TL;DR
There's a new observer in town! ReportingObserver
is a new API that lets you
know when your site uses a deprecated API or runs into a
browser intervention:
const observer = new ReportingObserver(
(reports, observer) => {
for (const report of reports) {
console.log(report.type, report.url, report.body);
}
},
{buffered: true}
);
observer.observe();
The callback can be used to send reports to a backend or analytics provider for further analysis.
Why is that useful? Until now, deprecation and
intervention warnings were only available in the DevTools as console messages.
Interventions, in particular, are only triggered by various real-world constraints
like device and network conditions. Thus, you may never even see these messages
when developing/testing a site locally. ReportingObserver
provides
the solution to this problem. When users experience potential issues in the wild,
we can be notified about them.
Introduction
A while back, I wrote a blog post ("Observing your web app")
because I found it fascinating how many APIs there are for monitoring the
"stuff" that happens in a web app. For example, there are APIs that can observe
information about the DOM: ResizeObserver
,
IntersectionObserver
, MutationObserver
. There are APIs for capturing
performance measurements: PerformanceObserver
. Other
APIs like window.onerror
and window.onunhandledrejection
even let us know
when something goes wrong.
However, there are other types of warnings which are not captured by these existing APIs. When your site uses a deprecated API or runs up against a browser intervention, DevTools is first to tell you about them:
One would naturally think window.onerror
captures these warnings. It does not!
That's because window.onerror
does not fire for warnings
generated directly by the user agent itself. It fires for runtime errors
(JS exceptions and syntax errors) caused by executing your code.
ReportingObserver
picks up the slack. It provides a programmatic way to be
notified about browser-issued warnings such as deprecations
and interventions. You can use it as a reporting tool and
lose less sleep wondering if users are hitting unexpected issues on your live
site.
The API
The API is not unlike the other "observer" APIs such
as IntersectionObserver
and ResizeObserver
. You give it a callback;
it gives you information. The information that the callback receives is a
list of issues that the page caused:
const observer = new ReportingObserver((reports, observer) => {
for (const report of reports) {
// → report.type === 'deprecation'
// → report.url === 'https://reporting-observer-api-demo.glitch.me'
// → report.body.id === 'XMLHttpRequestSynchronousInNonWorkerOutsideBeforeUnload'
// → report.body.message === 'Synchronous XMLHttpRequest is deprecated...'
// → report.body.lineNumber === 11
// → report.body.columnNumber === 22
// → report.body.sourceFile === 'https://reporting-observer-api-demo.glitch.me'
// → report.body.anticipatedRemoval === <JS_DATE_STR> or null
}
});
observer.observe();
Filtered reports
Reports can be pre-filter to only observe certain report types:
const observer = new ReportingObserver((reports, observer) => {
...
}, {types: ['deprecation']});
Buffered reports
The buffered: true
option is really useful when you want to see the
reports that were generated before the observer was created:
const observer = new ReportingObserver((reports, observer) => {
...
}, {types: ['intervention'], buffered: true});
It is great for situations like lazy-loading a library that uses
a ReportingObserver
. The observer gets added late, but you
don't miss out on anything that happened earlier in the page load.
Stop observing
Yep! It's got a disconnect
method:
observer.disconnect(); // Stop the observer from collecting reports.
Examples
Example - report browser interventions to an analytics provider:
const observer = new ReportingObserver(
(reports, observer) => {
for (const report of reports) {
sendReportToAnalytics(JSON.stringify(report.body));
}
},
{types: ['intervention'], buffered: true}
);
observer.observe();
Example - be notified when APIs are going to be removed:
const observer = new ReportingObserver((reports, observer) => {
for (const report of reports) {
if (report.type === 'deprecation') {
sendToBackend(`Using a deprecated API in ${report.body.sourceFile} which will be
removed on ${report.body.anticipatedRemoval}. Info: ${report.body.message}`);
}
}
});
observer.observe();
Conclusion
ReportingObserver
gives you an additional way for discovering and monitoring
potential issues in your web app. It's even a useful tool for understanding the
health of your codebase (or lack thereof). Send reports to a backend,
know about the real-world issues users are hitting on your site, update
code, profit!
Future work
In the future, my hope is that ReportingObserver
becomes the de-facto API
for catching all types of issues in JS. Imagine one API to catch everything
that goes wrong in your app:
- Browser interventions
- Deprecations
- Feature Policy violations. See crbug.com/867471.
- JS exceptions and errors (currently serviced by
window.onerror
). - Unhandled JS promise rejections (currently serviced by
window.onunhandledrejection
)
I'm also excited about tools integrating ReportingObserver
into
their workflows. Lighthouse is an example of a tool
that already flags browser deprecations when you run its
"Avoids deprecated APIs" audit:
Lighthouse currently uses the DevTools protocol
to scrape console messages and report these issues to developers. Instead, it
might be interesting to switch to ReportingObserver
for its well structured deprecation reports and additional metadata like
anticipatedRemoval
date.
Additional resources: