tree: ae75c25113508792c5d7bbd2c2242ffab98e29e0 [path history] [tgz]
  1. lib/
  2. test/
  3. base.js
  4. bindings.js
  5. bindings_lite.js
  6. BUILD.gn
  7. compile_preamble.js
  8. interface_support.js
  9. interface_types.js
  10. mojo_bindings_lite.html
  11. mojo_bindings_resources.grd
  12. README.md
mojo/public/js/README.md

Mojo JavaScript Bindings API

This document is a subset of the Mojo documentation.

TODO(crbug.com/912327): this document mentions deprecated JavaScript bindings.

We need to update it to describe the new bindings (bindings_lite).

Getting Started

The bindings API is defined in the mojo namespace and implemented in mojo_bindings.js, which could be generated by the GN target //mojo/public/js:bindings.

When a Mojom IDL file is processed by the bindings generator, JavaScript code is emitted in a .js file with the name based on the input .mojom file. Suppose we create the following Mojom file at //services/echo/public/interfaces/echo.mojom:

module test.echo.mojom;

interface Echo {
  EchoInteger(int32 value) => (int32 result);
};

And a GN target to generate the bindings in //services/echo/public/interfaces/BUILD.gn:

import("//mojo/public/tools/bindings/mojom.gni")

mojom("interfaces") {
  sources = [
    "echo.mojom",
  ]
}

Bindings are generated by building one of these implicitly generated targets (where “foo” is the target name):

  • foo_js JavaScript bindings; used as compile-time dependency.
  • foo_js_data_deps JavaScript bindings; used as run-time dependency.

If we then build this target:

ninja -C out/r services/echo/public/interfaces:interfaces_js

This will produce several generated source files. The one relevant to JavaScript bindings is:

out/gen/services/echo/public/interfaces/echo.mojom.js

In order to use the definitions in echo.mojom, you will need to include two files in your html page using <script> tags:

  • mojo_bindings.js Note: This file must be included before any .mojom.js files.
  • echo.mojom.js
<!DOCTYPE html>
<script src="URL/to/mojo_bindings.js"></script>
<script src="URL/to/echo.mojom.js"></script>
<script>

var echoPtr = new test.echo.mojom.EchoPtr();
var echoRequest = mojo.makeRequest(echoPtr);
// ...

</script>

Interfaces

Similar to the C++ bindings API, we have:

  • mojo.InterfacePtrInfo and mojo.InterfaceRequest encapsulate two ends of a message pipe. They represent the client end and service end of an interface connection, respectively.
  • For each Mojom interface Foo, there is a generated FooPtr class. It owns an InterfacePtrInfo; provides methods to send interface calls using the message pipe handle from the InterfacePtrInfo.
  • mojo.Binding owns an InterfaceRequest. It listens on the message pipe handle and dispatches incoming messages to a user-defined interface implementation.

Let's consider the echo.mojom example above. The following shows how to create an Echo interface connection and use it to make a call.

<!DOCTYPE html>
<script src="URL/to/mojo_bindings.js"></script>
<script src="URL/to/echo.mojom.js"></script>
<script>

function EchoImpl() {}
EchoImpl.prototype.echoInteger = function(value) {
  return Promise.resolve({result: value});
};

var echoServicePtr = new test.echo.mojom.EchoPtr();
var echoServiceRequest = mojo.makeRequest(echoServicePtr);
var echoServiceBinding = new mojo.Binding(test.echo.mojom.Echo,
                                          new EchoImpl(),
                                          echoServiceRequest);
echoServicePtr.echoInteger({value: 123}).then(function(response) {
  console.log('The result is ' + response.value);
});

</script>

Interface Pointers and Requests

In the example above, test.echo.mojom.EchoPtr is an interface pointer class. EchoPtr represents the client end of an interface connection. For method EchoInteger in the Echo Mojom interface, there is a corresponding echoInteger method defined in EchoPtr. (Please note that the format of the generated method name is camelCaseWithLowerInitial.)

There are some control methods shared by all interface pointer classes. For example, binding/extracting InterfacePtrInfo, setting connection error handler, querying version information, etc. In order to avoid name collision, they are defined in mojo.InterfacePtrController and exposed as the ptr field of every interface pointer class.

In the example above, echoServiceRequest is an InterfaceRequest instance. It represents the service end of an interface connection.

mojo.makeRequest creates a message pipe; populates the output argument (which could be an InterfacePtrInfo or an interface pointer) with one end of the pipe; returns the other end wrapped in an InterfaceRequest instance.

Binding an InterfaceRequest

A mojo.Binding bridges an implementation of an interface and a message pipe endpoint, dispatching incoming messages to the implementation.

In the example above, echoServiceBinding listens for incoming EchoInteger method calls on the messsage pipe, and dispatches those calls to the EchoImpl instance.

Receiving Responses

Some Mojom interface methods expect a response, such as EchoInteger. The corresponding JavaScript method returns a Promise. This Promise is resolved when the service side sends back a response. It is rejected if the interface is disconnected.

