Communicate between scripts in the background context (background script, browser action, page action, options page, etc.)
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I am running into an issue sending data from my background script to the script for my pageAction. My content script adds an <iframe /> and the JavaScript in the <iframe /> is receiving the data from my background script, but it does not seem to be retrieved in my pageAction.

In my background script I have something like:

chrome.tabs.sendMessage(senderTab.tab.id, 
{
   foo:bar
}); 

where senderTab.tab.id is the "sender" in onMessage Listener in my background script.

In the JavaScript loaded by the <iframe /> injected by my content script I have something like:

chrome.runtime.onMessage.addListener(
  function(request, sender, sendResponse) {
      console.log("received in iframe:", request);
    }   
});

The <iframe /> receives the message exactly as expected.

I put the same JavaScript in my page_action.js, but it does not receive any data from the background script. The pageAction is activated with chrome.pageAction.show(senderTab.tab.id); before I call chrome.tabs.sendMessage(senderTab.tab.id ...

Is the HTML page attached to my pageAction not part of the same tab? Since this tabId enabled me to activate/"show" the icon, I would think the listener in the JavaScript for the pageAction should also receive from chrome.tabs.sendMessage(senderTab.tab.id ...


In my content script I use the following to send data to the background script:

chrome.runtime.sendMessage({
  foo: bar
});  

When the content script sends the above message, the pageAction JavaScript is picking it up.


How do I get the background script to properly send data to my pageAction? I do not want to have pageAction request/poll, instead I want pageAction to just listen and receive. E.g., if the pageAction HTML it shown, it should be able to update in real time as the background page makes changes.

Kato answered 2/1, 2017 at 1:29 Comment(0)
E
26

Communicating with a page in the background context

Pages which are open in the background context include:

Using tabs.sendMessage()(MDN) will not send a message to any of them. You would need to use runtime.sendMessage()(MDN) to send a message to them. The scope for any of them, except background pages and event pages, only exists when it is being displayed. Obviously, you can not communicate with the code when it does not exist. When the scope exists, you can communicate with any of them using:

  • Directly
    From the background context, you can directly change variables, or call functions, in another page that is also in the background context (i.e. not content scripts), after having gotten a reference to its global scope, its Window, using extension.getViews()(MDN), extension.getBackgroundPage()(MDN), or other method(MDN).
    For example, you can call a function created with function myFunction in the page of the first returned view by using something like:

    winViews = chrome.extension.getViews();
    winViews[0].myFunction(foo); 
    

    It should be noted that in your callback from tabs.create()(MDN) or windows.create()(MDN) the view for the newly opened tab or window will probably not yet exist. You will need to use some methodology to wait for the view to exist.2 See below for recommended ways to communicate with newly opened tabs or windows.

    Directly manipulating values in the other page's scope allows you to communicate any type of data you desire.

  • Messaging
    Receive messages using chrome.runtime.onMessage(MDN), 3 which were sent with chrome.runtime.sendMessage()(MDN). Each time you receive a message in a runtime.onMessage listener, there will be a sendResponse function provided as the third argument which allows you to directly respond to the message. If the original sender has not supplied a callback to receive such a response in their call to chrome.runtime.sendMessage(), then the response is lost. If using Promises (e.g. browser.runtime.sendMessage() in Firefox), the response is passed as an argument when the Promise is fulfilled. If you want to send the response asynchronously, you will need to return true; from your runtime.onMessage listener.

    Ports
    You can also connect ports, using chrome.runtime.connect()(MDN) and chrome.runtime.onConnect(MDN) for longer term messaging.

    Use chrome.tabs.sendMessage() to send to content scripts
    If you want to send from the background context (e.g. background script or popup) to a content script you would use chrome.tabs.sendMessage()/chrome.runtime.onMessage, or connect port(s) using chrome.tabs.connect()(MDN)/chrome.runtime.onConnect.

    JSON-serializable data only
    Using messaging, you can only pass data which is JSON-serializable.

