FetchEvent: request property

Baseline Widely available

This feature is well established and works across many devices and browser versions. It’s been available across browsers since ⁨April 2018⁩.

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Note: This feature is only available in Service Workers.

The request read-only property of the FetchEvent interface returns the Request that triggered the event handler.

This property is non-nullable (since version 46, in the case of Firefox.) If a request is not provided by some other means, the constructor options object must contain a request (see FetchEvent().)

Value

A Request object.

Examples

This code snippet is from the service worker fetch sample (run the fetch sample live). The onfetch event handler listens for the fetch event. When fired, pass a promise that back to the controlled page to FetchEvent.respondWith(). This promise resolves to the first matching URL request in the Cache object. If no match is found, the code fetches a response from the network.

The code also handles exceptions thrown from the fetch() operation. Note that an HTTP error response (e.g., 404) will not trigger an exception. It will return a normal response object that has the appropriate error code set.

js
self.addEventListener("fetch", (event) => {   console.log("Handling fetch event for", event.request.url);    event.respondWith(     caches.match(event.request).then((response) => {       if (response) {         console.log("Found response in cache:", response);          return response;       }       console.log("No response found in cache. About to fetch from network…");        return fetch(event.request)         .then((response) => {           console.log("Response from network is:", response);            return response;         })         .catch((error) => {           console.error("Fetching failed:", error);            throw error;         });     }),   ); }); 

Specifications

Specification
Service Workers>
# fetch-event-request>

Browser compatibility

See also