Worker: postMessage() method
Note: This feature is available in Web Workers, except for Service Workers.
The postMessage()
method of the Worker
interface sends a message to the worker. The first parameter is the data to send to the worker. The data may be any JavaScript object that can be handled by the structured clone algorithm.
The Worker
postMessage()
method delegates to the MessagePort
postMessage()
method, which adds a task on the event loop corresponding to the receiving MessagePort
.
The Worker
can send back information to the thread that spawned it using the DedicatedWorkerGlobalScope.postMessage
method.
Syntax
postMessage(message)
postMessage(message, transfer)
postMessage(message, options)
Parameters
message
-
The object to deliver to the worker; this will be in the
data
field in the event delivered to themessage
event. This may be any value or JavaScript object handled by the structured clone algorithm, which includes cyclical references.The
message
parameter is mandatory. If the data to be passed to the worker is unimportant,null
orundefined
must be passed explicitly. transfer
Optional-
An optional array of transferable objects to transfer ownership of. The ownership of these objects is given to the destination side and they are no longer usable on the sending side. These transferable objects should be attached to the message; otherwise they would be moved but not actually accessible on the receiving end.
options
Optional-
An optional object containing the following properties:
transfer
Optional-
Has the same meaning as the
transfer
parameter.
Return value
None (undefined
).
Examples
The following code snippet shows the creation of a Worker
object using the Worker()
constructor. When either of two form inputs (first
and second
) have their values changed, change
events invoke postMessage()
to send the value of both inputs to the current worker.
const myWorker = new Worker("worker.js");
first.onchange = () => {
myWorker.postMessage([first.value, second.value]);
console.log("Message posted to worker");
};
second.onchange = () => {
myWorker.postMessage([first.value, second.value]);
console.log("Message posted to worker");
};
For a full example, see our simple worker example (run example).
Note: postMessage()
can only send a single object at once. As seen above, if you want to pass multiple values you can send an array.
Transfer Example
This minimum example has main
create an ArrayBuffer
and transfer it to myWorker
, then has myWorker
transfer it back to main
, with the size logged at each step.
main.js code
// create worker
const myWorker = new Worker("myWorker.js");
// listen for myWorker to transfer the buffer back to main
myWorker.addEventListener("message", function handleMessageFromWorker(msg) {
console.log("message from worker received in main:", msg);
const bufTransferredBackFromWorker = msg.data;
console.log(
"buf.byteLength in main AFTER transfer back from worker:",
bufTransferredBackFromWorker.byteLength,
);
});
// create the buffer
const myBuf = new ArrayBuffer(8);
console.log(
"buf.byteLength in main BEFORE transfer to worker:",
myBuf.byteLength,
);
// send myBuf to myWorker and transfer the underlying ArrayBuffer
myWorker.postMessage(myBuf, [myBuf]);
console.log(
"buf.byteLength in main AFTER transfer to worker:",
myBuf.byteLength,
);
myWorker.js code
// listen for main to transfer the buffer to myWorker
self.onmessage = function handleMessageFromMain(msg) {
console.log("message from main received in worker:", msg);
const bufTransferredFromMain = msg.data;
console.log(
"buf.byteLength in worker BEFORE transfer back to main:",
bufTransferredFromMain.byteLength,
);
// send buf back to main and transfer the underlying ArrayBuffer
self.postMessage(bufTransferredFromMain, [bufTransferredFromMain]);
console.log(
"buf.byteLength in worker AFTER transfer back to main:",
bufTransferredFromMain.byteLength,
);
};
Output logged
buf.byteLength in main BEFORE transfer to worker: 8 main.js:19
buf.byteLength in main AFTER transfer to worker: 0 main.js:27
message from main received in worker: MessageEvent { ... } myWorker.js:3
buf.byteLength in worker BEFORE transfer back to main: 8 myWorker.js:7
buf.byteLength in worker AFTER transfer back to main: 0 myWorker.js:15
message from worker received in main: MessageEvent { ... } main.js:6
buf.byteLength in main AFTER transfer back from worker: 8 main.js:10
byteLength
goes to 0 after the ArrayBuffer
is transferred. For a more sophisticated full working example of ArrayBuffer
transfer, see this Firefox demo add-on: GitHub :: ChromeWorker - demo-transfer-arraybuffer
Specifications
Specification |
---|
HTML Standard # dom-worker-postmessage-dev |
Browser compatibility
BCD tables only load in the browser
See also
- The
Worker
interface it belongs to.