on my first vue project attempting to wrestle with the official PWA plugin ( https://github.com/yyx990803/register-service-worker ). My specific problem: capturing the registered service worker and using it for anything. The github readme shows the exact file that is produced, and there seems to be zero documentation about how to work with this service worker once it is instantiated ( do I capture the registration instance? if so, how? )
I found this issue: https://github.com/vuejs/vue-cli/issues/1481 and am providing a better place to talk about this, as I haven't been able to find any example code or clear documentation about how to work with this.
If anyone has some sample code, please share. Vue and the new cli are incredible tools, documenting things like this is a necessary step forward to increasing the adoption of the platform
Default Service Worker Let's start with adding the Vue/PWA plugin to our Vue app (to generate a new app with the Vue CLI, read the docs over here). This will give you an extra file in the /src directory: registerServiceWorker. js . This file is then imported in main.
Creating a new project with Vue CLI First, install Vue CLI. Choose Manually select features, and you'll see a list of à la carte options for your new app, including Progressive Web App (PWA) Support . Use your arrow keys to move down to that option, and press space to enable it.
mobile · tutorial · vue. Progressive Web Applications (PWA) are a solution that addresses the increased use of native apps, mainly by smartphone technologies. Native apps are software programs developed for use on a particular device or operating system such as Android and iOS.
As already pointed out, it's more of a "service workers" issue than a "vue cli" one. First of all, to make sure we're on the same page, here's what the boilerplate content of registerServiceWorker.js should look like (vue cli 3, official pwa plugin):
import { register } from 'register-service-worker' if (process.env.NODE_ENV === 'production') { register(`${process.env.BASE_URL}service-worker.js`, { ready () { console.log( 'App is being served from cache by a service worker.\n' ) }, cached () { console.log('Content has been cached for offline use.') }, updated () { console.log('New content is available; please refresh.') }, offline () { console.log('No internet connection found. App is running in offline mode.') }, error (error) { console.error('Error during service worker registration:', error) } }) }
If you haven't changed the BASE_URL variable in your .env file, then it should correspond to the root of your vue app. You have to create a file named service-worker.js in the public folder (so that it's copied into your output directory on build).
Now, it is important to understand that all the code in the registerServiceWorker.js file does is register a service worker and provide a few hooks into its lifecycle. Those are typically used for debugging purposes and not to actually program the service worker. You can understand it by noticing that the registerServiceWorker.js file will be bundled into the app.js file and run in the main thread.
The vue-cli 3 official PWA plugin is based on Google's workbox, so to use the service worker, you'll have to first create a file named vue.config.js at the root of your project and copy the following code in it:
// vue.config.js module.exports = { // ...other vue-cli plugin options... pwa: { // configure the workbox plugin workboxPluginMode: 'InjectManifest', workboxOptions: { // swSrc is required in InjectManifest mode. swSrc: 'public/service-worker.js', // ...other Workbox options... } } }
If you already have created a vue.config.js file, then you just have to add the pwa attribute to the config object. Those settings will allow you to create your custom service worker located at public/service-worker.js
and have workbox inject some code in it: the precache manifest. It's a .js file where a list of references to your compiled static assets is stored in a variable typically named self.__precacheManifest
. You have to build your app in production mode in order to make sure that this is the case.
As it is generated automatically by workbox when you build in production mode, the precache manifest is very important for caching your Vue app shell because static assets are usually broken down into chunks at compile time and it would be very tedious for you to reference those chunks in the service worker each time you (re)build the app.
To precache the static assets, you can put this code at the beginning of your service-worker.js
file (you can also use a try/catch statement):
if (workbox) { console.log(`Workbox is loaded`); workbox.precaching.precacheAndRoute(self.__precacheManifest); } else { console.log(`Workbox didn't load`); }
You can then continue programming your service worker normally in the same file, either by using the basic service worker API or by using workbox's API. Of course, don't hesitate to combine the two methods.
I hope it helps !
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