I'm testing under Chrome Version 42.0.2311.152m and I want to implement to open a window on a notificationclick like in this example: (source: https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/API/WindowClient )
self.addEventListener('notificationclick', function(event) {
console.log('On notification click: ', event.notification.tag);
event.notification.close();
// This looks to see if the current is already open and
// focuses if it is
event.waitUntil(clients.matchAll({
type: "window"
}).then(function(clientList) {
for (var i = 0; i < clientList.length; i++) {
var client = clientList[i];
if (client.url == '/' && 'focus' in client)
return client.focus();
}
if (clients.openWindow)
return clients.openWindow('/');
}));
});
My filestructure is like:
https://myurl.no-ip.org/app/index.html
https://myurl.no-ip.org/app/manifest.json
https://myurl.no-ip.org/app/service-worker.js
I have the issue that I always get an
InvalidAccessError
when calling clients.openWindow('/') or clients.openWindow('https://myurl.no-ip.org/app/index.html') in the service-worker.js, I receive the error:
{code: 15,
message: "Not allowed to open a window.",
name: "InvalidAccessError"}
The "return client.focus()" line is never reached because the client.url is never just '/'. Looking at
clients.matchAll({type: "window"})
.then(function (clientList) {
console.log(clientList[0])});
I see my current WindowClient:
{focused: false,
frameType: "top-level",
url: "https://myurl.no-ip.org/app/index.html",
visibilityState: "hidden" }
The properties 'focused' and 'visibilityState' are correct and change correctly.
By doing a manual focus call
clients.matchAll({type: "window"})
.then(function (clientList) {
clientList[0].focus()});
I receive the error:
{code: 15,
message: "Not allowed to focus a window.",
name: "InvalidAccessError"}
I think the problem is that url is not just '/'. Do you have any ideas for that?
Thank you very much!
Best regards
Andi
Your code works fine for me, so I'll explain the requirements for using openWindow
/ focus
, and how you can avoid the "Not allowed to [open|focus] a window" error message.
clients.openWindow()
and windowClient.focus()
are only allowed after clicking the notification (in Chrome 47 at least), and at most one of these methods can be called, for the duration of the click handler. This behavior was specified in https://github.com/slightlyoff/ServiceWorker/issues/602.
If your openWindow
/ focus
call is rejected with error message
"Not allowed to open a window." for
openWindow
"Not allowed to focus a window." forfocus
then you didn't satisfy the requirements of openWindow
/ focus
. For example (all points also apply to focus
, not just openWindow
).
openWindow
was called while the notification wasn't clicked.openWindow
was called after the notificationclick
handler returned, and you did not call event.waitUntil
with a promise.openWindow
was called after the promise passed to event.waitUntil
was resolved.openWindow
expired.It is really necessary that openWindow
/ focus
is called at most once, and before the notificationclick
handler finishes.
As I said before, the code in the question works, so I'll show another annotated example.
// serviceworker.js
self.addEventListener('notificationclick', function(event) {
// Close notification.
event.notification.close();
// Example: Open window after 3 seconds.
// (doing so is a terrible user experience by the way, because
// the user is left wondering what happens for 3 seconds.)
var promise = new Promise(function(resolve) {
setTimeout(resolve, 3000);
}).then(function() {
// return the promise returned by openWindow, just in case.
// Opening any origin only works in Chrome 43+.
return clients.openWindow('https://example.com');
});
// Now wait for the promise to keep the permission alive.
event.waitUntil(promise);
});
index.html
<button id="show-notification-btn">Show notification</button>
<script>
navigator.serviceWorker.register('serviceworker.js');
document.getElementById('show-notification-btn').onclick = function() {
Notification.requestPermission(function(result) {
// result = 'allowed' / 'denied' / 'default'
if (result !== 'denied') {
navigator.serviceWorker.ready.then(function(registration) {
// Show notification. If the user clicks on this
// notification, then "notificationclick" is fired.
registration.showNotification('Test');
});
}
});
}
</script>
PS. Service workers are still in development, so it's worth mentioning that I've verified that the above remarks are correct in Chrome 49, and that the example works in Chrome 43+ (and opening /
instead of https://example.com
also works in Chrome 42).