1 <p> 2 An <code>Event</code> is an object 3 that allows you to be notified 4 when something interesting happens. 5 Here's an example of using the 6 <code>chrome.tabs.onCreated</code> event 7 to be notified whenever there's a new tab: 8 </p> 9 10 <pre> 11 chrome.tabs.onCreated.<b>addListener(function(</b>tab<b>) {</b> 12 appendToLog('tabs.onCreated --' 13 + ' window: ' + tab.windowId 14 + ' tab: ' + tab.id 15 + ' index: ' + tab.index 16 + ' url: ' + tab.url); 17 <b>});</b> 18 </pre> 19 20 <p> 21 As the example shows, 22 you register for notification using <code>addListener()</code>. 23 The argument to <code>addListener()</code> 24 is always a function that you define to handle the event, 25 but the parameters to the function depend on 26 which event you're handling. 27 Checking the documentation for 28 $ref:tabs.onCreated, 29 you can see that the function has a single parameter: 30 a $ref:tabs.Tab object 31 that has details about the newly created tab. 32 </p> 33 34 35 {{^is_apps}} 36 <div class="doc-family extensions"> 37 <h2 id="declarative">Declarative Event Handlers</h2> 38 39 <p> 40 The declarative event handlers provide a means to define rules consisting of 41 declarative conditions and actions. Conditions are evaluated in the browser 42 rather than the JavaScript engine which reduces roundtrip latencies and allows 43 for very high efficiency. 44 </p> 45 46 <p>Declarative event handlers are used for example in the <a 47 href="declarativeWebRequest.html">Declarative Web Request API</a> and possibly 48 further extension APIs in the future. This page describes the underlying 49 concepts of all declarative event handlers. 50 </p> 51 52 <h3 id="rules">Rules</h3> 53 54 <p>The simplest possible rule consists of one or more conditions and one or more 55 actions:</p> 56 <pre> 57 var rule = { 58 conditions: [ /* my conditions */ ], 59 actions: [ /* my actions */ ] 60 }; 61 </pre> 62 63 <p>If any of the conditions is fulfilled, all actions are executed.</p> 64 65 <p>In addition to conditions and actions you may give each rule an identifier, 66 which simplifies unregistering previously registered rules, and a priority to 67 define precedences among rules. Priorities are only considered if rules conflict 68 each other or need to be executed in a specific order. Actions are executed in 69 descending order of the priority of their rules.</p> 70 71 <pre> 72 var rule = { 73 id: "my rule", // optional, will be generated if not set. 74 priority: 100, // optional, defaults to 100. 75 conditions: [ /* my conditions */ ], 76 actions: [ /* my actions */ ] 77 }; 78 </pre> 79 80 <h3 id="eventobjects">Event objects</h3> 81 82 <p> 83 <a href="events.html">Event objects</a> may support rules. These event objects 84 don't call a callback function when events happen but test whether any 85 registered rule has at least one fulfilled condition and execute the actions 86 associated with this rule. Event objects supporting the declarative API have 87 three relevant methods: $ref:events.Event.addRules, 88 $ref:events.Event.removeRules, and 89 $ref:events.Event.getRules. 90 </p> 91 92 <h3 id="addingrules">Adding rules</h3> 93 94 <p> 95 To add rules call the <code>addRules()</code> function of the event object. It 96 takes an array of rule instances as its first parameter and a callback function 97 that is called on completion. 98 </p> 99 100 <pre> 101 var rule_list = [rule1, rule2, ...]; 102 function addRules(rule_list, function callback(details) {...}); 103 </pre> 104 105 <p> 106 If the rules were inserted successfully, the <code>details</code> parameter 107 contains an array of inserted rules appearing in the same order as in the passed 108 <code>rule_list</code> where the optional parameters <code>id</code> and 109 <code>priority</code> were filled with the generated values. If any rule is 110 invalid, e.g., because it contained an invalid condition or action, none of the 111 rules are added and the 112 $ref:runtime.lastError variable is set when 113 the callback function is called. Each rule in <code>rule_list</code> must 114 contain a unique identifier that is not currently used by another rule or an 115 empty identifier. 116 </p> 117 118 <p class="note"> 119 <strong>Note:</strong> Rules are persistent across browsing sessions. Therefore, 120 you should install rules during extension installation time using the 121 <code>$ref:runtime.onInstalled</code> 122 event. Note that this event is also triggered when an extension is updated. 123 Therefore, you should first clear previously installed rules and then register 124 new rules. 125 </p> 126 127 <h3 id="removingrules">Removing rules</h3> 128 129 <p> 130 To remove rules call the <code>removeRules()</code> function. It accepts an 131 optional array of rule identifiers as its first parameter and a callback 132 function as its second parameter. 133 </p> 134 135 <pre> 136 var rule_ids = ["id1", "id2", ...]; 137 function removeRules(rule_ids, function callback() {...