, I think you don't have any choice but to wrap the functions and/or events.
    – CBHacking
    Jan 6, 2021 at 6:18
7

I used to use this:

var _wr = function(type) {
    var orig = history[type];
    return function() {
        var rv = orig.apply(this, arguments);
        var e = new Event(type);
        e.arguments = arguments;
        window.dispatchEvent(e);
        return rv;
    };
};
history.pushState = _wr('pushState'), history.replaceState = _wr('replaceState');

window.addEventListener('replaceState', function(e) {
    console.warn('THEY DID IT AGAIN!');
});

It's almost the same as galambalazs did.

It's usually overkill though. And it might not work in all browsers. (I only care about my version of my browser.)

(And it leaves a var _wr, so you might want to wrap it or something. I didn't care about that.)

1
7

Thank @KalanjDjordjeDjordje for his answer. I tried to make his idea a complete solution:

const onChangeState = (state, title, url, isReplace) => { 
    // define your listener here ...
}

// set onChangeState() listener:
['pushState', 'replaceState'].forEach((changeState) => {
    // store original values under underscored keys (`window.history._pushState()` and `window.history._replaceState()`):
    window.history['_' + changeState] = window.history[changeState]
    
    window.history[changeState] = new Proxy(window.history[changeState], {
        apply (target, thisArg, argList) {
            const [state, title, url] = argList
            onChangeState(state, title, url, changeState === 'replaceState')
            
            return target.apply(thisArg, argList)
        },
    })
})
1
  • This + @run-at document-start worked great for my userscript. Thanks! May 28, 2022 at 16:41
6

In addition to other answers. Instead of storing the original function, we can use the History interface.

history.pushState = function()
{
    // ...

    History.prototype.pushState.apply(history, arguments);
}
3

I'd rather not overwrite the native history method so this simple implementation creates my own function called eventedPush state which just dispatches an event and returns history.pushState(). Either way works fine but I find this implementation a bit cleaner as native methods will continue to perform as future developers expect.

function eventedPushState(state, title, url) {
    var pushChangeEvent = new CustomEvent("onpushstate", {
        detail: {
            state,
            title,
            url
        }
    });
    document.dispatchEvent(pushChangeEvent);
    return history.pushState(state, title, url);
}

document.addEventListener(
    "onpushstate",
    function(event) {
        console.log(event.detail);
    },
    false
);

eventedPushState({}, "", "new-slug"); 
0
1

galambalazs's answer monkey patches window.history.pushState and window.history.replaceState, but for some reason it stopped working for me. Here's an alternative that's not as nice because it uses polling:

(function() {
    var previousState = window.history.state;
    setInterval(function() {
        if (previousState !== window.history.state) {
            previousState = window.history.state;
            myCallback();
        }
    }, 100);
})();
5
  • is there an alternative for polling? Jul 12, 2015 at 13:52
  • @SuperUberDuper: see the other answers.
    – Flimm
    Jul 13, 2015 at 9:26
  • 1
    @Flimm Polling is not nice, but ugly. But well, you didn't have choice you said.
    – Yairopro
    Jul 15, 2018 at 10:06
  • This is much better than monkey patching, the monkey patching can be undone by other script and you get NO notifications about it. Nov 26, 2018 at 0:50
  • I don't know why this got downvoted. This is a very viable solution, and works quite well. Sometimes the simplest answer is the best. Jul 16, 2021 at 15:45
1

Since you're asking about a Firefox addon, here's the code that I got to work. Using unsafeWindow is no longer recommended, and errors out when pushState is called from a client script after being modified:

Permission denied to access property history.pushState

Instead, there's an API called exportFunction which allows the function to be injected into window.history like this:

var pushState = history.pushState;

function pushStateHack (state) {
    if (typeof history.onpushstate == "function") {
        history.onpushstate({state: state});
    }

    return pushState.apply(history, arguments);
}

history.onpushstate = function(state) {
    // callback here
}

exportFunction(pushStateHack, unsafeWindow.history, {defineAs: 'pushState', allowCallbacks: true});
1
  • On the last line, you should change unsafeWindow.history, to window.history. It wasn't working for me with unsafeWindow. Apr 19, 2020 at 8:46
1

Well, I see many examples of replacing the pushState property of history but I'm not sure that's a good idea, I'd prefer to create a service event based with a similar API to history that way you can control not only push state but replace state as well and it open doors for many other implementations not relying on global history API. Please check the following example:

function HistoryAPI(history) {
    EventEmitter.call(this);
    this.history = history;
}

HistoryAPI.prototype = utils.inherits(EventEmitter.prototype);

const prototype = {
    pushState: function(state, title, pathname){
        this.emit('pushstate', state, title, pathname);
        this.history.pushState(state, title, pathname);
    },

    replaceState: function(state, title, pathname){
        this.emit('replacestate', state, title, pathname);
        this.history.replaceState(state, title, pathname);
    }
};

Object.keys(prototype).forEach(key => {
    HistoryAPI.prototype = prototype[key];
});

If you need the EventEmitter definition, the code above is based on the NodeJS event emitter: https://github.com/nodejs/node/blob/36732084db9d0ff59b6ce31e839450cd91a156be/lib/events.js. utils.inherits implementation can be found here: https://github.com/nodejs/node/blob/36732084db9d0ff59b6ce31e839450cd91a156be/lib/util.js#L970

2
  • I just edited my answer with the requested information, please check! Nov 9, 2017 at 22:09
  • @VictorQueiroz That a nice & clean idea to encapsulate the functions. But if some third part library calls for pushState, your HistoryApi won't be notified.
    – Yairopro
    Jul 15, 2018 at 10:00
1

I don't think it's an good idea do modify native functions even if you can, and you should always keep your application scope, so an good approach is not using the global pushState function, instead, use one of your own:

function historyEventHandler(state){ 
    // your stuff here
} 

window.onpopstate = history.onpushstate = historyEventHandler

function pushHistory(...args){
    history.pushState(...args)
    historyEventHandler(...args)
}
<button onclick="pushHistory(...)">Go to happy place</button>

Notice that if any other code use the native pushState function, you will not get an event trigger (but if this happens, you should check your code)

0

Based on the solution given by @gblazex, in case you want to follow the same approach, but using arrow functions, follow up the below example in your javascript logic:

private _currentPath:string;    
((history) => {
          //tracks "forward" navigation event
          var pushState = history.pushState;
          history.pushState =(state, key, path) => {
              this._notifyNewUrl(path);
              return pushState.apply(history,[state,key,path]); 
          };
        })(window.history);

//tracks "back" navigation event
window.addEventListener('popstate', (e)=> {
  this._onUrlChange();
});

Then, implement another function _notifyUrl(url) that triggers any required action you may need when the current page url is updated ( even if the page has not been loaded at all )

  private _notifyNewUrl (key:string = window.location.pathname): void {
    this._path=key;
    // trigger whatever you need to do on url changes
    console.debug(`current query: ${this._path}`);
  }
0

Since I just wanted the new URL, I've adapted the codes of @gblazex and @Alberto S. to get this:

(function(history){

  var pushState = history.pushState;
    history.pushState = function(state, key, path) {
    if (typeof history.onpushstate == "function") {
      history.onpushstate({state: state, path: path})
    }
    pushState.apply(history, arguments)
  }
  
  window.onpopstate = history.onpushstate = function(e) {
    console.log(e.path)
  }

})(window.history);
0

Follow up to the answer proposed by @KalanjDjordjeDjordje, my research revealed that window.location.href returns old address if called before target.apply, in this case, its better to do something after a promise with target.apply resolves, e.g.:

    window.history.pushState = new Proxy( window.history.pushState, {
        apply: ( target, thisArg, argArray ) => {
            const promise = new Promise( ( resolve ) => {
                const result = target.apply( thisArg, argArray );
                resolve( result );
            } );

            promise.then( ( ) => {
                    let url = new URL( window.location.href );
                    console.log('new href is now available');
            } );

            return promise;
        },
    } );

Met this problem in Wordpress Site Editor specifically.

-1

You could bind to the window.onpopstate event?

https://developer.mozilla.org/en/DOM%3awindow.onpopstate

From the docs:

An event handler for the popstate event on the window.

A popstate event is dispatched to the window every time the active history entry changes. If the history entry being activated was created by a call to history.pushState() or was affected by a call to history.replaceState(), the popstate event's state property contains a copy of the history entry's state object.

5
  • 10
    I tried this already and the event is only triggered when the users goes back in the history (or any of the history.go, .back) functions are called. But not on pushState. Here is my attempt to test it, maybe I do something wrong: jsfiddle.net/fkling/vV9vd It seems only related in that way that if the history was changed by pushState, the corresponding state object is passed to the event handler when the other methods are called. Jan 2, 2011 at 23:34
  • 2
    Ah. In that case the only thing I can think of is to register a timeout to look at the length of the history stack and fire an event if the stack size has changed.
    – stef
    Jan 2, 2011 at 23:44
  • 1
    Ok this is an interesting idea. The only thing is that the timeout would have to fire often enough so that the user won't notice any (long) delay (I have to load and show data for the new URL). I always try to avoid timeouts and polling where possible, but until now this seems to be the only solution. I will still wait for other proposals. But thank you very much for now! Jan 2, 2011 at 23:55
  • It might be even enough to check the length of the history stick on every click. Jan 3, 2011 at 9:13
  • 1
    Yes - that would work. I've been having a play with this - one issue is the replaceState call which would not throw an event because the size of the stack would not have changed.
    – stef
    Jan 3, 2011 at 9:23
-1

I think this topic needs a more modern solution.

I'm sure nsIWebProgressListener was around back then I'm surprised no one mentioned it.

From a framescript (for e10s compatability):

let webProgress = docShell.QueryInterface(Ci.nsIInterfaceRequestor).getInterface(Ci.nsIWebProgress);
webProgress.addProgressListener(this, Ci.nsIWebProgress.NOTIFY_STATE_WINDOW | Ci.nsIWebProgress.NOTIFY_LOCATION);

Then listening in the onLoacationChange

onLocationChange: function onLocationChange(webProgress, request, locationURI, flags) {
       if (flags & Ci.nsIWebProgressListener.LOCATION_CHANGE_SAME_DOCUMENT

That will apparently catch all pushState's. But there is a comment warning that it "ALSO triggers for pushState". So we need to do some more filtering here to ensure it's just pushstate stuff.

Based on: https://github.com/jgraham/gecko/blob/55d8d9aa7311386ee2dabfccb481684c8920a527/toolkit/modules/addons/WebNavigation.jsm#L18

And: resource://gre/modules/WebNavigationContent.js

2
  • This answer has nothing to do with the comment, unless I'm mistaken. WebProgressListeners are for FF extensions? This question is about HTML5 history
    – Kloar
    Mar 25, 2016 at 23:03
  • @Kloar lets delete these comments please
    – Noitidart
    Mar 26, 2016 at 2:57
-7

As standard states:

Note that just calling history.pushState() or history.replaceState() won't trigger a popstate event. The popstate event is only triggered by doing a browser action such as clicking on the back button (or calling history.back() in JavaScript)

we need to call history.back() to trigeer WindowEventHandlers.onpopstate

So insted of:

history.pushState(...)

do:

history.pushState(...)
history.pushState(...)
history.back()

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