- protocol
- Using
protocol
with a custompartition
orsession
- Methods
protocol.registerSchemesAsPrivileged(customSchemes)
protocol.registerFileProtocol(scheme, handler)
protocol.registerBufferProtocol(scheme, handler)
protocol.registerStringProtocol(scheme, handler)
protocol.registerHttpProtocol(scheme, handler)
protocol.registerStreamProtocol(scheme, handler)
protocol.unregisterProtocol(scheme)
protocol.isProtocolRegistered(scheme)
protocol.interceptFileProtocol(scheme, handler)
protocol.interceptStringProtocol(scheme, handler)
protocol.interceptBufferProtocol(scheme, handler)
protocol.interceptHttpProtocol(scheme, handler)
protocol.interceptStreamProtocol(scheme, handler)
protocol.uninterceptProtocol(scheme)
protocol.isProtocolIntercepted(scheme)
- Using
protocol
Register a custom protocol and intercept existing protocol requests.
Process: Main
An example of implementing a protocol that has the same effect as the file://
protocol:
const { app, protocol } = require('electron')
const path = require('path')
app.whenReady().then(() => {
protocol.registerFileProtocol('atom', (request, callback) => {
const url = request.url.substr(7)
callback({ path: path.normalize(`${__dirname}/${url}`) })
})
})
Note: All methods unless specified can only be used after the ready
event of the app
module gets emitted.
Using protocol
with a custom partition
or session
A protocol is registered to a specific Electron session object. If you don’t specify a session, then your protocol
will be applied to the default session that Electron uses. However, if you define a partition
or session
on your browserWindow
‘s webPreferences
, then that window will use a different session and your custom protocol will not work if you just use electron.protocol.XXX
.
To have your custom protocol work in combination with a custom session, you need to register it to that session explicitly.
const { session, app, protocol } = require('electron')
const path = require('path')
app.whenReady().then(() => {
const partition = 'persist:example'
const ses = session.fromPartition(partition)
ses.protocol.registerFileProtocol('atom', (request, callback) => {
const url = request.url.substr(7)
callback({ path: path.normalize(`${__dirname}/${url}`) })
})
mainWindow = new BrowserWindow({ webPreferences: { partition } })
})
Methods
The protocol
module has the following methods:
protocol.registerSchemesAsPrivileged(customSchemes)
customSchemes
CustomScheme[]
Note: This method can only be used before the ready
event of the app
module gets emitted and can be called only once.
Registers the scheme
as standard, secure, bypasses content security policy for resources, allows registering ServiceWorker, supports fetch API, and streaming video/audio. Specify a privilege with the value of true
to enable the capability.
An example of registering a privileged scheme, that bypasses Content Security Policy:
const { protocol } = require('electron')
protocol.registerSchemesAsPrivileged([
{ scheme: 'foo', privileges: { bypassCSP: true } }
])
A standard scheme adheres to what RFC 3986 calls generic URI syntax. For example http
and https
are standard schemes, while file
is not.
Registering a scheme as standard allows relative and absolute resources to be resolved correctly when served. Otherwise the scheme will behave like the file
protocol, but without the ability to resolve relative URLs.
For example when you load following page with custom protocol without registering it as standard scheme, the image will not be loaded because non-standard schemes can not recognize relative URLs:
<body>
<img src='test.png'>
</body>
Registering a scheme as standard will allow access to files through the FileSystem API. Otherwise the renderer will throw a security error for the scheme.
By default web storage apis (localStorage, sessionStorage, webSQL, indexedDB, cookies) are disabled for non standard schemes. So in general if you want to register a custom protocol to replace the http
protocol, you have to register it as a standard scheme.
Protocols that use streams (http and stream protocols) should set stream: true
. The <video>
and <audio>
HTML elements expect protocols to buffer their responses by default. The stream
flag configures those elements to correctly expect streaming responses.
protocol.registerFileProtocol(scheme, handler)
scheme
Stringhandler
Functionrequest
ProtocolRequestcallback
Functionresponse
(String | ProtocolResponse)
Returns Boolean
- Whether the protocol was successfully registered
Registers a protocol of scheme
that will send a file as the response. The handler
will be called with request
and callback
where request
is an incoming request for the scheme
.
To handle the request
, the callback
should be called with either the file’s path or an object that has a path
property, e.g. callback(filePath)
or callback({ path: filePath })
. The filePath
must be an absolute path.
By default the scheme
is treated like http:
, which is parsed differently from protocols that follow the “generic URI syntax” like file:
.
protocol.registerBufferProtocol(scheme, handler)
scheme
Stringhandler
Functionrequest
ProtocolRequestcallback
Functionresponse
(Buffer | ProtocolResponse)
Returns Boolean
- Whether the protocol was successfully registered
Registers a protocol of scheme
that will send a Buffer
as a response.
