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fetch-inject

Dynamically inline assets into the DOM using Fetch Injection.

  • 1.6.10
  • npm
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622
increased by38.53%
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Fetch Inject

A fetching async loader and DOM injection sequencer for high-performance websites.

Build Status Compressed IIFE Release Size NPM downloads per month Latest NPM version

Background

This library implements Fetch Injection, a performance optimization technique for managing asynchronous dependencies. It also works for stylesheets too, and was designed to be extensible for any resource type which can be loaded using fetch.

Use Fetch Inject to dynamically import page resources such as JS and CSS in parallel (even across the network), and load them into your page in a desired sequence.

Because it uses Fetch API, Fetch Inject will work alongside Service Workers, enabling you take the performance of your Progressive Web Apps to an entirely new level.

Waterfalls

Here are some example waterfalls using Fetch Inject.

Loading Bootstrap 4:

Bootstrap 4

Loading jQuery, Transit, Hover Intent, Superfish, Animo and main JS:

security7.net

Loading and initializing PhotoSwipe:

PhotoSwipe

WordPress Plugin

Fetch Inject has been built into a WordPress plugin, enabling the power of Fetch Injection for WordPress. Initial testing shows Fetch Injection will cause WordPress pages to load 200-300% faster than traditional methods.

Hyperdrive WordPress Plugin logo

For beta access to the plugin please visit Hyperdrive repo and drop the plugin code into your WordPress plugins directory.

Playground

Try Fetch Inject on CodePen using the latest version available on CDN.

Reference Use Cases to get a feel for what it can do.

Installing

Fetch Inject is available on NPM, Bower and CDN. It ships in the following flavors: IIFE, UMD and ES6.

  • Get it on NPM with npm i fetch-inject
  • Bower with bower install fetch-inject
  • CDN using jsDelivr

To download the lastest minified UMD bundle from the command line:

curl -L -o fetch-inject.umd.min.js https://go.habd.as/fetch-inject-umd-min

See the Development section for asset pipelines requiring vanilla AMD and CJS modules.

Syntax

Promise<Array<Object>> fetchInject(inputs, promise)

Parameters

inputs
Required. This defines the resources you wish to fetch. It must be an Array containing elements of type USVString or Request.
promise
Optional. A Promise to await before injecting fetched resources.

Return value

A Promise that resolves to an Array of Objects. Each Object contains a list of resolved properties of the Response Body used in the module, e.g.

[{
  blob: { size: 44735, type: "application/javascript" },
  text: "/*!↵ * Bootstrap v4.0.0-alpha.5 ... */"
}, {
  blob: { size: 31000, type: "text/css" },
  text: "/*!↵ * Font Awesome 4.7.0 ... */"
}]

Use Cases

Preventing Script Blocking

Problem: External scripts can lead to jank or SPOF if not handled correctly.

Solution: Load external scripts without blocking:

fetchInject([
  'https://cdn.jsdelivr.net/popper.js/1.0.0-beta.3/popper.min.js'
])

This is a simple case to get you started. Don't worry, it gets better.

Loading Non-critical CSS

Problem: PageSpeed Insights and Lighthouse ding you for loading unnecessary styles on initial render.

Solution: Inline your critical CSS and load non-critical styles asynchronously:

<style>/*! bulma.io v0.4.0 ... */</style>
<script>
fetchInject([
  '/css/non-critical.css',
  'https://cdn.jsdelivr.net/fontawesome/4.7.0/css/font-awesome.min.css'
])
</script>

Unlike loadCSS, Fetch Inject is smaller, doesn't use callbacks and ships a minifed UMD build for interop with CommonJS.

Lazyloading Scripts

Problem: You want to load a script in response to a user interaction without affecting your page load times.

Solution: Create an event listener, respond to the event and then destroy the listener.

const el = document.querySelector('details summary')
el.onclick = (evt) => {
  fetchInject([
    'https://cdn.jsdelivr.net/smooth-scroll/10.2.1/smooth-scroll.min.js'
  ])
  el.onclick = null  
}

Here we are loading the smooth scroll polyfill when a user opens a details element, useful for displaying a collapsed and keyboard-friendly table of contents.

Responding to Asynchronous Scripts

Problem: You need to perform a synchronous operation immediately after an asynchronous script is loaded.

