Targeting Microsoft Edge vs. Legacy engines in JsRT APIs

Note

The features described in this document are no longer being maintained. For more information on the new WebView2 control, see Introduction to Microsoft Edge WebView2 (Preview).

Windows 10 supports two different JavaScript engines:

  • The old Chakra engine (also called the legacy engine or jscript9.dll below) that ships with and supports Internet Explorer 11. This engine is frozen in time and will remain fundamentally unchanged from Win8.1/IE11 release.
  • The new Chakra engine (also called the Edge engine or chakra.dll below) that ships with and supports the new browser in Windows 10, Microsoft Edge. This engine will be continually updated and will support a "living" Edge engine. A living Microsoft Edge engine implies that unlike the legacy engine, the Microsoft Edge engine would not carry forward any form of versioning script functionality to opt into.

When creating an app using the JavaScript Runtime Hosting (JsRT) API, you can choose to target either the legacy or the Microsoft Edge engine.

  • If you need to emphasize backward compatibility of your existing applications, target the legacy engine.
  • If you want your app to be forward looking and support new JavaScript features as they are released (for example, ECMAScript 6), target the Microsoft Edge engine.

This topic includes details that describe how to target the different engines.

Target your preferred version

When creating an app, you can select the version of the JsRT that supports either the Microsoft Edge engine or the legacy engine. You can choose the JsRT version based on the guidelines above. To accommodate these distinctions, the following changes have been made to JsCreateRuntime, JsCreateContext, and JsStartDebugging.

For JsCreateRuntime:

  • When targeting the legacy engine, the JsRuntimeVersionEdge enumeration value is deprecated, and a message will suggest using the JsRuntimeVersionInternetExplorer11 value instead.

  • When targeting the Microsoft Edge engine, the version parameter is omitted from the JsCreateRuntime function.

    JsErrorCode JsCreateRuntime(JsRuntimeAttributes attributes, JsThreadServiceCallback callback, _Out_ JsRuntimeHandle* runtime);
    

For JsCreateContext and JsStartDebugging:

  • When targeting the legacy engine, the IDebugApplication interface is used to supply your own non-remote debugging methods. For debugging purposes, JsCreateContext and JsStartDebugging functions take IDebugApplication as parameter.
  • When targeting the Microsoft Edge engine, the IDebugApplication interface is deprecated. The Chakra engine enables native and script debugging capability with Visual Studio debugger without requiring an implementation of IDebugApplication from user. The interface is no longer a parameter for JsCreateContext and JsStartDebugging as a result.

The signatures for the preceding APIs in the legacy engine are as follows:

JsErrorCode JsCreateRuntime(JsRuntimeAttributes attributes, JsRuntimeVersion version, JsThreadServiceCallback callback, _Out_ JsRuntimeHandle* runtime);

JsErrorCode JsCreateContext(JsRuntimeHandle runtime, IDebugApplication *debugApplication, JsContextRef *newContext);

JsErrorCode JsStartDebugging(IDebugApplication *debugApplication);

The signatures for the preceding APIs in the Microsoft Edge engine are as follows:

JsErrorCode JsCreateRuntime(JsRuntimeAttributes attributes, JsThreadServiceCallback callback, _Out_ JsRuntimeHandle* runtime);

JsErrorCode JsCreateContext(JsRuntimeHandle runtime, JsContextRef *newContext);

JsErrorCode JsStartDebugging();

Compile for your preferred version using Visual C++

When using Visual C++, import the JsRT API by including the jsrt.h header, and ensure that jsrt.lib is included in your linker input files list:

#include <jsrt.h>

Adding jsrt.lib as a linker input file

If you want to target the Microsoft Edge engine binaries, you need to define the macro USE_EDGEMODE_JSRT before including jsrt.h, and instead of linking against jsrt.lib, you should link against chakrart.lib:

#define USE_EDGEMODE_JSRT
#include <jsrt.h>

Adding chakrart.lib as a linker input file

If you're starting with a new application, you are now ready to start writing code against the JsRT API.