    Messages are received by all scripts in the background, except the sender
    Messages sent to the background context are received by all scripts in the background context which have registered a listener, except the script which sent it.3 There is no way to specify that it is only to be received by a specific script. Thus, if you have multiple potential recipients, you will need to create a way to be sure that the message received was intended for that script. The ways to do so usually rely on specific properties existing in the message (e.g. use a destination or recipient property to indicate what script is to receive it, or define that some type of messages are always for one recipient or another), or to differentiate based on the sender(MDN) supplied to the message handler (e.g. if messages from one sender are always only for a specific recipient). There is no set way to do this, you must choose/create a way to do it for use in your extension.

    For a more detailed discussion of this issue, please see: Messages intended for one script in the background context are received by all

  • Data in a StorageArea
    Store data to a StorageArea(MDN) and be notified of the change in other scripts using chrome.storage.onChanged(MDN). The storage.onChanged event can be listened to in both the background context and content scripts.

    You can only store data which is JSON-serializable into a StorageArea.

Which method is best to use in any particular situation will depends on what you are wanting to communicate (type of data, state change, etc.), and to which portion, or portions, of your extension you are wanting to communicate from and to. For instance, if you want to communicate information which is not JSON-serializable, you would need to do so directly (i.e. not messaging or using a StorageArea). You can use multiple methods in the same extension.

More on popups

None of the popups (e.g. browser action, or page action) are directly associated with the active tab. There is no concept of a shared or separate instance per tab. However, the user can open one popup in each Chrome window. If more than one popup is open (a maximum of one per Chrome window), then each is in a separate instance (separate scope; has its own Window), but are in the same context. When a popup is actually visible, it exists in the background context.

There is only ever one page action or browser action popup open at a time per Chrome window. The HTML file which will be open will be whichever one has been defined for the active tab of the current window and opened by the user by clicking on the page/browser action button. This can be assigned a different HTML document for different tabs by using chrome.browserAction.setPopup()(MDN), or chrome.pageAction.setPopup()(MDN), and specifying a tabId. The popup can/will be destroyed for multiple reasons, but definitely when another tab becomes the active tab in the window in which the popup is open.

However, any method of communication used will only communicate to the one(s) which is/are currently open, not ones which are not open. If popups are open for more than one Chrome window at a time, then they are separate instances, with their own scope (i.e. their own Window). You can think of this something like having the same web page open in more than one tab.

If you have a background script, the background script context is persistent across the entire instance of Chrome. If you do not have a background script the context may be created when needed (e.g. a popup is shown) and destroyed when no longer needed.

chrome.tabs.sendMessage() can not communicate to popups

As mentioned above, even if the popup did exist, it will exist in the background context. Calling chrome.tabs.sendMessage() sends a message to content scripts injected into a tab/frame, not to the background context. Thus, it will not send a message to a non-content script like a popup.

Action button: enable/disable (browser action) vs. show/hide (page action)

Calling chrome.pageAction.show()(MDN) just causes the page action button to be shown. It does not cause any associated popup to be shown. If the popup/options page/other page is not actually being shown (not just the button), then its scope does not exist. When it does not exist, it, obviously, can not receive any message

Instead of the page action's ability to show()(MDN) or hide()(MDN) the button, browser actions can enable()(MDN) or disable()(MDN) the button.

Programmatically opening a tab or window with HTML from your extension

You can use tabs.create()(MDN) or windows.create()(MDN) to open a tab or window containing an HTML page from within your extension. However, the callback for both of those API calls is executed prior to the page's DOM existing and thus prior to any JavaScript associated with the page existing. Thus, you can not immediately access the DOM created by the contents of that page, nor interact with the JavaScript for the page. Very specifically: no runtime.onMessage() listeners will have been added, so no messages sent at that time will be received by the newly opening page.

