Most of the browsers provide localStorage with the storage limit of 5MB per domain. Are there such memory limits/constraints with respect to service workers?
I know
On latests browser you can use StorageManager which is an implementation of a new standard for browser storage, take a look at this mozilla article.
let _storageStats = await navigator.storage.estimate();
console.log(_storageStats);
/*
Will prompt something like this
{quota: 15946471833, usage: 682}
Which is a representation of quota/usage in bytes
As you can see I get an insane quota of almost 16 GB
*/
More info about navigator.storage.estimate()
and navigator.webkitTemporaryStorage.queryUsageAndQuota()
is here
https://developers.google.com/web/updates/2017/08/estimating-available-storage-space
Testing page is here https://thimbleprojects.org/startpolymer/361372/
Update Jan 15 2018
The StorageManager interface of Storage API is becoming a standard for all storage related api queries. As mentioned by @miguel-lattuada, the estimate API would provide an estimate of the storage used a web app the available storage. Also, note the QuotaExceededError exception which would help us in handling error scenarios.
eg code:
if ('storage' in navigator && 'estimate' in navigator.storage) {
navigator.storage.estimate().then(({usage, quota}) => {
console.log(`Using ${usage} out of ${quota} bytes.`);
}).catch(error => {
console.error('Loading storage estimate failed:');
console.log(error.stack);
});
} else {
console.error('navigator.storage.estimate API unavailable.');
}
For more info, refer the following 2 great articles:
March 16 2017 (keeping it just for reference/history)
Recently I came across this article: offline-cookbook which states as below:
Your origin is given a certain amount of free space to do what it wants with. That free space is shared between all origin storage: LocalStorage, IndexedDB, Filesystem, and of course Caches.
The amount you get isn't spec'd, it will differ depending on device and storage conditions. You can find out how much you've got via:
navigator.storageQuota.queryInfo("temporary").then(function(info) {
console.log(info.quota);
// Result: <quota in bytes>
console.log(info.usage);
// Result: <used data in bytes>
});
The above code might not work in all the browsers. (for eg: in chrome<48 one might have to look for webkitPersistentStorage etc)
Other useful info/resources
As per Offline Storage for Progressive Web Apps by Addy Osmani
In Chrome and Opera
: Your storage is per origin (rather than per API). Both storage mechanisms will store data until the browser quota is reached. Apps can check how much quota they’re using with the Quota Management API (as described above).
Firefox
no limits, but will prompt after 50MB data stored
Mobile Safari
50MB max
Desktop Safari
unlimited (prompts after 5MB)
IE10+
maxes at 250MB and prompts at 10MB
A more detailed guide on Working with quota on mobile browsers by Eiji Kitamura.
For now these are the most relevant articles/solutions found for my problem. If anyone knows some better article or specifications please share.
There's no explicit limit. All modern browsers are multi-process or similar, so a badly-designed page (or SW) won't do anything worse than crash itself.
Note that the SW spec is very explicit about the browser being able to kill and restart the SW at any time, for any reason. (If DevTools is open on a page, Chrome purposely kills SWs for the page constantly, to encourage you to adopt good practices.)
I'm not 100% certain, but I think you're limited entirely by what's available on the client machine. As in, there is no fixed upper limit
If someone was running a beast of a machine and the browser was the only active application, then you'd most likely have plenty of storage available
However, if it was an old limited machine that's barely chugging along; you'd have very little
It depends entirely on what you're trying to do really. You should only really be using service workers to store things vital to your page/application working