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Cache.match

This is an experimental technology
Check the Browser compatibility table carefully before using this in production.

The match() method of the Cache interface returns a Promise that resolves to the Response associated with the first matching request in the Cache object. If no match is found, the Promise resolves to undefined.

Syntax

cache.match(request, {options}).then(function(response) {
  // Do something with the response
});

Parameters

request
The Request you are attempting to find in the Cache. This can be a Request object or a URL.
options Optional
An object that sets options for the match operation. The available options are:
  • ignoreSearch: A Boolean that specifies whether to ignore the query string in the URL. For example, if set to true the ?value=bar part of http://foo.com/?value=bar would be ignored when performing a match. It defaults to false.
  • ignoreMethod: A Boolean that, when set to true, prevents matching operations from validating the Request http method (normally only GET and HEAD are allowed.) It defaults to false.
  • ignoreVary: A Boolean that when set to true tells the matching operation not to perform VARY header matching — i.e. if the URL matches you will get a match regardless of whether the Response object has a VARY header. It defaults to false.
  • cacheName: A DOMString that represents a specific cache to search within. Note that this option is ignored by Cache.match().

Return value

A Promise that resolves to the first Response that matches the request or to undefined if no match is found.

Note: Cache.match() is basically identical to Cache.matchAll(), except Cache.match() resolves with response[0] (the first matching response) instead of response[] (all matching response in an array).

Examples

This example is taken from the custom offline page example (live demo). It uses a cache to supply selected data when a request fails. A catch() clause is triggered when the call to fetch() throws an exception. Inside the catch() clause, match() is used to return the correct response.

In this example, only HTML documents retrieved with the GET HTTP verb will be cached. If our if() condition is false, then this fetch handler won't intercept the request. If there are any other fetch handlers registered, they will get a chance to call event.respondWith(). If no fetch handlers call event.respondWith(), the request will be handled by the browser as if there were no service worker involvement. If fetch() returns a valid HTTP response with an response code in the 4xx or 5xx range, the catch() will NOT be called.

self.addEventListener('fetch', function(event) {
  // We only want to call event.respondWith() if this is a GET request for an HTML document.
  if (event.request.method === 'GET' &&
      event.request.headers.get('accept').indexOf('text/html') !== -1) {
    console.log('Handling fetch event for', event.request.url);
    event.respondWith(
      fetch(event.request).catch(function(e) {
        console.error('Fetch failed; returning offline page instead.', e);
        return caches.open(OFFLINE_CACHE).then(function(cache) {
          return cache.match(OFFLINE_URL);
        });
      })
    );
  }
});

Specifications

Specification Status Comment
Service Workers
The definition of 'Cache match' in that specification.
Working Draft Initial definition.

Browser compatibilityUpdate compatibility data on GitHub

Desktop
Chrome Edge Firefox Internet Explorer Opera Safari
Basic support 43 16 39
39
Service workers (and Push) have been disabled in the Firefox 45 & 52 Extended Support Releases (ESR).
No 30 No
Mobile
Android webview Chrome for Android Edge Mobile Firefox for Android Opera for Android iOS Safari Samsung Internet
Basic support 43 43 No 39 30 No 4.0

See also

© 2005–2018 Mozilla Developer Network and individual contributors.
Licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License v2.5 or later.
https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/API/Cache/match