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Declarative Shadow DOM

Author: Mason Freed

Last Update: March 31, 2024


NOTE: This explainer is out of date. This feature is now standardized in the WHATWG html spec:

https://html.spec.whatwg.org/multipage/scripting.html#attr-template-shadowrootmode

Some details of the standardized feature differ from this explainer.


Note: There is also a blog post that describes this set of features.

Contents

Motivation

Server-Side Rendering (SSR) is an important requirement for many sites, which precludes any Javascript execution for getting the first pixels on the screen. The rationale given for this no-JS constraint typically includes:

  • Some search crawlers do not execute JS code before scraping page content, so for SEO, site owners require no-JS for indexable content.
  • The primary goal of SSR is to get rendered content in front of the user as fast as possible, prior to enabling interactivity. Eliminating all JS (including small inline scripts) from SSR content is seen as a hard requirement.
  • Some users run with no-JS settings/environments (e.g. users running JS script blockers), and supporting these users with at least basic content is required.

For the reasons above, the current imperative-only API for Shadow DOM is not compatible with SSR. In order to support Shadow DOM in SSR environments, a declarative Shadow DOM API is required.

Another related requirement for SSR solutions is that they support "isomorphic" code: the code running on the server (to build the SSR content) should be the same as the code running on the client. For Web Components, that boils down to the need for a DOM tree that can be serialized on the server and deserialized on the client back into the same tree, including #shadowroot nodes.

In addition to the SSR motivations given above, another commonly-cited motivation is ergonomics. One of the primary "features" of Shadow DOM is style encapsulation. The CSS developers who are involved with styling components are typically more comfortable with HTML/CSS than they are with JS, and usually prefer to be able to achieve their styling objectives without resorting to JS. Some design systems even limit or prohibit the use of JS for styling. Offering CSS developers an ergonomic declarative way to utilize Shadow DOM without requiring any JS would therefore allow such developers to benefit from the style scoping feature of Shadow DOM.

Finally, a distinct but related problem that this proposal could solve is the current inability to completely serialize DOM that contains shadow roots. Calling node.innerHTML on a node that contains a #shadowroot does not return the #shadowroot or any of its children. With this proposal, it is possible to provide that missing feature.

Declarative Shadow DOM is an often-requested feature from developers. For example, see these comments on the resolution thread. The prior attempts to standardize a declarative Shadow DOM syntax have all been rejected for a variety of reasons. This proposal attempts to resolve prior objections and get to a solution that all implementers can agree upon.

Proposed Solution

Syntax

The proposed solution re-uses the existing <template> element with a new "shadowrootmode" attribute to declare the shadow content and trigger the attachment of a shadow root:

<host-element>
    <template shadowrootmode="open">
        <style>shadow styles</style>
        <h2>Shadow Content</h2>
        <slot></slot>
    </template>
    <h2>Light content</h2>
</host-element>

Behavior

With the above markup, the HTML parser will perform these steps:

  1. Upon encountering the opening <template shadowrootmode="open"> tag, the parser switches to the "in template" insertion mode, just as with a normal <template> tag. All behaviors already associated with "in template" mode are followed at this point.
  2. Subsequent child content is parsed using the existing rules for "in template" insertion mode: child content is parsed into a new DocumentFragment without a browsing context.
  3. Upon parsing the closing </template> tag (or when the <template> node is popped off the stack of open elements in the case of mis-nested tags):
    1. The existing procedure for the closing "template" tag is performed.
    2. Let "the template element" equal the <template> element popped from the stack of open elements in the previous step.
    3. Let "shadowrootmode" equal the value of an attribute in "the template element"'s start tag token with the name "shadowrootmode". (Note: the check is made for the attribute value in the start tag token, similar to how HTML integration point is defined. This is a parser-only feature.)
    4. Let "delegates_focus" equal the value of an attribute in "the template element"'s start tag token with the name "shadowrootdelegatesfocus".
    5. If "shadowrootmode" does not contain a valid value ("open" or "closed"), then these steps end here. This is not a declarative shadow root. (See this discussion.)
    6. Let "shadowhost" equal the parent node of "the template element". (Note: the shadow root will be attached to the parent of the <template> node when the </template> closing tag is encountered. If script has moved that node, the shadow root will be attached to the new/current location.)
    7. If "shadowhost" is null, or is not a valid shadow host element, stop here - no shadow root will be attached in this case.
    8. A shadow root is attached to "shadowhost", with a mode equal to "shadowrootmode" (open or closed), and delegatesFocus equal to "delegates_focus".
    9. The content of "the template element"'s DocumentFragment is moved into the newly-created shadow root.
    10. "The template element" (now empty) is removed from the document. (See this discussion.)

