web-worker
Native cross-platform Web Workers. Works in published npm modules.
In Node, it's a web-compatible Worker implementation atop Node's worker_threads.
In the browser (and when bundled for the browser), it's simply an alias of Worker
.
Features
Here's how this is different from workerthreads:_
- makes Worker code compatible across browser and Node
- supports Module Workers (
{type:'module'}
) natively in Node 12.8+ - uses DOM-style events (
Event.data
,Event.type
, etc) - supports event handler properties (
worker.onmessage=..
) Worker()
accepts a module URL, Blob URL or Data URL- emulates browser-style WorkerGlobalScope within the worker
Usage Example
In its simplest form:
import Worker from 'web-worker';
const worker = new Worker('data:,postMessage("hello")');
worker.onmessage = e => console.log(e.data); // "hello"
main.js | worker.js |
---|---|
|
|
👉 Notice how new URL('./worker.js', import.meta.url)
is used above to load the worker relative to the current module instead of the application base URL. Without this, Worker URLs are relative to a document's URL, which in Node.js is interpreted to be process.cwd()
.
Support for this pattern in build tools and test frameworks is still limited. We are working on growing this.
Module Workers
Module Workers are supported in Node 12.8+ using this plugin, leveraging Node's native ES Modules support. In the browser, they can be used natively in Chrome 80+, or in all browsers via worker-plugin or rollup-plugin-off-main-thread. As with classic workers, there is no difference in usage between Node and the browser:
main.mjs | worker.mjs |
---|---|
|
|
Data URLs
Instantiating Worker using a Data URL is supported in both module and classic workers:
import Worker from 'web-worker';
const worker = new Worker(`data:application/javascript,postMessage(42)`);
worker.addEventListener('message', e => {
console.log(e.data) // 42
});
Special Thanks
This module aims to provide a simple and forgettable piece of infrastructure,
and as such it needed an obvious and descriptive name.
@calvinmetcalf, who you may recognize as the author of Lie and other fine modules, gratiously offered up the name from his web-worker
package.
Thanks Calvin!