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Service worker improvements

The Network, Application, and Sources tools have been improved to help you work with service workers and the network requests that pass through each service worker.

The improvements simplify the following tasks:

  • Debug based on service worker timelines.
    • The start of a request and duration of the bootstrap.
    • Update to service worker registration.
    • The runtime of a request using the fetch event handler.
    • The runtime of all fetch events for loading a client.
  • Explore the runtime details of fetch event handlers, install event handlers, and activate event handlers.
  • Step into and out of fetch event handler with page script information.

The improvements span the following tools:

  • The Network tool. Select a network request that runs through a service worker and access the corresponding timeline of the service worker in the Timing tool.

  • The Application tool. To debug service workers, use the Service workers page.

  • The Sources tool. Access page script information when stepping into fetch event handlers.

Network

Service worker timeline in the Network tool

You can access the service worker debugging features in the Network tool in either of the following ways:

  • Directly in the Network tool.
  • Started in the Application tool.

Request routing

To make request routing easier to visualize, timelines now display the service worker start-up and the respondWith fetch events. To debug and visualize a network request that passed through a service worker:

  1. Select the network request that went through a service worker.
  2. Open the Timing tool.

Fetch events

To learn more about the respondWith fetch events, click the dropdown arrow to the left of the respondWith. To see more details about the Original Request and Response Received, click the corresponding dropdown arrows.

Application

Application view

Service worker update timeline

The Microsoft Edge DevTools team added a timeline in the Application tool to reflect the update lifecycle of the service worker. This timeline displays the installation and activation events. Each of the events have a corresponding dropdown arrow to give you more details.

Request routing and fetch events

You can now access the service worker timelines through the Network tool. This feature benefits performance, minimizes UI duplication, and creates a more comprehensive debugging experience.

  1. Open the service worker that you're debugging.

  2. Click the Network button to open the request routing experience.

  3. Use the respondWith dropdown arrows for fetch event request and response information.

The Network tool displays the network requests that went through the service worker you are debugging. The automatic filter is a way to narrow down your exploration.

See also Application tool, to manage storage.

Sources

The DOM tree

To find more stack information, set a break point in the fetch handler. The details lead to where the resource is requested in the page script.

When the debugger pauses inside a fetch handler, a combined stack information is displayed in the panel to the right. After that, you can move around in the stack frames.

Future work

The Microsoft Edge DevTools team plans to further develop the cache detail, and are investigating more ways to improve the service worker debugging experience for Progressive Web Application (PWA) developers.