Dear diary, all I did today was fix 1 bug. I don't know why it happens, but I know how to make it not happen.#engineering — Swizec Teller (@Swizec) August 6, 2016

That was on Friday. I still don’t know why the bug happens, but I can reproduce it. Evidence says it’s a Chrome 52 bug, not a general JavaScript bug. Neither Safari nor Firefox make it happen.

Sometimes when you call .fetch() on a Backbone model, callbacks don’t fire. There’s no JavaScript error, the REST call works, the result is vanished by the browser. Joy of joys.

You need:

Webpack

Babel 6

Backbone (maybe Backbone is doing it wrong?)

A server that can serve JSON files

14 lines of code

I used create-react-app to set up a basic environment, ejected with npm run eject and added some config to Webpack to allow jQuery. Backbone depends on it. This part is not that relevant.

To show the bug itself, we need a Backbone model:

class BugModel extends Backbone . Model { constructor ( ) { super ( ) ; this . url = "bla.json" ; } }

Now I know what you’re thinking, that’s an ES6 object and Backbone was built before ES6. Official docs never mention the new class syntax. The traditional Backbone approach works too:

var BugModel = Backbone . Model . extend ( { url : "bla.json" , } ) ;

The same bug happens. I tried.

To cause the bug, we have to call .fetch() on two instances of BugModel that share the same id . The code looks like this:

let bug = new BugModel ( ) ; bug . fetch ( { success : ( ) => { console . log ( "fetch 1" ) ; doWeirdness ( bug ) ; } , } ) ; function doWeirdness ( bug ) { let newBug = new BugModel ( { id : bug . id } ) ; console . log ( "about to re-fetch" ) ; newBug . fetch ( { success : ( ) => console . log ( "fetch 2" , newBug ) , error : ( ) => console . log ( "error" ) , } ) ; }

We create an instance of BugModel in a variable called bug , then call .fetch() . This makes an API call to /bla.json , which returns a JSON file that looks like this: {"id": 1, "hai": "hello"} .

Backbone automagically parses this JSON string and sets an id and hai attribute. This part works like a charm.

Then we call doWeirdness and pass our bug object as an attribute. Inside doWeirdness , we make a new instance of BugModel called newBug and give it the same id as bug had. This is a crucial step.

When we call fetch on this new instance, the API call happens, but the callbacks do not. 'fetch 2' never prints.

This whole sequence of events might sound redundant, but it made sense in my real codebase. Even if re-fetching objects doesn’t make sense, it should work. It works in both Safari and Firefox.

This smells like a bug in memory optimization. Chrome thinks bug and newBug are the same object, even though they are not.

If you call fetch() twice on the same instance of BugModel , the same bug happens. (clue, part 1)

If both instances have a different id , both fetch calls fire callbacks. (clue, part 2)

Curiously, if you add a third fetch() call, that works.

newBug . fetch ( { success : ( ) => console . log ( "fetch 2" , newBug ) , error : ( ) => console . log ( "error" ) , } ) ; newBug . fetch ( { success : ( ) => console . log ( "fetch 3" ) , } ) ;

The bug didn’t happen in Chrome 51.

I am confused. ?

PS: there is a followup

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Published on August 10th, 2016 in Front End, Technical

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