Up to date

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Exporting for the Web

Viz také

This page describes how to export a Godot project to HTML5. If you're looking to compile editor or export template binaries from source instead, read Compiling for the Web.

HTML5 export allows publishing games made in Godot Engine to the browser. This requires support for WebAssembly, WebGL and SharedArrayBuffer in the user's browser.

Výstraha

Projects written in C# using Godot 4 currently cannot be exported to the web. To use C# on web platforms, use Godot 3 instead.

Tip

Use the browser-integrated developer console, usually opened with F12 (Cmd + Option + I on macOS), to view debug information like JavaScript, engine, and WebGL errors.

Výstraha

Godot 4's HTML5 exports currently cannot run on macOS and iOS due to upstream bugs with SharedArrayBuffer and WebGL 2.0. We recommend using macOS and iOS native export functionality instead, as it will also result in better performance.

Godot 3's HTML5 exports are more compatible with various browsers in general, especially when using the GLES2 rendering backend (which only requires WebGL 1.0).

Verze WebGL

Godot 4.0 and later can only target WebGL 2.0 (using the Compatibility rendering method). There is no stable way to run Vulkan applications on the web yet.

See Can I use WebGL 2.0 for a list of browser versions supporting WebGL 2.0. Note that Safari has several issues with WebGL 2.0 support that other browsers don't have, so we recommend using a Chromium-based browser or Firefox if possible.

Export options

If a runnable web export template is available, a button appears between the Stop scene and Play edited Scene buttons in the editor to quickly open the game in the default browser for testing.

If you plan to use VRAM compression make sure that Vram Texture Compression is enabled for the targeted platforms (enabling both For Desktop and For Mobile will result in a bigger, but more compatible export).

If a path to a Custom HTML shell file is given, it will be used instead of the default HTML page. See Custom HTML page for Web export.

Head Include is appended into the <head> element of the generated HTML page. This allows to, for example, load webfonts and third-party JavaScript APIs, include CSS, or run JavaScript code.

Důležité

Each project must generate their own HTML file. On export, several text placeholders are replaced in the generated HTML file specifically for the given export options. Any direct modifications to that HTML file will be lost in future exports. To customize the generated file, use the Custom HTML shell option.

Omezení

For security and privacy reasons, many features that work effortlessly on native platforms are more complicated on the web platform. Following is a list of limitations you should be aware of when porting a Godot game to the web.

Důležité

Browser vendors are making more and more functionalities only available in secure contexts, this means that such features are only be available if the web page is served via a secure HTTPS connection (localhost is usually exempt from such requirement).

Using cookies for data persistence

Users must allow cookies (specifically IndexedDB) if persistence of the user:// file system is desired. When playing a game presented in an iframe, third-party cookies must also be enabled. Incognito/private browsing mode also prevents persistence.

The method OS.is_userfs_persistent() can be used to check if the user:// file system is persistent, but can give false positives in some cases.

Zpracování na pozadí

The project will be paused by the browser when the tab is no longer the active tab in the user's browser. This means functions such as _process() and _physics_process() will no longer run until the tab is made active again by the user (by switching back to the tab). This can cause networked games to disconnect if the user switches tabs for a long duration.

This limitation does not apply to unfocused browser windows. Therefore, on the user's side, this can be worked around by running the project in a separate window instead of a separate tab.

Full screen and mouse capture

Browsers do not allow arbitrarily entering full screen. The same goes for capturing the cursor. Instead, these actions have to occur as a response to a JavaScript input event. In Godot, this means entering full screen from within a pressed input event callback such as _input or _unhandled_input. Querying the Input singleton is not sufficient, the relevant input event must currently be active.

For the same reason, the full screen project setting doesn't work unless the engine is started from within a valid input event handler. This requires customization of the HTML page.

Zvuk

Some browsers restrict autoplay for audio on websites. The easiest way around this limitation is to request the player to click, tap or press a key/button to enable audio, for instance when displaying a splash screen at the start of your game.

Viz také

Google offers additional information about their Web Audio autoplay policies.

Apple's Safari team also posted additional information about their Auto-Play Policy Changes for macOS.

Varování

Access to microphone requires a secure context.

Sítě

Low level networking is not implemented due to lacking support in browsers.

Currently, only HTTP client, HTTP requests, WebSocket (client) and WebRTC are supported.

The HTTP classes also have several restrictions on the HTML5 platform:

  • Accessing or changing the StreamPeer is not possible

  • Threaded/Blocking mode is not available

  • Cannot progress more than once per frame, so polling in a loop will freeze

  • No chunked responses

  • Host verification cannot be disabled

  • Subject to same-origin policy

Schránka

Clipboard synchronization between engine and the operating system requires a browser supporting the Clipboard API, additionally, due to the API asynchronous nature might not be reliable when accessed from GDScript.

Varování

Requires a secure context.