One additional change is made to the specification for HTMLTemplateElement: the .content property will return null for the <template shadowrootmode="open|closed"> element created during parsing. This will prevent scripts and MutationObservers from gaining access to the internals of the shadow root while parsing is taking place. Since the <template> element is only present during parsing, and is removed in step 10 above, this simply prohibits access during parsing.

With the behavior and example code above, the resulting DOM tree will be:

<host-element>
  #shadow-root (open)
    <style>shadow styles</style>
    <h2>Shadow Content</h2>
    <slot><h2> reveal
    </slot>
  <h2>Light content</h2>
</host-element>

For comparison, the above code snippet and behavior results (under this proposal) in the same final DOM tree as the following snippet which uses inline <script> to attach the shadow:

<host-element>
    <template>
        <style>shadow styles</style>
        <h2>Shadow Content</h2>
        <slot></slot>
    </template>
    <script>
      var template = document.currentScript.previousElementSibling;
      var shadowRoot = template.parentElement.attachShadow({mode:"open"});
      shadowRoot.appendChild(template.content);
      template.remove();
      document.currentScript.remove();
    </script>
    <h2>Light content</h2>
</host-element>

Serialization

To provide maximum value, a DOM tree containing #shadowroot’s should also be able to be serialized using element.innerHTML. However, as the existing behavior is to not include the #shadowroot or any of its contents, simply adding this capability by default would pose a web compat problem. So instead, a new method will be added to Element called getInnerHTML():

const html = element.getInnerHTML({ includeShadowRoots: true });

When called with includeShadowRoots: true on nodes that contain Shadow Hosts, the returned HTML will include a <template shadowrootmode> tag containing the shadow root contents for each such node.

As this is a new method, there are no compat problems to worry about. This method also allows future serialization options to be added, such as a method for serializing adoptedStylesheets found inside shadow roots.

Closed shadow roots

To allow serialization of closed shadow roots, an additional option will be added:

const html = element.getInnerHTML({ includeShadowRoots: true, closedRoots: [shadowRoot1,shadowRoot2,...] });

Using this syntax, if any of the closedRoots shadow roots are encountered during serialization, they will be serialized regardless of whether they are open or closed. Closed shadow roots will be serialized using <template shadowrootmode="closed">.

Additional arguments for attachShadow

Because the attachShadow() function has one other argument, delegates_focus, and potentially more in the future, there needs to be a way to specify these parameters in the declarative case. This is important not only for developer flexibility, but also so that the getInnerHTML() has a way to completely represent all possible shadow roots found in content. To achieve this, additional attributes will be added to the <template shadowrootmode> tag:

<template shadowrootmode="open" shadowrootdelegatesfocus>

Here, the presence of the shadowrootdelegatesfocus boolean attribute will cause the shadow root to be attached as if this imperative call were used:

attachShadow({ mode = "open", delegatesFocus = true });

Additional parameters added to attachShadow in the future could naturally be added as attributes to the declarative <template shadowrootmode> form.

Other Considerations

With the behavior described above, a number of questions and corner cases arise:

Existing declarative shadow roots

Because existing components might exist that do not anticipate the existence of a declaratively-created shadow root, these components might break if they assume this.attachShadow() will never throw and will always return an empty shadow root. To accomodate these components, the following changes will be made:

  1. If attachShadow() is called on a node that already contains a declaratively-created shadow root, the existing contents of that shadow root will be removed, and the (now empty) shadow root will be returned by attachShadow(). Note that no behavior changes will be made for imperatively-created shadow roots. An existing imperatively-created shadow root will cause any subsequent call to attachShadow() to throw an exception, as it does today.

