runtime.connect()
Make a connection between different contexts inside the extension.
You can call this:
- in an extension's content scripts, to establish a connection with the extension's background scripts (or similarly privileged scripts, like popup scripts or options page scripts).
- in an extension's background scripts (or similarly privileged scripts), to establish a connection with a different extension.
Note that you can't use this function to connect an extension to its content scripts. To do this, use tabs.connect()
.
By default, this connection enables the extension to exchange messages with itself or any other extension (if extensionId
is specified). However, the externally_connectable
manifest key can be used to limit communication to specific extensions and enable communication with websites. Connections within the extension trigger the runtime.onConnect
event, connections from other extensions or web pages trigger the runtime.onConnectExternal
event.
Syntax
js
let port = browser.runtime.connect(
extensionId, // optional string
connectInfo // optional object
)
Parameters
extensionId
Optional-
string
. The ID of the extension to connect to. If the target has set an ID explicitly using the browser_specific_settings key in manifest.json, thenextensionId
should have that value. Otherwise it should have the ID that was generated for the target. connectInfo
Optional-
object
. Details of the connection:name
Optional-
string
. Will be passed intoruntime.onConnect
for processes that are listening for the connection event. includeTlsChannelId
Optional-
boolean
. Whether the TLS channel ID will be passed intoruntime.onConnectExternal
for processes that are listening for the connection event.
Return value
runtime.Port
. Port through which messages can be sent and received. The port's onDisconnect
event is fired if the extension does not exist.
Browser compatibility
BCD tables only load in the browser
Examples
This content script:
- connects to the background script and stores the
Port
in a variable calledmyPort
. - listens for messages on
myPort
and logs them. - sends messages to the background script, using
myPort
, when the user clicks the document.
js
// content-script.js
let myPort = browser.runtime.connect({name:"port-from-cs"});
myPort.postMessage({greeting: "hello from content script"});
myPort.onMessage.addListener((m) => {
console.log("In content script, received message from background script: ");
console.log(m.greeting);
});
document.body.addEventListener("click", () => {
myPort.postMessage({greeting: "they clicked the page!"});
});
The corresponding background script:
- listens for connection attempts from the content script.
- when it receives a connection attempt:
- stores the port in a variable named
portFromCS
. - sends the content script a message using the port.
- starts listening to messages received on the port, and logs them.
- stores the port in a variable named
- sends messages to the content script, using
portFromCS
, when the user clicks the extension's browser action.
js
// background-script.js
let portFromCS;
function connected(p) {
portFromCS = p;
portFromCS.postMessage({greeting: "hi there content script!"});
portFromCS.onMessage.addListener((m) => {
console.log("In background script, received message from content script")
console.log(m.greeting);
});
}
browser.runtime.onConnect.addListener(connected);
browser.browserAction.onClicked.addListener(() => {
portFromCS.postMessage({greeting: "they clicked the button!"});
});
Note: This API is based on Chromium's chrome.runtime
API. This documentation is derived from runtime.json
in the Chromium code.