The best ways to resolve this issue are:

  1. Have the data available so the newly opening page can get the data when it is ready for. Do this by, prior to beginning the process of opening the page:
    1. If the source is in the background context: store the data in a variable available to the global scope of the sending page. The opening page can then use chrome.extension.getBackgroundPage() to read the data directly.
    2. If the source of the data is in either the background context or a content script: place the data into storage.local(MDN). The opening page can then read it when its JavaScript is run. For example, you could use a key called messageToNewExtensionPage.
  2. If you are using runtime.sendMessage(), then initiate the transfer of the data from your newly opening page by sending a message from the that page's code to the source of the data (using runtime.sendMessage(), or tabs.sendMessage() for content script sources) requesting the data. The script with the data can then send the data back using the sendResponse(MDN) function provided by runtime.onMessage().
  3. Wait to interact with the newly opening page until after at least the DOM is available, if not until after the JavaScript for the page has run. While it's possible to do this without the newly opening page providing specific notification that it's up and running, doing so is more complex and only useful in some specific cases (e.g. you want to do something prior to the JavaScript in the new page being run).2

Additional references

Chrome

Firefox


  1. With some minor exceptions: e.g. using a content script to insert content into the page context.
  2. There are multiple methods which you can use. Which way is best will depend on exactly what you are doing (e.g. when you need to access the view with respect to the code being executed in the view). A simple method would be just to poll waiting for the view to exist. The following code does that for opening a window:

    chrome.windows.create({url: myUrl},function(win){
        //Poll for the view of the window ID. Poll every 50ms for a
        //  maximum of 20 times (1 second). Then do a second set of polling to
        //  accommodate slower machines. Testing on a single moderately fast machine
        //  indicated the view was available after, at most, the second 50ms delay.
        waitForWindowId(win.id,50,20,actOnViewFound,do2ndWaitForWinId);
    });
    function waitForWindowId(id,delay,maxTries,foundCallback,notFoundCallback) {
        if(maxTries--<=0){
            if(typeof notFoundCallback === 'function'){
                notFoundCallback(id,foundCallback);
            }
            return;
        }
        let views = chrome.extension.getViews({windowId:id});
        if(views.length > 0){
            if(typeof foundCallback === 'function'){
                foundCallback(views[0]);
            }
        } else {
            setTimeout(waitForWindowId,delay,id,delay,maxTries,foundCallback
                       ,notFoundCallback);
        }
    }
    function do2ndWaitForWinId(winId,foundCallback){
        //Poll for the view of the window ID. Poll every 500ms for max 40 times (20s).
        waitForWindowId(winId,500,40,foundCallback,windowViewNotFound);
    }
    function windowViewNotFound(winId,foundCallback){
        //Did not find the view for the window. Do what you want here.
        //  Currently fail quietly.
    }
    function actOnViewFound(view){
        //What you desire to happen with the view, when it exists.
    }
    
  3. From MDN:

    In Firefox versions prior to version 51, the runtime.onMessage listener will be called for messages sent from the same script (e.g. messages sent by the background script will also be received by the background script). In those versions of Firefox, if you unconditionally call runtime.sendMessage() from within a runtime.onMessage listener, you will set up an infinite loop which will max-out the CPU and lock-up Firefox. If you need to call runtime.sendMessage() from within a runtime.onMessage, you will need to check the sender.url property to verify you are not sending a message in response to a message which was sent from the same script. This bug was resolved as of Firefox 51.