The usage is the same with registerFileProtocol
, except that the callback
should be called with either a Buffer
object or an object that has the data
property.
Example:
protocol.registerBufferProtocol('atom', (request, callback) => {
callback({ mimeType: 'text/html', data: Buffer.from('<h5>Response</h5>') })
})
protocol.registerStringProtocol(scheme, handler)
scheme
Stringhandler
Functionrequest
ProtocolRequestcallback
Functionresponse
(String | ProtocolResponse)
Returns Boolean
- Whether the protocol was successfully registered
Registers a protocol of scheme
that will send a String
as a response.
The usage is the same with registerFileProtocol
, except that the callback
should be called with either a String
or an object that has the data
property.
protocol.registerHttpProtocol(scheme, handler)
scheme
Stringhandler
Functionrequest
ProtocolRequestcallback
Functionresponse
ProtocolResponse
Returns Boolean
- Whether the protocol was successfully registered
Registers a protocol of scheme
that will send an HTTP request as a response.
The usage is the same with registerFileProtocol
, except that the callback
should be called with an object that has the url
property.
protocol.registerStreamProtocol(scheme, handler)
scheme
Stringhandler
Functionrequest
ProtocolRequestcallback
Functionresponse
(ReadableStream | ProtocolResponse)
Returns Boolean
- Whether the protocol was successfully registered
Registers a protocol of scheme
that will send a stream as a response.
The usage is the same with registerFileProtocol
, except that the callback
should be called with either a ReadableStream object or an object that has the data
property.
Example:
const { protocol } = require('electron')
const { PassThrough } = require('stream')
function createStream (text) {
const rv = new PassThrough() // PassThrough is also a Readable stream
rv.push(text)
rv.push(null)
return rv
}
protocol.registerStreamProtocol('atom', (request, callback) => {
callback({
statusCode: 200,
headers: {
'content-type': 'text/html'
},
data: createStream('<h5>Response</h5>')
})
})
It is possible to pass any object that implements the readable stream API (emits data
/end
/error
events). For example, here’s how a file could be returned:
protocol.registerStreamProtocol('atom', (request, callback) => {
callback(fs.createReadStream('index.html'))
})
protocol.unregisterProtocol(scheme)
scheme
String
Returns Boolean
- Whether the protocol was successfully unregistered
Unregisters the custom protocol of scheme
.
protocol.isProtocolRegistered(scheme)
scheme
String
Returns Boolean
- Whether scheme
is already registered.
protocol.interceptFileProtocol(scheme, handler)
scheme
Stringhandler
Functionrequest
ProtocolRequestcallback
Functionresponse
(String | ProtocolResponse)
Returns Boolean
- Whether the protocol was successfully intercepted
Intercepts scheme
protocol and uses handler
as the protocol’s new handler which sends a file as a response.
protocol.interceptStringProtocol(scheme, handler)
scheme
Stringhandler
Functionrequest
ProtocolRequestcallback
Functionresponse
(String | ProtocolResponse)
Returns Boolean
- Whether the protocol was successfully intercepted
Intercepts scheme
protocol and uses handler
as the protocol’s new handler which sends a String
as a response.
protocol.interceptBufferProtocol(scheme, handler)
scheme
Stringhandler
Functionrequest
ProtocolRequestcallback
Functionresponse
(Buffer | ProtocolResponse)
Returns Boolean
- Whether the protocol was successfully intercepted
Intercepts scheme
protocol and uses handler
as the protocol’s new handler which sends a Buffer
as a response.
protocol.interceptHttpProtocol(scheme, handler)
scheme
Stringhandler
Functionrequest
ProtocolRequestcallback
Functionresponse
ProtocolResponse
Returns Boolean
- Whether the protocol was successfully intercepted
Intercepts scheme
protocol and uses handler
as the protocol’s new handler which sends a new HTTP request as a response.
protocol.interceptStreamProtocol(scheme, handler)
scheme
Stringhandler
Functionrequest
ProtocolRequestcallback
Functionresponse
(ReadableStream | ProtocolResponse)
Returns Boolean
- Whether the protocol was successfully intercepted
Same as protocol.registerStreamProtocol
, except that it replaces an existing protocol handler.
protocol.uninterceptProtocol(scheme)
scheme
String
Returns Boolean
- Whether the protocol was successfully unintercepted
Remove the interceptor installed for scheme
and restore its original handler.
protocol.isProtocolIntercepted(scheme)
scheme
String
Returns Boolean
- Whether scheme
is already intercepted.