Closes the request. After this is called, no further response data will be passed to the browser's rendering engine and no more filter events will be given to the extension.
Note the difference between this function and disconnect()
. With disconnect()
, the browser will continue to process any further response data, but it won't be accessible through the filter. With close()
, the browser will ignore any response data that hasn't already been passed through to the rendering engine.
You should always call close()
or disconnect()
once you don't need to interact with the response any further.
You can't call this function until after the onstart
event has fired.
filter.close()
None.
None.
Desktop | Mobile | |||||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Chrome | Edge | Firefox | Internet Explorer | Opera | Safari | WebView Android | Chrome Android | Firefox for Android | Opera Android | Safari on IOS | Samsung Internet | |
close |
No |
No |
57 |
? |
No |
No |
? |
? |
57 |
? |
? |
? |
This example will replace the page content with "replacement text":
function listener(details) { let filter = browser.webRequest.filterResponseData(details.requestId); filter.onstart = event => { console.log("started"); let encoder = new TextEncoder(); filter.write(encoder.encode("replacement content")); filter.close(); } } browser.webRequest.onBeforeRequest.addListener( listener, {urls: ["https://example.org/"], types: ["main_frame"]}, ["blocking"] );
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https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Mozilla/Add-ons/WebExtensions/API/webRequest/StreamFilter/close