Gamepads

Gamepads will not be detected until one of their button is pressed. Gamepads might have the wrong mapping depending on the browser/OS/gamepad combination, sadly the Gamepad API does not provide a reliable way to detect the gamepad information necessary to remap them based on model/vendor/OS due to privacy considerations.

Varování

Requires a secure context.

Boot splash is not displayed

The default HTML page does not display the boot splash while loading. However, the image is exported as a PNG file, so custom HTML pages can display it.

Serving the files

Exporting for the web generates several files to be served from a web server, including a default HTML page for presentation. A custom HTML file can be used, see Custom HTML page for Web export.

Varování

To ensure low audio latency and the ability to use Thread in web exports, Godot 4 web exports always use SharedArrayBuffer. This requires a secure context, while also requiring the following CORS headers to be set when serving the files:

Cross-Origin-Opener-Policy: same-origin
Cross-Origin-Embedder-Policy: require-corp

If you don't control the web server or are unable to add response headers, use coi-serviceworker as a workaround.

If the client doesn't receive the required response headers, the project will not run.

The generated .html file can be used as DirectoryIndex in Apache servers and can be renamed to e.g. index.html at any time. Its name is never depended on by default.

The HTML page draws the game at maximum size within the browser window. This way, it can be inserted into an <iframe> with the game's size, as is common on most web game hosting sites.

The other exported files are served as they are, next to the .html file, names unchanged. The .wasm file is a binary WebAssembly module implementing the engine. The .pck file is the Godot main pack containing your game. The .js file contains start-up code and is used by the .html file to access the engine. The .png file contains the boot splash image. It is not used in the default HTML page, but is included for custom HTML pages.

The .pck file is binary, usually delivered with the MIME-type application/octet-stream. The .wasm file is delivered as application/wasm.

Varování

Delivering the WebAssembly module (.wasm) with a MIME-type other than application/wasm can prevent some start-up optimizations.

Delivering the files with server-side compression is recommended especially for the .pck and .wasm files, which are usually large in size. The WebAssembly module compresses particularly well, down to around a quarter of its original size with gzip compression. Consider using Brotli precompression if supported on your web server for further file size savings.

Hosts that provide on-the-fly compression: GitHub Pages (gzip)

Hosts that don't provide on-the-fly compression: itch.io, GitLab Pages (supports manual gzip precompression)

Tip

The Godot repository includes a Python script to host a local web server. This script is intended for testing the web editor, but it can also be used to test exported projects.

Save the linked script to a file called serve.py, move this file to the folder containing the exported project's index.html, then run the following command in a command prompt within the same folder:

# You may need to replace `python` with `python3` on some platforms.
python serve.py --root .

On Windows, you can open a command prompt in the current folder by holding Shift and right-clicking on empty space in Windows Explorer, then choosing Open PowerShell window here.

This will serve the contents of the current folder and open the default web browser automatically.

Note that for production use cases, this Python-based web server should not be used. Instead, you should use an established web server such as Apache or nginx.

Calling JavaScript from script

In web builds, the JavaScriptBridge singleton is implemented. It offers a single method called eval that works similarly to the JavaScript function of the same name. It takes a string as an argument and executes it as JavaScript code. This allows interacting with the browser in ways not possible with script languages integrated into Godot.

func my_func():
    JavaScriptBridge.eval("alert('Calling JavaScript per GDScript!');")

The value of the last JavaScript statement is converted to a GDScript value and returned by eval() under certain circumstances:

  • JavaScript number is returned as float

  • JavaScript boolean is returned as bool

  • JavaScript string is returned as String

  • JavaScript ArrayBuffer, TypedArray and DataView are returned as PackedByteArray

func my_func2():
    var js_return = JavaScriptBridge.eval("var myNumber = 1; myNumber + 2;")
    print(js_return) # prints '3.0'

Any other JavaScript value is returned as null.

HTML5 export templates may be built without support for the singleton to improve security. With such templates, and on platforms other than HTML5, calling JavaScriptBridge.eval will also return null. The availability of the singleton can be checked with the web feature tag:

func my_func3():
    if OS.has_feature('web'):
        JavaScriptBridge.eval("""
            console.log('The JavaScriptBridge singleton is available')
        """)
    else:
        print("The JavaScriptBridge singleton is NOT available")

Tip

GDScript's multi-line strings, surrounded by 3 quotes """ as in my_func3() above, are useful to keep JavaScript code readable.

The eval method also accepts a second, optional Boolean argument, which specifies whether to execute the code in the global execution context, defaulting to false to prevent polluting the global namespace:

func my_func4():
    # execute in global execution context,
    # thus adding a new JavaScript global variable `SomeGlobal`
    JavaScriptBridge.eval("var SomeGlobal = {};", true)

Environment variables

You can use the following environment variables to set export options outside of the editor. During the export process, these override the values that you set in the export menu.

HTML5 export environment variables

Export option

Environment variable

Encryption / Encryption Key

GODOT_SCRIPT_ENCRYPTION_KEY