This is an experimental technology
Check the Browser compatibility table carefully before using this in production.
The AbortController interface represents a controller object that allows you to abort one or more DOM requests as and when desired.
You can create a new AbortController object using the AbortController.AbortController() constructor. Communicating with a DOM request is done using an AbortSignal object.
Constructor
AbortController.AbortController()- Creates a new
AbortControllerobject instance.
Properties
AbortController.signalRead only- Returns a
AbortSignalobject instance, which can be used to communicate with/abort a DOM request.
Methods
AbortController.abort()- Aborts a DOM request before it has completed. This is able to abort fetch requests, consumption of any response
Body, and streams.
Examples
In the following snippet, we aim to download a video using the Fetch API.
We first create a controller using the AbortController() constructor, then grab a reference to its associated AbortSignal object using the AbortController.signal property.
When the fetch request is initiated, we pass in the AbortSignal as an option inside the request's options object (see {signal}, below). This associates the signal and controller with the fetch request and allows us to abort it by calling AbortController.abort(), as seen below in the second event listener.
var controller = new AbortController();
var signal = controller.signal;
var downloadBtn = document.querySelector('.download');
var abortBtn = document.querySelector('.abort');
downloadBtn.addEventListener('click', fetchVideo);
abortBtn.addEventListener('click', function() {
controller.abort();
console.log('Download aborted');
});
function fetchVideo() {
...
fetch(url, {signal}).then(function(response) {
...
}).catch(function(e) {
reports.textContent = 'Download error: ' + e.message;
})
}
Note: When abort() is called, the fetch() promise rejects with an AbortError.
You can find a full working example on GitHub — see abort-api (see it running live also).
Specifications
| Specification | Status | Comment |
|---|---|---|
| DOM The definition of 'AbortController' in that specification. |
Living Standard | Initial definition |
Browser compatibility
| Desktop | Mobile | ||||||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Basic support | Chrome Full support 66 | Edge Full support 16 | Firefox Full support 57 | IE No support No | Opera Full support 53 | Safari Full support 11.1 | WebView Android Full support 66 | Chrome Android Full support 66 | Edge Mobile Full support 16 | Firefox Android Full support 57 | Opera Android Full support 53 | Safari iOS Full support 11.1 | Samsung Internet Android No support No |
AbortController() constructor | Chrome Full support 66 | Edge Full support 16 | Firefox Full support 57 | IE No support No | Opera Full support 53 | Safari Full support 11.1 | WebView Android Full support 66 | Chrome Android Full support 66 | Edge Mobile Full support 16 | Firefox Android Full support 57 | Opera Android Full support 53 | Safari iOS Full support 11.1 | Samsung Internet Android No support No |
signal | Chrome Full support 66 | Edge Full support 16 | Firefox Full support 57 | IE No support No | Opera Full support 53 | Safari Full support 11.1 | WebView Android Full support 66 | Chrome Android Full support 66 | Edge Mobile Full support 16 | Firefox Android Full support 57 | Opera Android Full support 53 | Safari iOS Full support 11.1 | Samsung Internet Android No support No |
abort | Chrome Full support 66 | Edge Full support 16 | Firefox Full support 57 | IE No support No | Opera Full support 53 | Safari Full support 11.1 | WebView Android Full support 66 | Chrome Android Full support 66 | Edge Mobile Full support 16 | Firefox Android Full support 57 | Opera Android Full support 53 | Safari iOS Full support 11.1 | Samsung Internet Android No support No |
Legend
- Full support
- Full support
- No support
- No support
- Experimental. Expect behavior to change in the future.
- Experimental. Expect behavior to change in the future.
See also
- Fetch API
- Abortable Fetch by Jake Archibald