RTCDataChannel: bufferedAmountLowThreshold property
Baseline Widely available
This feature is well established and works across many devices and browser versions. It’s been available across browsers since January 2020.
The RTCDataChannel
property
bufferedAmountLowThreshold
is used to specify the number
of bytes of buffered outgoing data that is considered "low." The default value is
0. When the number of buffered outgoing bytes, as indicated by the
bufferedAmount
property, falls to or
below this value, a bufferedamountlow
event is fired. This event may be
used, for example, to implement code which queues more messages to be sent whenever
there's room to buffer them. Listeners may be added with
onbufferedamountlow
or
addEventListener()
.
The user agent may implement the process of actually sending data in any way it chooses; this may be done periodically during the event loop or truly asynchronously. As messages are actually sent, this value is reduced accordingly.
Note: bufferedamountlow
events are not fired after the data channel is closed.
Value
The number of queued outgoing data bytes below which the buffer is considered to be "low."
Example
In this snippet of code, bufferedAmountLowThreshold
is set to 64kB, and a
handler for the bufferedamountlow
event is established by setting the
onbufferedamountlow
property to a function which should
send more data into the buffer by calling send()
.
const dc = peerConnection.createDataChannel("File Transfer");
dc.bufferedAmountLowThreshold = 65535;
dc.onbufferedamountlow = () => {
/* use send() to queue more data to be sent */
};
Specifications
Specification |
---|
WebRTC: Real-Time Communication in Browsers # dom-rtcdatachannel-bufferedamountlowthreshold |
Browser compatibility
BCD tables only load in the browser