Welcome What's new in Chrome extensions API reference Samples
Welcome What's new in Chrome extensions API reference Samples

chrome.alarms

  • Description

    Use the chrome.alarms API to schedule code to run periodically or at a specified time in the future.

  • Permissions
    alarms

Manifest

To use the chrome.alarms API, declare the "alarms" permission in the manifest:

{
"name": "My extension",
...
"permissions": [
"alarms"
],
...
}

Concepts and usage

Device sleep

The behavior of alarms when a device goes to sleep is currently undefined. An alarm will never fire early but may fire significantly later than expected if a device went to sleep after an alarm was scheduled.

Persistence

Alarms generally persist until an extension is updated. However, this is not guaranteed, and alarms may be cleared when the browser is restarted. Consequently, consider setting a value in storage when an alarm is created, and then ensure it exists each time your service worker starts up. For example:

const STORAGE_KEY = "user-preference-alarm-enabled";

async function checkAlarmState() {
const { alarmEnabled } = await chrome.storage.get(STORAGE_KEY);

if (alarmEnabled) {
const alarm = await chrome.alarms.get("my-alarm");

if (!alarm) {
await chrome.alarms.create({ periodInMinutes: 1 });
}
}
}

checkAlarmState();

Examples

The following examples show how to use and respond to an alarm. To try this API, install the Alarm API example from the chrome-extension-samples repository.

Set an alarm

The following example sets an alarm in the service worker when the extension is installed:

service-worker.js:

chrome.runtime.onInstalled.addListener(async ({ reason }) => {
if (reason !== 'install') {
return;
}

// Create an alarm so we have something to look at in the demo
await chrome.alarms.create('demo-default-alarm', {
delayInMinutes: 1,
periodInMinutes: 1
});
});

Chrome 120: Starting in Chrome 120, the minimum alarm interval has been reduced from 1 minute to 30 seconds. For an alarm to trigger in 30 seconds, set periodInMinutes: 0.5.

Chrome 117: Starting in Chrome 117, the number of active alarms is limited to 500. Once this limit is reached, chrome.alarms.create() will fail. When using a callback, chrome.runtime.lastError will be set. When using promises, the promise will be rejected.

Respond to an alarm

The following example sets the action toolbar icon based on the name of the alarm that went off.

service-worker.js:

chrome.alarms.onAlarm.addListener((alarm) => {
chrome.action.setIcon({
path: getIconPath(alarm.name),
});
});

Summary

Types

Alarm

Properties

  • name

    string

    Name of this alarm.

  • periodInMinutes

    number optional

    If not null, the alarm is a repeating alarm and will fire again in periodInMinutes minutes.

  • scheduledTime

    number

    Time at which this alarm was scheduled to fire, in milliseconds past the epoch (e.g. Date.now() + n). For performance reasons, the alarm may have been delayed an arbitrary amount beyond this.

AlarmCreateInfo

Properties

  • delayInMinutes

    number optional

    Length of time in minutes after which the onAlarm event should fire.

  • periodInMinutes

    number optional

    If set, the onAlarm event should fire every periodInMinutes minutes after the initial event specified by when or delayInMinutes. If not set, the alarm will only fire once.

  • when

    number optional

    Time at which the alarm should fire, in milliseconds past the epoch (e.g. Date.now() + n).

Methods

clear

chrome.alarms.clear(
  name?: string,
  callback?: function,
)
Promise

Clears the alarm with the given name.

Parameters

  • name

    string optional

    The name of the alarm to clear. Defaults to the empty string.

  • callback

    function optional

    The callback parameter looks like: (wasCleared: boolean) => void

    • wasCleared

      boolean

Returns

  • Promise<boolean>

    Chrome 91+

    Promises are supported in Manifest V3 and later, but callbacks are provided for backward compatibility. You cannot use both on the same function call. The promise resolves with the same type that is passed to the callback.

clearAll

chrome.alarms.clearAll(
  callback?: function,
)
Promise

Clears all alarms.

Parameters

  • callback

    function optional

    The callback parameter looks like: (wasCleared: boolean) => void

    • wasCleared

      boolean

Returns

  • Promise<boolean>

    Chrome 91+

    Promises are supported in Manifest V3 and later, but callbacks are provided for backward compatibility. You cannot use both on the same function call. The promise resolves with the same type that is passed to the callback.

create

chrome.alarms.create(
  name?: string,
  alarmInfo: AlarmCreateInfo,
  callback?: function,
)
Promise

Creates an alarm. Near the time(s) specified by alarmInfo, the onAlarm event is fired. If there is another alarm with the same name (or no name if none is specified), it will be cancelled and replaced by this alarm.

In order to reduce the load on the user's machine, Chrome limits alarms to at most once every 30 seconds but may delay them an arbitrary amount more. That is, setting delayInMinutes or periodInMinutes to less than 0.5 will not be honored and will cause a warning. when can be set to less than 30 seconds after "now" without warning but won't actually cause the alarm to fire for at least 30 seconds.

To help you debug your app or extension, when you've loaded it unpacked, there's no limit to how often the alarm can fire.

Parameters

  • name

    string optional

    Optional name to identify this alarm. Defaults to the empty string.

  • Describes when the alarm should fire. The initial time must be specified by either when or delayInMinutes (but not both). If periodInMinutes is set, the alarm will repeat every periodInMinutes minutes after the initial event. If neither when or delayInMinutes is set for a repeating alarm, periodInMinutes is used as the default for delayInMinutes.

  • callback

    function optional

    Chrome 111+

    The callback parameter looks like: () => void

Returns

  • Promise<void>

    Chrome 111+

    Promises are supported in Manifest V3 and later, but callbacks are provided for backward compatibility. You cannot use both on the same function call. The promise resolves with the same type that is passed to the callback.

get

chrome.alarms.get(
  name?: string,
  callback?: function,
)
Promise

Retrieves details about the specified alarm.

Parameters

  • name

    string optional

    The name of the alarm to get. Defaults to the empty string.

  • callback

    function optional

    The callback parameter looks like: (alarm?: Alarm) => void

Returns

  • Promise<Alarm | undefined>

    Chrome 91+

    Promises are supported in Manifest V3 and later, but callbacks are provided for backward compatibility. You cannot use both on the same function call. The promise resolves with the same type that is passed to the callback.

getAll

chrome.alarms.getAll(
  callback?: function,
)
Promise

Gets an array of all the alarms.

Parameters

  • callback

    function optional

    The callback parameter looks like: (alarms: Alarm[]) => void

Returns

  • Promise<Alarm[]>

    Chrome 91+

    Promises are supported in Manifest V3 and later, but callbacks are provided for backward compatibility. You cannot use both on the same function call. The promise resolves with the same type that is passed to the callback.

Events

onAlarm

chrome.alarms.onAlarm.addListener(
  callback: function,
)

Fired when an alarm has elapsed. Useful for event pages.

Parameters

  • callback

    function

    The callback parameter looks like: (alarm: Alarm) => void

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