Compile for your preferred version using .NET

If you're using .NET and P/Invoke, you must change your JsRT API [DllImport] declarations to import chakra.dll instead of jscript9.dll. In addition, change the definition of JsCreateRuntime to remove the JsRuntimeVersion parameter and the definition of JsCreateContext and JsStartDebugging to remove the IDebugApplication parameter.

For the legacy engine, use the following code.

[DllImport("jscript9.dll")]
public static extern JsErrorCode JsCreateRuntime(
    JsRuntimeAttributes attributes,
    JsRuntimeVersion version,
    JsThreadServiceCallback callback,
    out JsRuntimeSafeHandle runtime
);

[DllImport("jscript9.dll")]
public static extern JsErrorCode JsCreateContext(
    JsRuntimeSafeHandle runtime,
    IDebugApplication debugApplication,
    out JsContextRef newContext
);   

[DllImport("jscript9.dll")]
public static extern JsErrorCode JsStartDebugging(
    IDebugApplication debugApplication,
);

For the Microsoft Edge engine, use the following code.

[DllImport("chakra.dll")]
public static extern JsErrorCode JsCreateRuntime(
    JsRuntimeAttributes attributes,
    JsThreadServiceCallback callback,
    out JsRuntimeSafeHandle runtime
);  

[DllImport("chakra.dll")]
public static extern JsErrorCode JsCreateContext(
    JsRuntimeSafeHandle runtime,
    out JsContextRef newContext
);

[DllImport("chakra.dll")]
public static extern JsErrorCode JsStartDebugging();

Caution

If you are manually marshaling the function pointer (such as via LoadLibrary/GetProcAddress), it is critical that you do not mix the declarations of the method, or else you will unbalance the stack, which will result in unpredictable behavior such as causing your app to crash. The same problem will occur if you perform a global search-and-replace of instances of jscript9.dll in your import code, because you'll miss the version parameter being dropped.

Summary

In Windows 10, the JavaScript Runtime Hosting APIs are splitting into two. These APIs now support a "living" Microsoft Edge engine, whose language capabilities will be aligned with the "living" Microsoft Edge engine in the Microsoft Edge. You can leverage these capabilities from your desktop or Store apps to create new and exciting ways to extend your application and to leverage modern Web skills in your existing code base. However, because there are subtle differences between previous versions, you must be aware of the following points when targeting the Edge or legacy engine.

  • Your app can support only one version of JsRT per process.

    For example, you can't create a Microsoft Edge engine runtime and then a legacy engine runtime and expect them to run correctly in the same process. This is unsupported and may result in undocumented behavior, such as failure to load the second DLL.

  • When targeting the Microsoft Edge engine, your app may unexpectedly acquire new features when the underlying platform is automatically updated.

    For example, the Internet Explorer 11 mode of the legacy runtime supports block-scoping variable declarations such as let and const. If the Microsoft Edge engine automatic versioning behavior had been the standard previously, code that had worked in Internet Explorer 10 mode, which did not have block-scoping rules, may have started failing when the platform had automatically upgraded. This must be a consideration when choosing which runtime model to use. While we believe you should target the Microsoft Edge engine whenever possible, you must be careful about using JavaScript code structures that may become invalid in the future.

  • JsRT for the Windows Store only supports the Microsoft Edge engine (chakra.dll). Apps attempting to link against any JsRT API in jscript9.dll will fail certification.

  • It is critical that you do not confuse the declaration of JsCreateRuntime, JsCreateContext, and JsStartDebugging between jscript9.dll and chakra.dll, because it will result in imbalancing the stack.

    When using C and C++, you will receive a linker error if you try to use the wrong declaration, as long as you're not doing something like calling LoadLibrary and then GetProcAddress. .NET developers may not find this problem as easily, so double-check your code when using this feature.

See also