  2. (Discussed in a separate issue) An accessor will be added to ElementInternals to provide "declarative Shadow DOM-aware" components access to existing shadow roots, including "closed" shadow roots. The ElementInternals.shadowRoot accessor will return any existing #shadowroot so that its content can be potentially re-used and connected.

Note that because step #1 above will be the defined behavior for the "attach a shadow root" DOM algorithm, it will also be used when attaching a declarative shadow root. This means that if multiple declarative shadow roots are included within a single shadow host element, only the last declarative shadow root will remain, and all prior shadow root contents will be removed. So:

<div>
  <template shadowrootmode="open">
    <h1>This h1 tag will be removed, but this shadow root will remain.</h1>
  </template>
  <template shadowrootmode="closed">
    <h1>This is the final, *open* shadow root content.</h1>
  </template>
</div>

As noted, only the contents of the second shadow root will remain. And because the original (first) declarative shadow root is kept, and only its contents are removed, the final shadow root in this example will have "open" mode.

The best practice will be to only include a single declarative <template shadowrootmode> element within each host element.

Ordinary templates containing declarative Shadow DOM

Consider this code:

<template id=ordinary>
  <div>
    <template shadowrootmode=open>
      <slot></slot>
    </template>
  </div>
</template>

In this case, the "ordinary" template contains a div, which in turn contains a declarative shadow root. When this is parsed, the contents of the template will be parsed into a separate content document, and as the declarative <template shadowrootmode> node is encountered and parsed, a shadow root will be attached to <div>. Therefore, this template content document will contain a declarative #shadowroot. When cloned, the expectation would be that the resulting cloned content should also have declarative #shadowroot:

container.appendChild(ordinary.content.cloneNode(true));

...should result in the following DOM:

<div id=container>
  <div>
    #shadowroot
      <slot></slot>
  </div>
</div>

In order to achieve that, the WhatWG DOM spec for cloning a node will need to be modified. In that algorithm, when a declarative shadow root is encountered on the source node, a shadow root will need to be attached to the copy, and the contents of the shadow root also cloned to the copy's shadow root.

Root element is <template shadowrootmode>

In this case:

host.setHTML('<template shadowrootmode=open></template>', ...)

it would be a bit odd/confusing if this attached a shadow root to the <host> element. To avoid confusion, this will just result in a warning, and a "normal" template inside <host>.

Templates containing root-level declarative shadow roots

<template id=my_template>
    <template shadowrootmode=open></template>
</template>
<div id=host></div>
<script>
    host.appendChild(my_template.content.cloneNode(true));
</script>

In this case, similar to the prior example, it would be odd/confusing to attach a #shadowroot to <div id=host>. Here again, to avoid confusion, this will just issue a warning, and place a "normal" template inside <host>.

Other unanswered questions

  1. How should adoptedStylesheets on #shadowroot nodes be handled? On the parser side, should there be a way to "point to" a stylesheet that gets automatically adopted within the declarative #shadowroot? On the serialization side, should the existing contents of adoptedStylesheets be automatically serialized into new <style> nodes? This could potentially be controlled by a new convertAdoptedStylesheetsToInlineStyles argument to getInnerHTML().

  2. What about CSS custom states and AOM IDL attributes? These can't yet be represented declaratively, so there is no way to serialize them in getInnerHTML(). This means that custom elements must re-set these values upon construction. I don't see a better solution than this.

