# WebExtension `browser` API Polyfill [![Build Status](https://travis-ci.org/mozilla/webextension-polyfill.svg?branch=master)](https://travis-ci.org/mozilla/webextension-polyfill) This library allows extensions written for the Promise-based WebExtension/BrowserExt API being standardized by the [W3 Browser Extensions][w3-browserext] group to be used without modification in Google Chrome. [w3-browserext]: https://www.w3.org/community/browserext/ Table of contents ================= * [Building](#building) * [Basic Setup](#basic-setup) * [Using the Promise-based APIs](#using-the-promise-based-apis) * [Examples](#examples) ## Building To build, assuming you're already installed [node >= 6](https://nodejs.org) and [npm](https://www.npmjs.com/), simply run: ```sh npm install npm run build npm run test ``` This will install all the npm dependencies and build both non-minified and minified versions of the final library, and output them to `dist/browser-polyfill.js` and `dist/browser-polyfill.min.js`, respectively, and finally executes the unit tests on the generated dist files. ## Basic Setup In order to use the polyfill, it must be loaded into any context where `browser` APIs are accessed. The most common cases are background and content scripts, which can be specified in `manifest.json`: ```javascript { // ... "background": { "scripts": [ "browser-polyfill.js", "background.js" ] }, "content_scripts": [{ // ... "js": [ "browser-polyfill.js", "content.js" ] }] } ``` For HTML documents, such as `browserAction` popups, or tab pages, it must be included more explicitly: ```html ``` And for dynamically-injected content scripts loaded by `tabs.executeScript`, it must be injected by a separate `executeScript` call, unless it has already been loaded via a `content_scripts` declaration in `manifest.json`: ```javascript browser.tabs.executeScript({file: "browser-polyfill.js"}); browser.tabs.executeScript({file: "content.js"}).then(result => { // ... }); ``` ## Using the Promise-based APIs The Promise-based APIs in the `browser` namespace work, for the most part, very similarly to the callback-based APIs in Chrome's `chrome` namespace. The major differences are: * Rather than receiving a callback argument, every async function returns a `Promise` object, which resolves or rejects when the operation completes. * Rather than checking the `chrome.runtime.lastError` property from every callback, code which needs to explicitly deal with errors registers a separate Promise rejection handler. * Rather than receiving a `sendResponse` callback to send a response, `onMessage` listeners simply return a Promise whose resolution value is used as a reply. * Rather than nesting callbacks when a sequence of operations depend on each other, Promise chaining is generally used instead. * For users of an ES7 transpiler, such as Babel, the resulting Promises are generally used with `async` and `await`, rather than dealt with directly. ## Examples The following code will retrieve a list of URLs patterns from the `storage` API, retrieve a list of tabs which match any of them, reload each of those tabs, and notify the user that is has been done: ```javascript browser.storage.get("urls").then(({urls}) => { return browser.tabs.query({url: urls}); }).then(tabs => { return Promise.all( Array.from(tabs, tab => browser.tabs.reload(tab.id))); ); }).then(() => { return browser.notifications.create({ type: "basic", iconUrl: "icon.png", title: "Tabs reloaded", message: "Your tabs have been reloaded", }); }).catch(error => { console.error(`An error occurred while reloading tabs: ${error.message}`); }); ``` Or, using an async function: ```javascript async function reloadTabs() { try { let {urls} = await browser.storage.get("urls"); let tabs = await browser.tabs.query({url: urls}); await Promise.all( Array.from(tabs, tab => browser.tabs.reload(tab.id))); ); await browser.notifications.create({ type: "basic", iconUrl: "icon.png", title: "Tabs reloaded", message: "Your tabs have been reloaded", }); } catch (error) { console.error(`An error occurred while reloading tabs: ${error.message}`); } } ``` It's also possible to use Promises effectively using two-way messaging. Communication between a background page and a tab content script, for example, looks something like this from the background page side: ```javascript browser.tabs.sendMessage("get-ids").then(results => { processResults(results); }); ``` And like this from the content script: ```javascript browser.runtime.onMessage.addListener(msg => { if (msg == "get-ids") { return browser.storage.get("idPattern").then(({idPattern}) => { return Array.from(document.querySelectorAll(idPattern), elem => elem.textContent); }); } }); ``` or: ```javascript browser.runtime.onMessage.addListener(async function(msg) { if (msg == "get-ids") { let {idPattern} = await browser.storage.get("idPattern"); return Array.from(document.querySelectorAll(idPattern), elem => elem.textContent); } }); ``` Or vice versa.