Connection Errors

If a pipe is disconnected, both endpoints will be able to observe the connection error (unless the disconnection is caused by closing/destroying an endpoint, in which case that endpoint won‘t get such a notification). If there are remaining incoming messages for an endpoint on disconnection, the connection error won’t be triggered until the messages are drained.

Pipe disconnecition may be caused by:

  • Mojo system-level causes: process terminated, resource exhausted, etc.
  • The bindings close the pipe due to a validation error when processing a received message.
  • The peer endpoint is closed. For example, the remote side is a bound interface pointer and it is destroyed.

Regardless of the underlying cause, when a connection error is encountered on a binding endpoint, that endpoint's connection error handler (if set) is invoked. This handler may only be invoked once as long as the endpoint is bound to the same pipe. Typically clients and implementations use this handler to do some kind of cleanup or recovery.

// Assume echoServicePtr is already bound.
echoServicePtr.ptr.setConnectionErrorHandler(function() {
  DoImportantCleanUp();
});

// Assume echoServiceBinding is already bound:
echoServiceBinding.setConnectionErrorHandler(function() {
  DoImportantCleanUpToo();
});

Note: Closing one end of a pipe will eventually trigger a connection error on the other end. However it's ordered with respect to any other event (e.g. writing a message) on the pipe. Therefore, it is safe to make an echoInteger call on echoServicePtr and reset it immediately (which results in disconnection), echoServiceBinding will receive the echoInteger call before it observes the connection error.

Associated Interfaces

An associated interface connection doesn't have its own underlying message pipe. It is associated with an existing message pipe (i.e., interface connection).

Similar to the non-associated interface case, we have:

  • mojo.AssociatedInterfacePtrInfo and mojo.AssociatedInterfaceRequest encapsulate a route ID, representing a logical connection over a message pipe.
  • For each Mojom interface Foo, there is a generated FooAssociatedPtr class. It owns an AssociatedInterfacePtrInfo. It is the client side of an interface.
  • mojo.AssociatedBinding owns an AssociatedInterfaceRequest. It listens on the connection and dispatches incoming messages to a user-defined interface implementation.

See this document for more details.

Automatic and Manual Dependency Loading

By default, generated .mojom.js files automatically load Mojom dependencies. For example, if foo.mojom imports bar.mojom, loading foo.mojom.js will insert a <script> tag to load bar.mojom.js, if it hasn't been loaded.

The URL of bar.mojom.js is determined by:

  • the path of bar.mojom relative to the position of foo.mojom at build time;
  • the URL of foo.mojom.js.

For exmple, if at build time the two Mojom files are located at:

a/b/c/foo.mojom
a/b/d/bar.mojom

The URL of foo.mojom.js is:

http://example.org/scripts/b/c/foo.mojom.js

Then the URL of bar.mojom.js is supposed to be:

http://example.org/scripts/b/d/bar.mojom.js

If you would like bar.mojom.js to live at a different location, you need to set mojo.config.autoLoadMojomDeps to false before loading foo.mojom.js, and manually load bar.mojom.js yourself. Similarly, you need to turn off this option if you merge bar.mojom.js and foo.mojom.js into a single file.

<!-- Automatic dependency loading -->
<script src="http://example.org/scripts/mojo_bindings.js"></script>
<script src="http://example.org/scripts/b/c/foo.mojom.js"></script>


<!-- Manual dependency loading -->
<script src="http://example.org/scripts/mojo_bindings.js"></script>
<script>
  mojo.config.autoLoadMojomDeps = false;
</script>
<script src="http://example.org/scripts/b/d/bar.mojom.js"></script>
<script src="http://example.org/scripts/b/c/foo.mojom.js"></script>

Performance Tip: Avoid Loading the Same .mojom.js File Multiple Times

If mojo.config.autoLoadMojomDeps is set to true (which is the default value), you might accidentally load the same .mojom.js file multiple times if you are not careful. Although it doesn't cause fatal errors, it hurts performance and therefore should be avoided.

<!-- Assume that mojo.config.autoLoadMojomDeps is set to true: -->

<!-- No duplicate loading; recommended. -->
<script src="http://example.org/scripts/b/c/foo.mojom.js"></script>

<!-- No duplicate loading, although unnecessary. -->
<script src="http://example.org/scripts/b/d/bar.mojom.js"></script>
<script src="http://example.org/scripts/b/c/foo.mojom.js"></script>

<!-- Load bar.mojom.js twice; should be avoided. -->
<!-- when foo.mojom.js is loaded, it sees that bar.mojom.js is not yet loaded,
     so it inserts another <script> tag for bar.mojom.js. -->
<script src="http://example.org/scripts/b/c/foo.mojom.js"></script>
<script src="http://example.org/scripts/b/d/bar.mojom.js"></script>

If a .mojom.js file is loaded for a second time, a warnings will be showed using console.warn() to bring it to developers' attention.

Name Formatting

As a general rule, Mojom definitions follow the C++ formatting style. To make the generated JavaScript bindings conforms to our JavaScript style guide, the code generator does the following conversions:

In MojomIn generated .mojom.js
MethodLikeThismethodLikeThis
parameter_like_thisparameterLikeThis
field_like_thisfieldLikeThis
name_space.like_thisnameSpace.likeThis