Solution: You could create a script element and use the async and onload attributes. Or you could...

fetchInject([
  'https://cdn.jsdelivr.net/momentjs/2.17.1/moment.min.js'
]).then(() => {
  console.log(`Finish in less than ${moment().endOf('year').fromNow(true)}`)
})

Ordering Script Dependencies

Problem: You have several scripts that depend on one another and you want to load them all asynchronously, in parallel, without causing race conditions.

Solution: Pass fetchInject to itself as a second argument, forming a promise recursion:

fetchInject([
  'https://npmcdn.com/bootstrap@4.0.0-alpha.5/dist/js/bootstrap.min.js'
], fetchInject([
  'https://cdn.jsdelivr.net/jquery/3.1.1/jquery.slim.min.js',
  'https://npmcdn.com/tether@1.2.4/dist/js/tether.min.js'
]))

Managing Asynchronous Dependencies

Problem: You want to load some dependencies which require some dependencies, which require some dependencies. You want it all in parallel, and you want it now.

Solution: You could scatter some links into your document head, blocking initial page render, bloat your application bundle with scripts the user might not actually need. Or you could...

const tether = ['https://cdn.jsdelivr.net/tether/1.4.0/tether.min.js']
const drop = ['https://cdn.jsdelivr.net/drop/1.4.2/js/drop.min.js']
const tooltip = [
  'https://cdn.jsdelivr.net/tooltip/1.2.0/tooltip.min.js',
  'https://cdn.jsdelivr.net/tooltip/1.2.0/tooltip-theme-arrows.css'
]
fetchInject(tooltip, fetchInject(drop, fetchInject(tether)))
  .then(() => {
    new Tooltip({
      target: document.querySelector('h1'),
      content: "You moused over the first <b>H1</b>!",
      classes: 'tooltip-theme-arrows',
      position: 'bottom center'
    })
  })

What about jQuery dropdown menus? Sure why not...

fetchInject([
  '/assets/js/main.js'
], fetchInject([
  '/assets/js/vendor/superfish.min.js'
], fetchInject([
  '/assets/js/vendor/jquery.transit.min.js',
  '/assets/js/vendor/jquery.hoverIntent.js'
], fetchInject([
  '/assets/js/vendor/jquery.min.js'
]))))

Loading and Handling Composite Libraries

Problem: You want to deep link to gallery images using PhotoSwipe without slowing down your page.

Solution: Download everything in parallel and instantiate when finished:

const container = document.querySelector('.pswp')
const items = JSON.parse({{ .Params.gallery.main | jsonify }})
fetchInject([
  '/css/photoswipe.css',
  '/css/default-skin/default-skin.css',
  '/js/photoswipe.min.js',
  '/js/photoswipe-ui-default.min.js'
]).then(() => {
  const gallery = new PhotoSwipe(container, PhotoSwipeUI_Default, items)
  gallery.init()
})

This example turns TOML into JSON, parses the object, downloads all of the PhotoSwipe goodies and then activates the PhotoSwipe gallery immediately when the interface is ready to be displayed.

Supported Browsers

All browsers with support for Fetch and Promises.

Fetch will become available in Safari in the Safari 10.1 release that ships with macOS Sierra 10.12.4 and Safari on iOS 10.3. Jon Davis,  Web Technologies Evangelist

Progressive Enhancement

You don't need to polyfill fetch for older browsers when they already know how to load external scripts. Give them a satisfactory fallback experience instead.

In your document head get the async loading started right away if the browser supports it:

(function () {
  if (!window.fetch) return;
  fetchInject([
    '/js/bootstrap.min.js'
  ], fetchInject([
    '/js/jquery.slim.min.js',
    '/js/tether.min.js'
  ]))
})()

Then, before the close of the document body, provide the traditional experience to avoid blocking the parser until content is visible:

(function () {
  if (window.fetch) return;
  document.write('<script src="/js/bootstrap.min.js"><\/script>');
  document.write('<script src="/js/jquery.slim.min.jss"><\/script>');
  document.write('<script src="/js/tether.min.js"><\/script>');
})()

This is entirely optional, but a good practice unless you're going full hipster.

Development

  1. Clone the repo.
  2. Install dev dependencies.
  3. Execute npm run for a listing of available commands.

If you need vanilla AMD or CJS modules, update the NPM scripts in the package manifest and npm run build.

Contributing

Please use Issues for bugs and enhancement requests only. Use npm run commit to create Commitizen-friendly commit messages. If you need support, you know where to go. Thanks!

See Also

License

ISC

Keywords

FAQs

Package last updated on 01 May 2017

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