BaseAudioContext: state property
Baseline Widely available
This feature is well established and works across many devices and browser versions. It’s been available across browsers since April 2021.
The state
read-only property of the BaseAudioContext
interface returns the current state of the AudioContext
.
Value
A string. Possible values are:
closed
-
The audio context has been closed (with the
AudioContext.close()
method.) interrupted
Experimental-
The audio context has been interrupted by an occurrence outside the control of the web app.
running
-
The audio context is running normally.
suspended
-
The audio context has been suspended (with the
AudioContext.suspend()
method.)
Description
The state
property of an audio context is used to expose its current operational state. This is normally done by querying the state
inside a statechange
event handler so that changes in state can be responded to appropriately.
The running
and closed
values are self-explanatory — they indicate that the audio context is either running normally, or closed (via the AudioContext.close()
method).
The interrupted
and suspended
states both represent a "paused" state that can later be resumed, but they differ in terms of what they signify:
- The
suspended
state indicates that the audio context was paused in response to a user action inside the web app, by running theAudioContext.suspend()
method inside aclick
(or similar) event handler. In this case, the context would be unpaused by running theAudioContext.resume()
method. - The
interrupted
state indicates that the audio context was paused in response to an interruption outside the control of the web app. In this case, the browser decides when to pause and unpause the app. The web app can then handle theinterrupted
state appropriately, for example by pausing an audio stream to avoid wasting resources while an app is not being used.
Interruptions that may trigger the interrupted
state can include:
- A conferencing or phone app on the same system requiring exclusive access to the device's audio hardware.
- The user closing their laptop.
- API features designed to initiate or respond to audio interruptions.
Note:
How the interrupted
state is triggered may vary between browsers.
Note also the potential for transitions between the interrupted
and suspended
states:
- If
suspend()
is called on an audio context during an interruption (state
isinterrupted
), the state will transition tosuspended
immediately. - If
resume()
is called on asuspended
audio context during an interruption, the state will transition tointerrupted
immediately. - If an interruption happens while the audio context is
suspended
, the context will not transition tointerrupted
. This transition won't happen unlessresume()
is called on the context (as outlined by the previous point). This choice was made to avoid exposing too much device information to web pages - for example, logging every time the laptop is closed could be a privacy issue.
Examples
Handling state changes
The following snippet is taken from our AudioContext states demo (see it running live.) The onstatechange
handler is used to log the
current state to the console every time it changes.
audioCtx.onstatechange = () => {
console.log(audioCtx.state);
};
Resuming interrupted play states in iOS Safari
In iOS Safari, when a user leaves the page (e.g., switches tabs, minimizes the browser, or turns off the screen) the audio context's state changes to "interrupted" and needs to be resumed. For example:
function play() {
if (audioCtx.state === "interrupted") {
audioCtx.resume().then(() => play());
return;
}
// rest of the play() function
}
Specifications
Specification |
---|
Web Audio API # dom-baseaudiocontext-state |