I have this very basic question
I'm striving to understand the Service Worker life cycle, or even better, what in practical terms initialize and change the states.
I got 2 questions right now:
1 - in chrome://inspect/#service-workers
there are always 2 ou 3 lines, showing service workers all running with the same PID. Why? Why not only one?
2- When i inspect my service worker on refresh i got this:
- #566 activated and is running [stop]
- #570 waiting to activate [skipWaiting]
What does that mean? What is 566 and what is 570? I suppose they are instances of the the sw, but why there are two of them? And why 570 is still waiting? What do I have to do to make sure it will be registered-installed-activated?
3- General questions
- What ends the install event in a normal life cycle?
- What fires the activate event in a normal life cycle?
index.html
<script>
if ('serviceWorker' in navigator) {
window.addEventListener('load', function() {
navigator.serviceWorker.register('./sw.js')
.then(function(registration) {
// successful
console.log('Success: ', registration);
}).catch(function(err) {
// registration failed
console.log('Error: ', err);
});
});
}
</script>
sw.js
var cache_name = 'v1';
var cache_files = [
'./',
'./index.html',
'./style.css'
]
self.addEventListener('install', function(e){
console.log('SW install:', e);
e.waitUntil(
caches.open(cache_name)
.then(function(cache){
console.log('cache', cache);
return cache.addAll(cache_files);
})
.then(function(cache){
console.log('Cache completed');
})
)
});
self.addEventListener('activate', function(event) {
console.log('SW activate:', event);
});
self.addEventListener('fetch', function(e){
console.log('SW fetch:', e.request.url)
e.respondWith(
caches.match(e.request)
.then(function(cache_response){
if(cache_response) return cache_response;
return fetch(e.request);
})
.catch(function(err){
console.log('Cache error', err)
})
);
});
Thanks!