Cache API

The awesome ServiceWorker API is meant to give developers a bit more control over what is and isn't cached, and how. Sure we can play games with ETags and the like but doing it programmatically with JavaScript just feels better, more controllable. As with every API, however, adding stuff to cache isn't just fun and games -- you have to do the cleanup work yourself too, and by "cleanup work" I mean having to delete cache.

Let's have a look at how you can get caches, add and delete requests from caches, and how you can then delete an entire cache!

Detecting the cache API

To detect if the browser supports the Cache API...

if('caches' in window) { // Has support! }

...check for the presence of the caches object within the window .

Creating a Cache

Creating a cache requires a caches.open call with a cache name:

caches.open('test-cache').then(function(cache) { // Cache is created and accessible });

The caches.open call returns a Promise and the cache object that was either created or existed before the open call.

Adding to Cache

You can think of a cache as an array of Request objects which act as keys to their responses which are stored by the browser. Simple addition to cache is happens via two main methods: add and addAll . You can provide these methods a string for the URL that should be fetched and cached or a Request object. You can learn more about Request objects by reading my fetch API post.

To batch add URLs to cache, you can use the addAll method:

caches.open('test-cache').then(function(cache) { cache.addAll(['/', '/images/logo.png']) .then(function() { // Cached! }); });

The addAll method accepts an array of URLs whose URLs and responses should be cached. addAll returns a Promise. To add a single URL, use the add method:

caches.open('test-cache').then(function(cache) { cache.add('/page/1'); // "/page/1" URL will be fetched and cached! });

add can also accept a custom Request :

caches.open('test-cache').then(function(cache) { cache.add(new Request('/page/1', { /* request options */ })); });

Similar to add is put whereby you can add a URL and its Response object:

fetch('/page/1').then(function(response) { return caches.open('test-cache').then(function(cache) { return cache.put('/page/1', response); }); });

Exploring Cache

To view requests that have already been cached, you can use the individual cache's keys method to retrieve an array of cached Request objects:

caches.open('test-cache').then(function(cache) { cache.keys().then(function(cachedRequests) { console.log(cachedRequests); // [Request, Request] }); }); /* Request { bodyUsed: false credentials: "omit" headers: Headers integrity: "" method: "GET" mode: "no-cors" redirect: "follow" referrer: "" url: "https://fullhost.tld/images/logo.png" } */

If you'd like to view the response of a cached Request , you can do so by using cache.match or cache.matchAll :

caches.open('test-cache').then(function(cache) { cache.match('/page/1').then(function(matchedResponse) { console.log(matchedResponse); }); }); /* Response { body: (...), bodyUsed: false, headers: Headers, ok: true, status: 200, statusText: "OK", type: "basic", url: "https://davidwalsh.name/page/1" } */

You can learn more about Response objects by reading my fetch API post.

Removing a Cached Request

To remove a request from cache, use the cache's delete method:

caches.open('test-cache').then(function(cache) { cache.delete('/page/1'); });

The cache will no longer contain /page/1 !

Getting Existing Cache Names

To get the names of existing caches, use caches.keys :

caches.keys().then(function(cacheKeys) { console.log(cacheKeys); // ex: ["test-cache"] });

window.caches.keys() again returns a promise.

Deleting A Cache

Deleting a cache is simple once you have cache key name:

caches.delete('test-cache').then(function() { console.log('Cache successfully deleted!'); });

You'll often delete a cache when you're replacing with a new one (to trigger re-installation of a new service worker):

// Assuming `CACHE_NAME` is the newest name // Time to clean up the old! var CACHE_NAME = 'version-8'; // ... caches.keys().then(function(cacheNames) { return Promise.all( cacheNames.map(function(cacheName) { if(cacheName != CACHE_NAME) { return caches.delete(cacheName); } }) ); });

You'll want to keep these snippets in your toolbox for when you look to become a service worker expert. Chrome and Firefox now have service worker support so you'll be seeing many more sites/apps available (reliably) offline and loading at much faster rates. Enjoy!