EventSource

The EventSource interface is web content's interface to server-sent events.

An EventSource instance opens a persistent connection to an HTTP server, which sends events in text/event-stream format. The connection remains open until closed by calling EventSource.close().

Once the connection is opened, incoming messages from the server are delivered to your code in the form of events. If there is an event field in the incoming message, the triggered event is the same as the event field value. If no event field is present, then a generic message event is fired.

Unlike WebSockets, server-sent events are unidirectional; that is, data messages are delivered in one direction, from the server to the client (such as a user's web browser). That makes them an excellent choice when there's no need to send data from the client to the server in message form. For example, EventSource is a useful approach for handling things like social media status updates, news feeds, or delivering data into a client-side storage mechanism like IndexedDB or web storage.

Warning: When not used over HTTP/2, SSE suffers from a limitation to the maximum number of open connections, which can be specially painful when opening various tabs as the limit is per browser and set to a very low number (6). The issue has been marked as "Won't fix" in Chrome and Firefox. This limit is per browser + domain, so that means that you can open 6 SSE connections across all of the tabs to www.example1.com and another 6 SSE connections to www.example2.com. (from Stackoverflow). When using HTTP/2, the maximum number of simultaneous HTTP streams is negotiated between the server and the client (defaults to 100).

Constructor

EventSource()

Creates a new EventSource to handle receiving server-sent events from a specified URL, optionally in credentials mode.

Properties

This interface also inherits properties from its parent, EventTarget.

EventSource.readyState Read only

A number representing the state of the connection. Possible values are CONNECTING (0), OPEN (1), or CLOSED (2).

EventSource.url Read only

A DOMString representing the URL of the source.

EventSource.withCredentials Read only

A boolean value indicating whether the EventSource object was instantiated with cross-origin (CORS) credentials set (true), or not (false, the default).

Event handlers

EventSource.onerror

Is an event handler called when an error occurs and the error event is dispatched on an EventSource object.

EventSource.onmessage

Is an event handler called when a message event is received, that is when a message is coming from the source.

EventSource.onopen

Is an event handler called when an open event is received, that is when the connection was just opened.

Methods

This interface also inherits methods from its parent, EventTarget.

EventSource.close()

Closes the connection, if any, and sets the readyState attribute to CLOSED. If the connection is already closed, the method does nothing.

Events

error

Fired when a connection to an event source failed to open.

message

Fired when data is received from an event source.

open

Fired when a connection to an event source has opened.

Additionally, the event source itself may send messages with an event field, which will create ad-hoc events keyed to that value.

Examples

In this basic example, an EventSource is created to receive unnamed events from the server; a page with the name sse.php is responsible for generating the events.

var evtSource = new EventSource('sse.php');
var eventList = document.querySelector('ul');

evtSource.onmessage = function(e) {
  var newElement = document.createElement("li");

  newElement.textContent = "message: " + e.data;
  eventList.appendChild(newElement);
}

Each received event causes our EventSource object's onmessage event handler to be run. It, in turn, creates a new <li> element and writes the message's data into it, then appends the new element to the list element already in the document.

Note: You can find a full example on GitHub — see Simple SSE demo using PHP.

To listen to named events, you'll require a listener for each type of event sent.

  const sse = new EventSource('/api/v1/sse');

  /* This will listen only for events
   * similar to the following:
   *
   * event: notice
   * data: useful data
   * id: someid
   *
   */
  sse.addEventListener("notice", function(e) {
    console.log(e.data)
  })

  /* Similarly, this will listen for events
   * with the field `event: update`
   */
  sse.addEventListener("update", function(e) {
    console.log(e.data)
  })

  /* The event "message" is a special case, as it
   * will capture events without an event field
   * as well as events that have the specific type
   * `event: message` It will not trigger on any
   * other event type.
   */
  sse.addEventListener("message", function(e) {
    console.log(e.data)
  })

Specifications

Browser compatibility

Desktop Mobile
Chrome Edge Firefox Internet Explorer Opera Safari WebView Android Chrome Android Firefox for Android Opera Android Safari on IOS Samsung Internet
EventSource
6
79
6
No
11
5
≤37
18
45
11
5
1.0
EventSource
9
79
6
No
11
5
≤37
18
45
12
5
1.0
close
6
79
6
No
Yes
5
≤37
18
45
12
5
1.0
error_event
6
79
6
No
Yes
5
≤37
18
45
12
5
1.0
message_event
6
79
6
No
Yes
5
≤37
18
45
12
5
1.0
onerror
6
79
6
No
Yes
5
≤37
18
45
12
5
1.0
onmessage
6
79
6
No
Yes
5
≤37
18
45
12
5
1.0
onopen
6
79
6
No
Yes
5
≤37
18
45
12
5
1.0
open_event
6
79
6
No
Yes
5
≤37
18
45
12
5
1.0
readyState
6
79
6
No
Yes
5
≤37
18
45
12
5
1.0
url
6
79
6
No
Yes
5
≤37
18
45
12
5
1.0
withCredentials
6
79
6
No
Yes
5
≤37
18
45
12
5
1.0
worker_support
6
79
53
No
≤15
5
≤37
18
53
≤14
5
1.0

See also

© 2005–2021 MDN contributors.
Licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License v2.5 or later.
https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/API/EventSource