IDBTransaction: commit() method

The commit() method of the IDBTransaction interface commits the transaction if it is called on an active transaction.

Note that commit() doesn't normally have to be called — a transaction will automatically commit when all outstanding requests have been satisfied and no new requests have been made. commit() can be used to start the commit process without waiting for events from outstanding requests to be dispatched.

If it is called on a transaction that is not active, it throws an InvalidStateError DOMException.

Note: This feature is available in Web Workers

Syntax

js

commit()

Parameters

None.

Return value

None (undefined).

Exceptions

InvalidStateError DOMException

Thrown if the transaction state is not active.

Examples

js

const note = document.getElementById("notifications");

// open a read/write db transaction, ready for adding the data
const transaction = db.transaction(["myDB"], "readwrite");

// report on the success of opening the transaction
transaction.oncomplete = (event) => {
  note.innerHTML +=
    "<li>Transaction completed: database modification finished.</li>";
};

transaction.onerror = (event) => {
  note.innerHTML +=
    "<li>Transaction not opened due to error. Duplicate items not allowed.</li>";
};

// create an object store on the transaction
const objectStore = transaction.objectStore("myObjStore");

// add our newItem object to the object store
const objectStoreRequest = objectStore.add(newItem[0]);

objectStoreRequest.onsuccess = (event) => {
  // report the success of the request (this does not mean the item
  // has been stored successfully in the DB - for that you need transaction.onsuccess)
  note.innerHTML += "<li>Request successful.</li>";
};

// Force the changes to be committed to the database asap
transaction.commit();

Specifications

Specification
Indexed Database API 3.0
# ref-for-dom-idbtransaction-commit②

Browser compatibility

BCD tables only load in the browser

See also