Lazy-worker

Lazy web workers only work when someone is watching - in the UI thread!

View the Project on GitHub bgrohman/lazy-worker

lazy-worker

Lazy web workers only work when someone is watching - in the UI thread!

Why?

IE<10 doesn't support web workers. By using a lazy-worker, you can code to the web workers spec even on IE.

Can I use this?

Since lazy-worker only overwrites the global Worker object if it doesn't already exist, lazy-worker can be used both in browsers that have native web worker support and those that don't. The global Worker object can be manually overridden by calling lazyWorker.exportWorker(). Alternatively, the lazyWorker.Worker constructor can be used directly to create lazy workers.

Browser Support

Running the Unit Tests

The test.html file needs to be hosted by a server and not open from the local file system. If you have ruby, run ruby -r webrick -e "s = WEBrick::HTTPServer.new(:Port => 9090, :DocumentRoot => Dir.pwd); trap('INT') { s.shutdown }; s.start" in the top level directory and open http://localhost:9090/test/test.html.

Alternatively, the tests can be run using the grunt build tool command grunt qunit.

Current Web Worker Functionality

Example

// In main.js
Worker.lazy; // true
var worker = new Worker('my-worker.js');
worker.lazy; // true

worker.onmessage = function(msg) {
  console.log(msg.data.foo);
};

worker.onerror = function(err) {
  console.log('Error: ', err.type, err.message);
};

worker.postMessage({
  foo: 'foo'
});
// In my-worker.js
self.importScripts('my-helper-script.js');

self.onmessage = function(msg) {
  var foo = msg.data.foo + 'bar';

  self.postMessage({
    foo: foo
  });
};