With support for WebAssembly coming into all new major browsers, how can I check whether the current browser which is visiting my website supports it?
3 Answers
There are a few ways that you can detect the presence of WebAssembly. The basic one is to check whether WebAssembly if of type "object" in the global scope, but "global scope" is a tricky thing to get to in different JavaScript environments (main browser thread, worker, node.js).
Doing so is also not technically sufficient because you could have WebAssembly support but be unable to actually compile or instantiate because of CSP (and exactly what CSP disallows isn't standardized yet, work ongoing here).
A conservative check could be as follows:
const supported = (() => {
try {
if (typeof WebAssembly === "object"
&& typeof WebAssembly.instantiate === "function") {
const module = new WebAssembly.Module(Uint8Array.of(0x0, 0x61, 0x73, 0x6d, 0x01, 0x00, 0x00, 0x00));
if (module instanceof WebAssembly.Module)
return new WebAssembly.Instance(module) instanceof WebAssembly.Instance;
}
} catch (e) {
}
return false;
})();
console.log(supported ? "WebAssembly is supported" : "WebAssembly is not supported");
It does the following:
- Check whether
WebAssemblyis accessible in the current scope. If it's not global we don't really care! - See whether it has the
.instantiatefunction, which we don't actually use here but which you'd want to use when you actually instantiate because it's asynchronous and can handle large modules on the main thread or off. - Try to synchronously compile the smallest possible module (magic number
'\0', 'a', 's', 'm', followed by version number 1 encoded as auint32), and see if we get aWebAssembly.Moduleout of it. - Finally, try to synchronously instantiate that module, and check that it's a
WebAssembly.Instance.
This is a bit much but should work regardless of:
- Where code is running (main thread, worker, node.js).
- How CSP ends up being standardized.
-
Threw a quick test together and this test took 1 ms, can't beat that with a baseball bat– DexygenNov 30, 2018 at 1:00
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@GeorgeJempty I just ran it on JSBench, and I get at least 20x that on Safari, 6x that on Chrome. If it actually becomes a bottleneck on the web, browsers will optimize it. Dec 11, 2018 at 0:37
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Odd, the html code from this doesn't say not supported(in red) on Chromium
74.0.3729.169-2(on Arch Linux), but does so on Firefox; while this answer's code says not supported on both. I did find it odd also that protonmail works with webassembly disabled on Chromium though, I guess maybe it's not disabled anymore via:--disable-asm-webassembly --disable-features=AsmJsToWebAssembly --disable-features=WebAssembly,WebAssemblyStreaming– user11509478May 29, 2019 at 15:10 -
The
Hello worldexample from here also works on chromium74.0.3729.169-2(but not on firefox). I guess WebAssembly can't be disabled on chromium anymore, but it can be disabled on Firefox69.0a1 (2019-05-26) (64-bit).– user11509478May 29, 2019 at 15:34 -
Ok, chromium webassembly can be disabled via
--js-flags=--noexpose_wasm, source– user11509478May 29, 2019 at 15:39
(Insufficent reputation to comment so....)
If you're testing on older browsers the () => syntax is not supported, so it can be done as a function all instead:
function wasmSupported() {
// try/catch, return false; as in JF Bastien's answer
}
if(wasmSupported()) { ... }
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But if youre testing on older browsers WebAssembly certainly isnt supported anyways? Feb 20, 2021 at 17:56
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@pacukluka I'm assuming in most cases that the
ifcomes with anelsein practice to let end users know what's going wrong with the webpage. May 23, 2021 at 5:16
In case it helps, I've just found Google Chrome Labs' "wasm-feature-detect" library:
https://github.com/GoogleChromeLabs/wasm-feature-detect
It's used to power the "Your browser" column at https://webassembly.org/roadmap/
HTH.