  3. Could this declarative Shadow DOM syntax be used as a serialization format for selections that cross Shadow DOM boundaries? From all observations, it appears so: given that DSD offers a general-purpose, pure-HTML serialization format for DOM that contains Shadow Roots, it would seem to be perfect for selection serialization. Of course, there are other thornier issues with selecting across Shadow DOM bounds, such as: 1) what happens when a selection starts or ends within a Shadow Root, 2) are there XSS concerns with being able to select and copy closed Shadow Root content, and 3) is there a cross-platform compatibility issue if some browsers support DSD while others don't? But however these questions are answered, if the resulting API would like to go ahead with serializing Shadow Roots, then DSD seems like the perfect format.

What does declarative Shadow DOM mean?

It is important to note that a #shadowroot within a DOM tree is very special. It is not a node within the normal DOM tree. It is not part of node.children or node.parent for any node in the tree. It is, in this way, very unlike most other "normal" nodes. As such, one should expect the declarative HTML representation of #shadowroot to also have some special properties, and to behave differently from other HTML tags.

For example, one of the "normal" behaviors of HTML tags is that they don’t "disappear". If "<element>" appears in the HTML, then the corresponding DOM tree contains an <element> node in the tree. However, for any direct declarative representation of #shadowroot, the "<template shadowrootmode>" tag will be present in the HTML, but there will be a #shadowroot in its place in the DOM. And to have a proper correspondence between HTML and DOM in this case, there should not be a <template shadowrootmode> element also in the DOM tree. If there were, repeatedly calling host_element.outerHTML = host_element.outerHTML would add duplicate <template shadowrootmode> elements to the DOM tree, and would result in errors due to the attempt to attach multiple shadow roots.

Note the symmetry in the above HTML/DOM comparison. The "<template shadowrootmode>" HTML on the left exactly corresponds to the #shadowroot in the DOM tree on the right.

One element that is somewhat similar in these ways to the #shadowroot is a "normal" <template> element. While a "<template>" tag found in HTML parses into a <template> element in the DOM tree, any content within the <template> tag is parsed into a separate #document-fragment. That content does not become child nodes of the <template> element, even though the HTML markup appears to place it there as children:

Isn't it tedious to repeat the contents of each shadow root?

Yes. But in exactly the same way that all other HTML must be "repeated". Because the proposed syntax for declarative Shadow DOM uses a <template> element, many people immediately think that the declarative Shadow DOM feature needs to include some sort of syntax to re-use "chunks" of shadow DOM content, rather than having to repeat the content of each repeated Shadow DOM. However, this misses the point entirely. First, there is an existing mechanism for repeating chunks of HTML: the ordinary (non-declarative Shadow DOM) <template> element:

<template id=chunk>
  <div>Duplicated content here
    <template shadowrootmode=open>
      Yes, declarative Shadow DOM can be included
    </template>
  </div>
</template>
<script>
  // Add 100 copies of this chunk
  for (var i = 0; i < 100; i++)
    document.body.appendChild(chunk.content.cloneNode(true));
</script>

And second, because the (ordinary) <template> element provides the Web Platform's "repeated HTML" API, there is no other HTML element that offers any type of "automatic repitition" mechanism. Consider the example of a "buy it now" button, implemented in light-dom:

<button>
  <img src="product.jpg"> Purchase widget for $123.45
</button>

If an author needs many of these buttons on a single page, the above HTML snippet is repeated verbatim multiple times in the HTML source for the page. (Also note that while the structure might be the same, the content is likely slightly different: the product image and price will probably differ.) In the same exact way, a custom element button with declarative Shadow DOM would repeat a similar chunk of HTML:

<buy-it-now-button>
  <template shadowrootmode=open>
    <img src="product.jpg"> Purchase widget for $123.45
  </template>
</buy-it-now-button>

In both cases, when hand-authoring in pure HTML, repeated content is always repeated in HTML. And when using a templating system, the <template> element can be used to stamp out duplicate sections of HTML. This works just as well with declarative Shadow DOM.

