You could monitor the offline
and online
events, which are widely supported. Further, you could test connectivity by attempting to fetch HEAD
from the target server URL:
// Test this by running the code snippet below and then
// use the "Offline" checkbox in DevTools Network panel
window.addEventListener('online', handleConnection);
window.addEventListener('offline', handleConnection);
function handleConnection() {
if (navigator.onLine) {
isReachable(getServerUrl()).then(function(online) {
if (online) {
// handle online status
console.log('online');
} else {
console.log('no connectivity');
}
});
} else {
// handle offline status
console.log('offline');
}
}
function isReachable(url) {
/**
* Note: fetch() still "succeeds" for 404s on subdirectories,
* which is ok when only testing for domain reachability.
*
* Example:
* https://google.com/noexist does not throw
* https://noexist.com/noexist does throw
*/
return fetch(url, { method: 'HEAD', mode: 'no-cors' })
.then(function(resp) {
return resp && (resp.ok || resp.type === 'opaque');
})
.catch(function(err) {
console.warn('[conn test failure]:', err);
});
}
function getServerUrl() {
return document.getElementById('serverUrl').value || window.location.origin;
}
<fieldset>
<label>
<span>Server URL for connectivity test:</span>
<input id="serverUrl" style="width: 100%">
</label>
</fieldset>
<script>document.getElementById('serverUrl').value = window.location.origin;</script>
<p>
<i>Use Network Panel in DevTools to toggle Offline status</i>
</p>
One technique of handling this:
-
Offline event
- show offline icon/status
- enable only features that are available offline (via cached data)
-
Online event
- show online icon/status
- enable all features