IDBDatabase: transaction() method
The transaction
method of the IDBDatabase
interface immediately returns a transaction object (IDBTransaction
) containing the IDBTransaction.objectStore
method, which you can use to access your object store.
Syntax
transaction(storeNames)
transaction(storeNames, mode)
transaction(storeNames, mode, options)
Parameters
-
storeNames
-
The names of object stores that are in the scope of the new transaction, declared as an array of strings. Specify only the object stores that you need to access. If you need to access only one object store, you can specify its name as a string. Therefore the following lines are equivalent:
db.transaction(["my-store-name"]);
db.transaction("my-store-name");
If you need to access all object stores in the database, you can use the property IDBDatabase.objectStoreNames
:
const transaction = db.transaction(db.objectStoreNames);
Passing an empty array will throw an exception.
mode
Optional
-
The types of access that can be performed in the transaction. Transactions are opened in one of three modes: readonly
, readwrite
and readwriteflush
(non-standard, Firefox-only.) versionchange
mode can't be specified here. If you don't provide the parameter, the default access mode is readonly
. To avoid slowing things down, don't open a readwrite
transaction unless you actually need to write into the database.
If you need to open the object store in readwrite
mode to change data, you would use the following:
const transaction = db.transaction("my-store-name", "readwrite");
As of Firefox 40, IndexedDB transactions have relaxed durability guarantees to increase performance (see Webkit bug 1112702), which is the same behavior as other IndexedDB-supporting browsers. Previously in a readwrite
transaction, a complete
event was fired only when all data was guaranteed to have been flushed to disk. In Firefox 40+ the complete
event is fired after the OS has been told to write the data but potentially before that data has actually been flushed to disk. The complete
event may thus be delivered quicker than before, however, there exists a small chance that the entire transaction will be lost if the OS crashes or there is a loss of system power before the data is flushed to disk. Since such catastrophic events are rare most consumers should not need to concern themselves further.
Note: In Firefox, if you wish to ensure durability for some reason (e.g. you're storing critical data that cannot be recomputed later) you can force a transaction to flush to disk before delivering the complete
event by creating a transaction using the experimental (non-standard) readwriteflush
mode (see IDBDatabase.transaction
.) This is currently experimental, and can only be used if the dom.indexedDB.experimental
pref is set to true
in about:config
.
options
Optional
-
Dictionary of other options. Available options are:
-
durability
-
"default"
, "strict"
, or "relaxed"
. The default is "default"
. Using "relaxed"
provides better performance, but with fewer guarantees. Web applications are encouraged to use "relaxed"
for ephemeral data such as caches or quickly changing records, and "strict"
in cases where reducing the risk of data loss outweighs the impact to performance and power.
Return value
Exceptions
InvalidStateError
DOMException
-
Thrown if the close()
method has previously been called on this IDBDatabase
instance.
NotFoundError
DOMException
-
Thrown if an object store specified in the 'storeNames' parameter has been deleted or removed.
-
TypeError
-
Thrown if the value for the mode
parameter is invalid.
InvalidAccessError
DOMException
-
Thrown if the function was called with an empty list of store names.
Examples
In this example we open a database connection, then use transaction() to open a transaction on the database. For a complete example, see our To-do Notifications app (view example live).
let db;
const DBOpenRequest = window.indexedDB.open("toDoList", 4);
DBOpenRequest.onsuccess = (event) => {
note.innerHTML += "<li>Database initialized.</li>";
db = DBOpenRequest.result;
displayData();
};
const transaction = db.transaction(["toDoList"], "readwrite");
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>";
};
const objectStore = transaction.objectStore("toDoList");
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 |
transaction |
23 |
12 |
10 |
10 |
15 |
8 |
4.4 |
25 |
22 |
14 |
8 |
1.5 |
See also