Working on a web extension is an interesting experience — you get to taste web while working with special extension APIs. One such API is storage
— the web extension flavor of persistence. Let’s explore how you can use session
and local
storage within your Manifest V3 web extensions!
Enabling Extension Storage
The extension storage
API isn’t available by default. To enable the storage
API, you need to cite it in the manifest.json
file of your extension:
{ // more.... "manifest_version": 3, "name": "__MSG_appName__", "permissions": [ "storage", // more.... ], // more.... }
Adding storage
to the permissions
array, which is a top level manifest.json
key, provides session
and local
storage capabilities to your extension.
Get, Set, and Remove Storage Values
Much like traditional localStorage
and sessionStorage
APIs, extension storage provides get
, set
, and remove
operations:
// set await chrome.storage.session.set({ name: "David", color: "green" }); // get const { name, color } = await chrome.storage.session.get(["name", "color"]); // remove await chrome.storage.session.remove(["name", "color"]);
A few things to note:
get
requires an array argument, not a single value likelocalStorage
andsessionStorage
set
needs to be an object formatremove
is also an array, much likeget
- You can use
chrome.storage.local
orchrome.storage.session
depending on how - All of the extension storage API methods are promise-based, with
await
or callback formats
Clear All Storage
In the event that you want to clear all data for local or session storage, there’s a clear
method:
await chrome.storage.session.clear();
Using clear
is effective but you’ll want to be sure that you do truly want to clear everything — clear
could become a maintenance issue.
Storage is an essential part of most web extensions. While the API is simple, the async format and method names are different.