}); 138 </pre> 139 140 <p> 141 If <code>rule_ids</code> is an array of identifiers, all rules having 142 identifiers listed in the array are removed. If <code>rule_ids</code> lists an 143 identifier, that is unknown, this identifier is silently ignored. If 144 <code>rule_ids</code> is <code>undefined</code>, all registered rules of this 145 extension are removed. The <code>callback()</code> function is called when the 146 rules were removed. 147 </p> 148 149 <h3 id="retrievingrules">Retrieving rules</h3> 150 151 <p> 152 To retrieve a list of currently registered rules, call the 153 <code>getRules()</code> function. It accepts an optional array of rule 154 identifiers with the same semantics as <code>removeRules</code> and a callback 155 function. 156 </p> 157 158 <pre> 159 var rule_ids = ["id1", "id2", ...]; 160 function getRules(rule_ids, function callback(details) {...}); 161 </pre> 162 163 <p> 164 The <code>details</code> parameter passed to the <code>callback()</code> function 165 refers to an array of rules including filled optional parameters. 166 </p> 167 168 <h3 id="performance">Performance</h3> 169 170 <p> 171 To achieve maximum performance, you should keep the following guidelines in 172 mind: 173 <ul> 174 <li><p>Register and unregister rules in bulk. After each 175 registration or unregistration, Chrome needs to update internal data 176 structures. This update is an expensive operation.</p> 177 <p>Instead of</p> 178 <pre> 179 var rule1 = {...}; 180 var rule2 = {...}; 181 chrome.declarativeWebRequest.onRequest.addRules([rule1]); 182 chrome.declarativeWebRequest.onRequest.addRules([rule2]);</pre> 183 <p>prefer to write</p> 184 <pre> 185 var rule1 = {...}; 186 var rule2 = {...}; 187 chrome.declarativeWebRequest.onRequest.addRules([rule1, rule2]);</pre> 188 <li>Prefer substring matching over matching using regular expressions in a 189 $ref:events.UrlFilter. Substring based matching is extremely fast. 190 <p>Instead of</p> 191 <pre> 192 var match = new chrome.declarativeWebRequest.RequestMatcher({ 193 url: {urlMatches: "example.com/[^?]*foo" } });</pre> 194 <p>prefer to write</p> 195 <pre> 196 var match = new chrome.declarativeWebRequest.RequestMatcher({ 197 url: {hostSuffix: "example.com", pathContains: "foo"} });</pre> 198 <li>If you have many rules that all share the same actions, you may merge 199 the rules into one because rules trigger their actions as soon as a single 200 condition is fulfilled. This speeds up the matching and reduces memory 201 consumption for duplicate action sets. 202 <p>Instead of</p> 203 <pre> 204 var condition1 = new chrome.declarativeWebRequest.RequestMatcher({ 205 url: { hostSuffix: 'example.com' } }); 206 var condition2 = new chrome.declarativeWebRequest.RequestMatcher({ 207 url: { hostSuffix: 'foobar.com' } }); 208 var rule1 = { conditions: [condition1], 209 actions: [new chrome.declarativeWebRequest.CancelRequest()]}; 210 var rule2 = { conditions: [condition2], 211 actions: [new chrome.declarativeWebRequest.CancelRequest()]}; 212 chrome.declarativeWebRequest.onRequest.addRules([rule1, rule2]);</pre> 213 <p>prefer to write</p> 214 <pre> 215 var rule = { conditions: [condition1, condition2], 216 actions: [new chrome.declarativeWebRequest.CancelRequest()]}; 217 chrome.declarativeWebRequest.onRequest.addRules([rule]);</pre> 218 </ul> 219 </p> 220 </div> 221 {{/is_apps}} 222 223 {{^is_apps}} 224 <div class="doc-family extensions"> 225 <h2 id="filtered">Filtered events</h2> 226 227 <p>Filtered events are a mechanism that allows listeners to specify a subset of 228 events that they are interested in. A listener that makes use of a filter won't 229 be invoked for events that don't pass the filter, which makes the listening 230 code more declarative and efficient - an <a href="event_pages.html">event 231 page</a> page need not be woken up to handle events it doesn't care 232 about.</p> 233 234 <p>Filtered events are intended to allow a transition from manual filtering 235 code like this:</p> 236 237 <pre> 238 chrome.webNavigation.onCommitted.addListener(function(e) { 239 if (hasHostSuffix(e.url, 'google.com') || 240 hasHostSuffix(e.url, 'google.com.au')) { 241 // ... 242 } 243 }); 244 </pre> 245 246 <p>into this:</p> 247 248 <pre> 249 chrome.webNavigation.onCommitted.addListener(function(e) { 250 // ... 251 }, {url: [{hostSuffix: 'google.com'}, 252 {hostSuffix: 'google.com.au'}]}); 253 </pre> 254 255 <p>Events support specific filters that are meaningful to that event. The list 256 of filters that an event supports will be listed in the documentation for that 257 event in the "filters" section.</p> 258 259 <p>When matching URLs (as in the example above), event filters support the same 260 URL matching capabilities as expressible with a 261 $ref:events.UrlFilter, except for scheme and port 262 matching.</p> 263 264 </div> 265 {{/is_apps}} 266