Best practice for keeping timer running in PWA

吃可爱长大的小学妹 提交于 2021-02-08 07:50:04

问题


I am building a progressive web app using React, the concept of which revolves around keeping a timer running.

For context, the app is for home-brewers to keep track of when hops and other additions need to be added to their boil during their brew. Additions are added with a certain amount of time remaining in the boil, i.e. 1 oz Citra hops at 20 minutes remaining.

I'm using JavaScript's setInterval to "tick" the timer, which is an elapsedSeconds state property that drives the rest of the application.

The problem I'm running into is when the timer stops ticking. If I let the app run, the screen will eventually lock, or I'll switch apps, etc. The service worker will continue running, and the timer will continue to tick, for a short time (about 10 minutes from what I can tell in testing?)

My thought is that I will store an epoch time in state, that represents the time when the timer started. That way, when a user "returns" to the PWA, I can compare the current epoch time against the stored startingEpochTime to get the elapsedSeconds back. But I don't want to do this comparison at every "tick" if I don't have to. Ideally, this comparison would only run when the user is returning to the application from some other context, after the service worker has already stopped processing.

What I'm looking for is the correct way to do this. Would window.onload work in this instance? If I switch apps to another app for 20 minutes then switch back to my timer app, is that method run again? Looking for the best practice for this sort of scenario, or any idea that might help me out.


回答1:


Here's a couple of pointers that can help:

The general solution to what you describe is the Wake Lock API, which is the process of being design and specified, but is not available anywhere by default (yet).

In terms of what's currently implemented, there are pretty reliable ways of at least detecting when your web app goes into the background and goes back into the foreground using the Page Lifecycle API events. Once you're reliably detecting when you've come back to the foreground, a technique like what's mentioned in the comments about comparing the start time to the current time sounds about right.



来源:https://stackoverflow.com/questions/58244539/best-practice-for-keeping-timer-running-in-pwa

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