Skip to main content

Loading

Edit this page on GitHub

A component that defines a page or a layout can export a load function that runs before the component is created. This function runs both during server-side rendering and in the client, and allows you to fetch and manipulate data before the page is rendered, thus preventing loading spinners.

If the data for a page comes from its endpoint, you may not need a load function. It's useful when you need more flexibility, for example loading data from an external API, which might look like this:

src/routes/blog/[slug].svelte
<script context="module">
  /** @type {import('@sveltejs/kit').Load} */  export async function load({ params, fetch, session, stuff }) {
    const url = `https://cms.example.com/article/${params.slug}.json`;
    const response = await fetch(url);

    return {
      status: response.status,
      props: {
        article: response.ok && (await response.json())
      }
    };
  }
</script>

Note the <script context="module"> — this is necessary because load runs before the component is rendered. Code that is per-component instance should go into a second <script> tag.

load is similar to getStaticProps or getServerSideProps in Next.js, except that it runs on both the server and the client. In the example above, if a user clicks on a link to this page the data will be fetched from cms.example.com without going via our server.

If load returns {fallthrough: true}, SvelteKit will fall through to other routes until something responds, or will respond with a generic 404.

SvelteKit's load receives an implementation of fetch, which has the following special properties:

  • it has access to cookies on the server
  • it can make requests against the app's own endpoints without issuing an HTTP call
  • it makes a copy of the response when you use it, and then sends it embedded in the initial page load for hydration

load only applies to page and layout components (not components they import), and runs on both the server and in the browser with the default rendering options.

Code called inside load blocks:

  • should use the SvelteKit-provided fetch wrapper rather than using the native fetch
  • should not reference window, document, or any browser-specific objects
  • should not directly reference any API keys or secrets, which will be exposed to the client, but instead call an endpoint that uses any required secrets

It is recommended that you not store pre-request state in global variables, but instead use them only for cross-cutting concerns such as caching and holding database connections.

Mutating any shared state on the server will affect all clients, not just the current one.

Inputpermalink

The load function receives an object containing six fields — url, params, props, fetch, session and stuff. The load function is reactive, and will re-run when its parameters change, but only if they are used in the function. Specifically, if url, session or stuff are used in the function, they will be re-run whenever their value changes, and likewise for the individual properties of params.

Note that destructuring parameters in the function declaration is enough to count as using them.

urlpermalink

url is an instance of URL, containing properties like the origin, hostname, pathname and searchParams.

In some environments this is derived from request headers during server-side rendering. If you're using adapter-node, for example, you may need to configure the adapter in order for the URL to be correct.

paramspermalink

params is derived from url.pathname and the route filename.

For a route filename example like src/routes/a/[b]/[...c] and a url.pathname of /a/x/y/z, the params object would look like this:

{
  "b": "x",
  "c": "y/z"
}

propspermalink

If the page you're loading has an endpoint, the data returned from it is accessible inside the leaf component's load function as props. For layout components and pages without endpoints, props will be an empty object.

fetchpermalink

fetch is equivalent to the native fetch web API, and can make credentialed requests. It can be used across both client and server contexts.

When fetch runs on the server, the resulting response will be serialized and inlined into the rendered HTML. This allows the subsequent client-side load to access identical data immediately without an additional network request.

Cookies will only be passed through if the target host is the same as the SvelteKit application or a more specific subdomain of it.

sessionpermalink

session can be used to pass data from the server related to the current request, e.g. the current user. By default it is undefined. See getSession to learn how to use it.

stuffpermalink

stuff is passed from layouts to descendant layouts and pages, and can be filled with anything else you need to make available. For the root __layout.svelte component, it is equal to {}, but if that component's load function returns an object with a stuff property, it will be available to subsequent load functions.

Outputpermalink

If you return a Promise from load, SvelteKit will delay rendering until the promise resolves. The return value has several properties, all optional:

statuspermalink

The HTTP status code for the page. If returning an error this must be a 4xx or 5xx response; if returning a redirect it must be a 3xx response. The default is 200.

errorpermalink

If something goes wrong during load, return an Error object or a string describing the error alongside a 4xx or 5xx status code.

redirectpermalink

If the page should redirect (because the page is deprecated, or the user needs to be logged in, or whatever else) return a string containing the location to which they should be redirected alongside a 3xx status code.

The redirect string should be a properly encoded URI. Both absolute and relative URIs are acceptable.

maxagepermalink

To cause pages to be cached, return a number describing the page's max age in seconds. The resulting cache header will include private if user data was involved in rendering the page (either via session, or because a credentialed fetch was made in a load function), but otherwise will include public so that it can be cached by CDNs.

This only applies to pages, not layouts.

propspermalink

If the load function returns a props object, the props will be passed to the component when it is rendered.

stuffpermalink

This will be merged with any existing stuff and passed to the load functions of subsequent layout and page components.

The combined stuff is available to components using the page store as $page.stuff, providing a mechanism for pages to pass data 'upward' to layouts.

previous Layouts
next Hooks