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Building an Offline Page for theguardian.com — ...

Building an Offline Page for theguardian.com — JSConf Budapest, May 2016

You’re on a train to work and you open up the Guardian app on your phone. A tunnel surrounds you, but the app still works in very much the same way as it usually would—despite your lack of internet connection, you still get the full experience, only the content shown will be stale. If you tried the same for the Guardian website, however, it wouldn’t load at all. Native apps have long had the tools to deal with these situations, in order to deliver rich user experiences whatever the user’s situation may be. With service workers, the web is catching up. This talk will explain how Oliver used service workers to build an offline page for theguardian.com.

Oliver Joseph Ash

May 14, 2016
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Transcript

  1. • Content is cached • Experience: • offline: stale content

    remains • server down: stale content remains • poor connection: stale while revalidate • good connection: stale while revalidate Native app
  2. Experience: • offline: nothing • server down: nothing • poor

    connection: white screen of death • good connection: new content Website
  3. What is a service worker? • Script that runs in

    the background • Useful for features with no user interaction, e.g.: • listen to push events, useful for pushing notifications • intercept and handle network requests • future: • background sync • alarms (e.g. reminders) • geofencing • A progressive enhancement • Trusted origins only (HTTPS, localhost) • Chrome, Opera, and Firefox stable
  4. 1 2

  5. var version = 1; var staticCacheName = 'static' + version;

    var updateCache = function () { return caches.open(staticCacheName) .then(function (cache) { return cache.addAll([ '/offline-page', '/assets/css/main.css', '/assets/js/main.js' ]); }); }; self.addEventListener('install', function (event) { event.waitUntil(updateCache()); }); • install event: get ready! • Cache the assets needed later • Version the cache
  6. 1 2

  7. const staticCacheName = 'static'; const version = 1; const updateCache

    = () => ( caches.open(staticCacheName + version) .then(cache => cache.addAll([ '/offline-page.html', '/assets/css/main.css', '/assets/js/main.js' ]); ); ); self.addEventListener('install', function (event) { event.waitUntil(updateCache()); }); self.addEventListener('fetch', function (event) { event.respondWith(fetch(event.request)); }); • Default: just fetch • Override default • Intercept network requests to: • fetch from the network • read from the cache • construct your own response fetch events
  8. • e.g., use templating to construct a HTML response from

    JSON Service worker: custom responses self.addEventListener('fetch', function (event) { var responseBody = '<h1>Hello, World!</h1>'; var responseOptions = { headers: { 'Content-Type': 'text/html' } }; var response = new Response( responseBody, responseOptions ); event.respondWith(response); });
  9. var doesRequestAcceptHtml = function (request) { return request.headers.get('Accept') .split(',') .some(function

    (type) { return type === ‘text/html’; }); }; self.addEventListener('fetch', function (event) { var request = event.request; if (doesRequestAcceptHtml(request)) { event.respondWith(fetch(request)); } });
  10. self.addEventListener('fetch', function (event) { var request = event.request; if (doesRequestAcceptHtml(request))

    { event.respondWith( fetch(request).catch(function () { return caches.match('/offline-page'); }) ); } });
  11. self.addEventListener('fetch', function (event) { var request = event.request; if (doesRequestAcceptHtml(request))

    { event.respondWith( fetch(request).catch(function () { return caches.match('/offline-page'); }) ); } else { event.respondWith( caches.match(request) ); } });
  12. self.addEventListener('fetch', function (event) { var request = event.request; if (doesRequestAcceptHtml(request))

    { event.respondWith( fetch(request).catch(function () { return caches.match('/offline-page'); }) ); } else { event.respondWith( caches.match(request).then(function (response) { return response || fetch(request); }) ); } });
  13. var version = 1; var cacheNameSuffix = 'static' + '-'

    + version; var getISODate = function () { return new Date().toISOString().split('T')[0]; }; var getCacheName = function () { return getISODate() + '-' + cacheNameSuffix; }; var isLatestCacheName = function (key) { return key === getCacheName(); }; var deleteOldCaches = function () { var getOldCacheKeys = function () { return caches.keys().then(function (keys) { return keys.filter(function (key) { return !isLatestCacheName(key); }); }); }; return getOldCacheKeys().then(function (oldCacheKeys) { return Promise.all(oldCacheKeys.map(function (key) { return caches.delete(key); })); }); }; var isCacheUpdated = function () { return caches.keys().then(function (keys) { return keys.some(isLatestCacheName); }); }; isCacheUpdated().then(function (isUpdated) { if (!isUpdated) { updateCache().then(deleteOldCaches); } }); // <normal fetch handling code>
  14. Future usages of service worker on theguardian.com • Offline page

    will increase in significance • Offline page can be extended • show stale content, like native apps • show personalised content, downloaded ahead of time • show content that has been “saved for later” • Go fully offline-first
  15. Offline-first • Instantly respond to navigations with a “shell” •

    Improves the experience for users with poor connections • No more white screen of death • Show stale content whilst fetching new content
  16. Problems and caveats • Browser bugs in both Chrome and

    Firefox • Interleaving of versions in CDN cache
  17. 0 60 120 Seconds /v1.css TTL: 1 year /v2.css TTL:

    1 year /offline-page.html TTL: 60 seconds /service-worker.js TTL: 60 seconds v1 v2 v1 v2 Deploy
  18. Why? Is this valuable? • Fun • Insignificant usage due

    to HTTPS/browser support • … but good to plant the seed • Iron out browser bugs, pushes the web forward
  19. “If we only use features that work in IE8, we're

    condemning ourselves to live in an IE8 world.” — Nolan Lawson
  20. Conclusion • Service workers allow us to progressively enhance the

    experience for: • offline users • users with poor connections • It’s easy to build an offline page • A simple offline page is a good place to start