Sensor APIs

The Sensor APIs are a set of interfaces built to a common design that expose device sensors in a consistent way to the web platform.

Sensor APIs concepts and usage

Although the Generic Sensor API specification defines a Sensor interface, as a web developer you will never use it. Instead you'll use one of its subclasses to retrieve specific kinds of sensor data. For example, the accelerometer interface returns the acceleration of the device along all three axes at the time it is read.

Sensors may or may not correspond exactly to a physical device sensor. For example, the Gyroscope interface corresponds exactly to a physical device interface. Alternatively, the AbsoluteOrientationSensor interface provides information that is algorithmically aggregated from two or more device sensors. These sensor types are referred to as low-level and high-level respectively. The latter type of sensor is also called a fusion sensor (alternatively, virtual or synthetic sensors).

Feature detection

Sensor interfaces are only proxies for the underlying device sensors. Consequently, feature detection is more complicated for sensors than it is for other APIs. The presence of a sensor API does not tell you whether that API is connected to a real hardware sensor, whether that sensor works, if it's still connected, or even whether the user has granted access to it. Making all this information consistently available is costly to performance and battery life.

Therefore, feature detection for sensor APIs must include both detection of the APIs themselves and defensive programming strategies (see below).

The examples below show three methods for detecting sensor APIs. Additionally you can put object instantiation inside a try...catch block. Notice that detection through the Navigator interface is not one of the available options.

if (typeof Gyroscope === "function") {
    // run in circles...
}

if ("ProximitySensor" in window) {
    // watch out!
}

if (window.AmbientLightSensor) {
    // go dark...
}

Defensive programming

As stated in Feature Detection, checking for a particular sensor API is insufficient for feature detection. The existence of an actual sensor must be confirmed as well. This is where defensive programming is needed. Defensive programming requires three strategies.

  • Checking for thrown errors when instantiating a sensor object.
  • Listening for errors thrown during its use.
  • Handling the errors gracefully so that the user experience is enhanced rather than degraded.

The code example below illustrates these principles. The try...catch block catches errors thrown during sensor instantiation. It listens for error events to catch errors thrown during use. The only time anything is shown to the user is when permissions need to be requested and when the sensor type isn't supported by the device.

Note: If a feature policy blocks use of a feature it is because your code is inconsistent with the policies set on your server. This is not something that would ever be shown to a user. The Feature-Policy HTTP header article contains implementation instructions.

let accelerometer = null;
try {
    accelerometer = new Accelerometer({ referenceFrame: 'device' });
    accelerometer.addEventListener('error', event => {
        // Handle runtime errors.
        if (event.error.name === 'NotAllowedError') {
            // Branch to code for requesting permission.
        } else if (event.error.name === 'NotReadableError' ) {
            console.log('Cannot connect to the sensor.');
        }
    });
    accelerometer.addEventListener('reading', () => reloadOnShake(accelerometer));
    accelerometer.start();
} catch (error) {
    // Handle construction errors.
    if (error.name === 'SecurityError') {
        // See the note above about feature policy.
        console.log('Sensor construction was blocked by a feature policy.');
    } else if (error.name === 'ReferenceError') {
        console.log('Sensor is not supported by the User Agent.');
    } else {
        throw error;
    }
}

Permissions and Feature Policy

Sensor readings may not be taken unless the user grants permission to a specific sensor type. Do this using the Permissions API. A brief example, shown below, requests permission before attempting to use the sensor.

navigator.permissions.query({ name: 'accelerometer' })
.then(result => {
  if (result.state === 'denied') {
    console.log('Permission to use accelerometer sensor is denied.');
    return;
  }
  // Use the sensor.
});

An alternative approach is to attempt to use the sensor and listen for the SecurityError.

const sensor = new AbsoluteOrientationSensor();
sensor.start();
sensor.addEventListener('error', error => {
  if (event.error.name === 'SecurityError')
    console.log("No permissions to use AbsoluteOrientationSensor.");
});

The following table describes for each sensor type, the name required for the Permissions API, the <iframe> element's allow attribute and the Feature-Policy directive.

Sensor Permission/Feature Policy Name
AbsoluteOrientationSensor 'accelerometer', 'gyroscope', and 'magnetometer'
Accelerometer 'accelerometer'
AmbientLightSensor 'ambient-light-sensor'
GravitySensor 'accelerometer'
Gyroscope 'gyroscope'
LinearAccelerationSensor 'accelerometer'
Magnetometer 'magnetometer'
RelativeOrientationSensor 'accelerometer', and 'gyroscope'

Readings

Sensor readings are received through the reading event callback which is inherited by all sensor types. Reading frequency is decided by you, accomplished with an option passed to a sensor's constructor. The option is a number that specifies the number of readings per second. A whole number or decimal may be used, the latter for frequencies less than a second. The actual reading frequency depends device hardware and consequently may be less than requested.

The following example illustrates this using the Magnetometer sensor.

let magSensor = new Magnetometer({frequency: 60});

magSensor.addEventListener('reading', e => {
  console.log("Magnetic field along the X-axis " + magSensor.x);
  console.log("Magnetic field along the Y-axis " + magSensor.y);
  console.log("Magnetic field along the Z-axis " + magSensor.z);
})
magSensor.addEventListener('error', event => {
  console.log(event.error.name, event.error.message);
})
magSensor.start();

Interfaces

AbsoluteOrientationSensorSecure context

Describes the device's physical orientation in relation to the Earth's reference coordinate system.

AccelerometerSecure context

Provides the acceleration applied to the device along all three axes.

AmbientLightSensorSecure context

Returns the current light level or illuminance of the ambient light around the hosting device.

GravitySensorSecure context

Provides the gravity applied to the device along all three axes.

GyroscopeSecure context

Provides the angular velocity of the device along all three axes.

LinearAccelerationSensorSecure context

Provides the acceleration applied to the device along all three axes, but without the contribution of gravity.

MagnetometerSecure context

Provides information about the magnetic field as detected by the device's primary magnetometer sensor.

OrientationSensorSecure context

The base class for the AbsoluteOrientationSensor. This interface cannot be used directly, instead it provides properties and methods accessed by interfaces that inherit from it.

RelativeOrientationSensorSecure context

Describes the device's physical orientation without regard to the Earth's reference coordinate system.

SensorSecure context

The base class for all the other sensor interfaces. This interface cannot be used directly. Instead it provides properties, event handlers, and methods accessed by interfaces that inherit from it.

SensorErrorEventSecure context

Provides information about errors thrown by a Sensor or related interface.

Specifications

Specification
Generic Sensor API
Accelerometer
Ambient Light Sensor
Gyroscope
Magnetometer
Orientation Sensor

Browser compatibility

BCD tables only load in the browser