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This specification defines an interoperable means for site developers to asynchronously transfer small HTTP data from the User Agent to a web server.
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The credential mode is now "include" instead of omit.
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This section is non-normative.
The Beacon specification defines an interface that web developers can use to asynchronously transfer small HTTP data from the User Agent to a web server.
The specification addresses the needs of analytics and diagnostics code that typically attempt to send data to a web server prior to the unloading of the document. Sending the data any sooner may result in a missed opportunity to gather data. However, ensuring that the data has been sent during the unloading of a document is something that has traditionally been difficult for developers.
User agents will typically ignore asynchronous XMLHttpRequests made in an unload handler. To solve this problem, analytics and diagnostics code will typically make a synchronous XMLHttpRequest in an unload or beforeunload handler to submit the data. The synchronous XMLHttpRequest forces the User Agent to delay unloading the document, and makes the next navigation appear to be slower. There is nothing the next page can do to avoid this perception of poor page load performance.
There are other techniques used to ensure that data is submitted. One
such technique is to delay the unload in order to submit data by creating
an Image element and setting its src
attribute within the
unload handler. As most user agents will delay the unload to complete the
pending image load, data can be submitted during the unload. Another
technique is to create a no-op loop for several seconds within the unload
handler to delay the unload and submit data to a server.
Not only do these techniques represent poor coding patterns, some of them are unreliable and also result in the perception of poor page load performance for the next navigation.
The following example shows a theoretical analytics code that attempts to submit data to a server by using a synchronous XMLHttpRequest in an unload handler. This results in the unload of the page to be delayed.
window.addEventListener('unload', logData, false); function logData() { var client = new XMLHttpRequest(); client.open("POST", "/log", false); // third parameter indicates sync xhr client.setRequestHeader("Content-Type", "text/plain;charset=UTF-8"); client.send(analyticsData); }
Using the sendBeacon
method, the data
will be transmitted asynchronously to the web server when the User Agent
has had an opportunity to do so, without delaying the unload or affecting
the performance of the next navigation.
The following example shows a theoretical analytics code pattern that
submits data to a server using the by using the sendBeacon
method.
window.addEventListener('unload', logData, false); function logData() { navigator.sendBeacon("/log", analyticsData); }
All diagrams, examples, and notes in this specification are non-normative, as are all sections explicitly marked non-normative. Everything else in this specification is normative.
The key words "MUST", "MUST NOT", "REQUIRED", "SHOULD", "SHOULD NOT", "RECOMMENDED", "MAY", and "OPTIONAL" in the normative parts of this document are to be interpreted as described in [RFC2119]. For readability, these words do not appear in all uppercase letters in this specification.
Requirements phrased in the imperative as part of algorithms (such as "strip any leading space characters" or "return false and abort these steps") are to be interpreted with the meaning of the key word ("must", "should", "may", etc) used in introducing the algorithm.
Some conformance requirements are phrased as requirements on attributes, methods or objects. Such requirements are to be interpreted as requirements on user agents.
Conformance requirements phrased as algorithms or specific steps may be implemented in any manner, so long as the end result is equivalent. (In particular, the algorithms defined in this specification are intended to be easy to follow, and not intended to be performant.)
The following terms are defined in the DOM specification: [DOM]
SyntaxError
error nameThe following terms are defined in the HTML specification: [HTML5]
The following terms are defined in the HTML specification: [FETCH]
Origin
header flagThe following terms are defined in the File API specification: [FILEAPI]
The following terms are defined in the Typed Array specification: [TYPEDARRAY]
ArrayBufferView
interfaceArrayBuffer
interfaceThe following terms are defined in the URL specification: [URL]
The IDL fragments in this specification must be interpreted as required for conforming IDL fragments, as described in the Web IDL specification [WebIDL].
The following terms are defined in the Web IDL specification:
USVString
typeThe following term is defined in the XMLHttpRequest specification: [XMLHttpRequest]
FormData
interfaceThis section is non-normative.
This specification defines an interoperable means for site developers to asynchronously transfer small HTTP data from the User Agent to a web server.
sendBeacon
MethodThe sendBeacon
method transmits data provided by the data
parameter to the URL provided by
the url
parameter. User agents
MUST ignore any entity bodies returned in the response. User agents MAY
close the connection prematurely once they start receiving an entity
body. The User Agent SHOULD transmit data at the earliest available
opportunity, but MAY prioritize the transmission of data lower compared
to other network traffic. The User Agent SHOULD make a best effort
attempt to eventually transmit the data.
url
The url
parameter indicates the URL where the data is
to be transmitted.
data
The data
parameter is the BodyInit data that is
to be transmitted.
The sendBeacon
method returns true if the user agent is able to successfully queue the
data for transfer. Otherwise it returns false.
If the User Agent limits the amount of data that can be queued to be sent using this API and the size of data causes that limit to be exceeded, this method returns false. A return value of true implies the browser has queued the data for transfer. However, since the actual data transfer happens asynchronously, this method does not provide any information whether the data transfer has succeeded or not. The actual data transfer may occur after the page has unloaded. To be still an effective mechanism for developers, the User Agent should make the best effort to transmit the data including making multiple attempts to transmit the data in presence of transient network or server errors, even though it uses POST to transmit the data.
On calling the sendBeacon
method, the
following steps must be run:
Set requestTime to current time.
Set base to the entry settings object's API base URL.
Set origin to the entry settings object's origin.
Set referrer to the entry settings object's' API referrer source's URL if entry settings object's API referrer source is a document, and entry settings object's API referrer source otherwise
Set parsedUrl to the result of the URL parser
steps with url
and base. If the algorithm
returns an error, or if parsedUrl's scheme is not
"http" or "https", throw a
"SyntaxError
" exception and terminate these
steps.
If data is not null and if the user agent limits the amount of data that can be queued to be sent using this API and the size of data causes that limit to be exceeded, terminate these steps and set the return value to false.
If mimeType is not null, append a
Content-Type
header with value mimeType to
headerList. Append a Accept-Language
header
with an appropriate value to headerList. Append a
Accept
header with */*
as the value
to headerList.
sendBeacon()
call, but continue to runs the following
steps. These steps may be run even after the document has
unloaded.Let req be a new request, initialized as follows:
POST
Origin
header flag
Set age to current time minus requestTime
expressed in seconds. If age is non-zero, append a
Beacon-Age
header with value age
to header list field of req.
The Beacon-Age header field is used to communicate the time
delay, measured in seconds, between the time when the request is sent and
the requestTime set when sendBeacon
method is called. The
ABNF (Augmented Backus-Naur Form) syntax for the Beacon-Age header
field is as follows:
Beacon-Age = "Beacon-Age" ":" 1*DIGIT
This section is non-normative.
This specification does not add extra security or privacy considerations in addition to the ones associated with forms submissions in HTML, as noted here.
The permanent message header field registry should be updated with the following registrations ([RFC3864]):
We would like to sincerely thank Jonas Sicking, Ilya Grigorik, James Simonsen, William Chan, Jason Weber, Philippe Le Hegaret, Daniel Austin, Chase Douglas, and others who have helped refine this specification to acknowledge their contributions to this work.