Embroider answered 2/1, 2017 at 2:31 Comment(17)
thanks @makyen, but what is the best strategy so that only the pageAction for the current page receives the update? In my background script I use function(request, sender, sendResponse) { sendResponse(foo); } to capture the request from the pageAction and then send data back to the calling pageAction however, this goes to EVERY page action in an open tab. What modification to the above is needed so it only sends the update to the proper pageAction?Kato
@EricG, There is only ever one pageAction popup open at a time: whichever one has been defined for the active tab of the current window and opened by the user by clicking on the page action button. This can be assigned a different HTML document for different tabs by using chrome.pageAction.setPopup() and specifying a tabId. However, any method of communication used will only communicate to the one which is currently open, not multiple ones. From your comment, it sounds like you are talking about something other than an actual pageAction popup. Please describe in more detail.Embroider
I will open another question to expand on this. Perhaps this has something to do with reuse in the background script. Is the background script persistent across all tabs or does each tab get its own version of the background script?Kato
@EricG, the background script context is persistent across the entire instance of Chrome. If you are including the same script file as what you define as the background script for other uses, then it is possible that you have that script running in multiple scopes within the same context (and potentially within multiple contexts). Please be sure to include your manifest.json in your new question, as that may be crucial to understanding your issue. Please also leave a comment here with a link to your new question. I'll probably see it anyway, but I would appreciate your informing me directly.Embroider
Thanks, I will create the new question probably later in the week since I need to boil my extension down to the minimal parts. If I use chrome.pageAction.setPopup() with the same HTML page, will it still be shared instance or will each tab has its own instantiation?Kato
There will only ever be one pageAction popup per Chrome window in existence at a time. It will be based on the HTML file specified as the popup for whichever tab is the active tab in that window when the user opens the popup by clicking the pageAction button. The popup can/will be destroyed for multiple reasons, but definitely when another tab becomes the active tab in the window in which the popup is open. There is no concept of a shared or separate instance per tab. However, popups in separate windows are in separate scopes (each has its own Window), but are in the same context.Embroider
The direct method could use some further explanation or references. Such as calling a function with params on a window object (i.e. extView[ 'window_function' ]( 'param' );). Also in the case of using extension.getViews() immediately after tabs.create() could also use explanation, as the view likely won't exist until after you've exited the calling function, necessitating perhaps some event handler callback.Vargueno
@user314159, As to needing to wait after tabs.create() or windows.create(), I added a comment to that effect and some code copied/modified from another answer of mine. If you still feel more should be added, please tell me. The link that you provided is just basic JavaScript. The OP appears to have a misconception between a variable name and what the variable represents with respect to using it in [] to dynamically access an Object's properties (i.e. not understanding that foo.bar !== foo[bar], but that foo.bar === foo['bar']) . I don't see a reason to use it as a reference.Embroider
@Embroider Just simply the syntax for Direct method would help, however you get a Window object, you can use winObj[ 'property' ] = 'value' or winObj[ 'global_function' ]( 'param' ) or winObj[ 'global_obj' ].public_method( 'param' ). As I never used a winObj in that way before, the syntax did not occur to me, and required further searching, but just those 3 simple examples would greatly clarify what is meant by Direct.Vargueno
@Embroider Thanks for the polling example. Seems painful. Doesn't that block UI? I thought an async function with await browser.tabs.create() followed by browser.extension.getViews() would be sufficient, but apparently not. Will try out the additional step of polling, maybe with a total maximum of 2-5s to consider failure and not block indefinitely. A few hundred ms is bad enough, but I can live with that for now.Vargueno
@user314159, OK, I will think about it and add something (probably pulled from one of my other answers, or projects). The Window object is just another JavaScript DOM Object. Your examples are identical to winObj.property = 'value' or winObj.global_function( 'param' ) or winObj.global_obj.method( 'param' ), just like it would be for any other Object.Embroider
@user314159, The code in the answer is in a typical setTimeout() loop. It does not block the UI. it polls immediately, then every delay milliseconds for a maximum of maxTries times, which causes it to stop trying after the number of times specified (see code comments & second loop added). Using setTimeout() for the delay, results in relinquishing execution so other things can be done (e.g. like actually opening the window). Such is needed if the Browser is single process. The code came from something tested on both Chrome and Firefox. Firefox is single process in many situations.Embroider
@Embroider Yes, understood, thanks. I was just unsure if the Window object actually had all the javascript code bound directly to it, or if it was elsewhere, or if there were permissions/CSP complications, etc. There is an advantage to using obj[ 'thing' ] vs obj.thing, for the specific case when thing itself might be a variable name, var thing; obj.thing = 'broken'; obj[ thing ] = 'value';. Other than that, equivalent, yes. Thanks again for help!Vargueno
@Embroider For setTimeout, yes, my mistake, very nice solution. I realize this question was Chrome-centric, but yes. My Firefox Nightly tells me "[X] Enable Multiprocess" and "multiprocessCompatible":true. Lies! ;)Vargueno
@user314159, You can force multiprocess and force non-multiprocess. I have a couple of different profiles set each direction which I use for testing when I want to be sure I am testing in one mode or the other. The fact that your extension is declared as multiprocess compatible, does not mean that Firefox will be running in multiprocess mode in any particular instance.Embroider
Let us continue this discussion in chat.Vargueno
This is one of the best StackOverflow posts I've ever seen!Poise

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