Alternatives Considered

Syntax: <template shadowrootmode=open> vs. <shadowroot>

It would be more ergonomic to define the declarative shadow root using a new <shadowroot> tag, rather than re-using the <template> tag with a new attribute. However, this approach has two major disadvantages:

  1. Before the new <shadowroot> tag is implemented and understood by all rendering engines, there could be serious compat problems. Consider what would happen in this case, if <shadowroot> is not natively understood, and is instead parsed into an HTMLElement:
<shadowroot>
   <style>
     Scoped styles here
   </style>
   <script>
      const myShadowRoot = document.currentScript.getRootNode();
   </script>
</shadowroot>

In this case, the intention is for the <style> block to be scoped to the shadow root, and the <script> to execute once the shadow root has been attached. However, since <shadowroot> is parsed to a plain HTMLElement, the <style> styles will leak out and apply to the entire page, and within the <script>, myShadowRoot will actually point to the owner document object. Both would seem to be very bad.

In contrast, the chosen <template> approach is safe from both issues, since it will be parsed as an inert DocumentFragment, which simply doesn’t get converted into a shadow root (before this feature is implemented). This situation is much easier to feature-detect and code around.

  1. Implementation of a new <shadowroot> element, with most of the same parser semantics as <template>, is a significant undertaking. The implementation of <template> took many years, and suffered through many security bugs, before being stabilized in all renderers. And while the <shadowroot> element could likely "follow the pattern" set by the <template> implementation, it would still be a significant undertaking.

Syntax: <template shadowrootmode=open> vs <template shadowrootmode>

It would be more ergonomic to allow shadowrootmode to function as a boolean attribute, without needing to declare the shadow root open or closed. However, deferring to the previously-agreed-upon imperative behavior, which requires the mode to be defined (open vs closed), it seems better to stick with that behavior in the declarative version. Therefore, it is required that shadowrootmode be equal to either "open" or "closed" - anything else results in the element being parsed as a normal <template> element.

Timing: Attach the shadow on opening or closing <template> tag?

If the shadow root were attached upon encountering the opening <template> tag, there would seem to be several advantages:

  1. This approach would likely be more compatible with streaming. When the shadow root is attached only on the closing </template> tag, nothing will be rendered until that point. If the page consists of a large, nested set of web components, then nothing will be rendered until the parser encounters the final closing tag of the outermost component. This problem isn’t as bad if the page is built as a light dom document containing many small web-components-based widgets.
  2. This solution would likely be slightly more performant. By directly parsing the <template> contents into the shadow root, there would be no need to move the template contents into the shadow root document.

However, the major downside to this approach is that the implementation complexity would likely be significantly higher. The existing <template> code would need to be carefully modified to understand the differences between parsing into an inert <template> DocumentFragment and parsing into an active #shadowroot. Additionally, because the shadow root document would be "live" in this case, contained scripts could execute. This would require more care (and code) to deal with the corner cases that might arise in this situation. It is possible that these corner cases are the same ones encountered while implementing <template>, and therefore the <template shadowrootmode> implementation could "copy" the details from <template>. However, this would still require significantly more effort.

Keep the <template shadowrootmode> node around?

The current proposal removes the <template shadowrootmode> node after performing the attachShadow() and moving the content out of the <template> and into the #shadowroot. Alternatively, that <template> node could be left in the document as an empty inert node, similar to how existing <template> elements are left in the DOM tree, albeit without any children. The downsides of this approach are:

  1. The ergonomics would be a bit worse, as there would be a leftover copy of the template that would be encountered upon traversing the tree. This would lead to confusion among both developers (who would see both DocumentFragments in the devtools Elements pane) and scripts (which would now iterate over both sets of trees). Additionally, the leftover <template> node would always get slotted into the unnamed <slot>.
  2. The memory consumption and overhead would be increased, due to the extra <template shadowrootmode> node left in the tree. Additionally, the slotting algorithm would also need to do extra work to slot in the leftover <template shadowrootmode> element into unnamed slots within the shadow root.

The advantage of this approach would be that it avoids the abnormal behavior of a "self-removing" element. There are no current examples in the web platform of elements that remove themselves when parsed. (There is one historical example, <isindex>, but that has since been removed.) This advantage seems to be mostly about theoretical purity at this point. So unless there turns out to be negative web developer impact from introducing this new behavior, the above downsides would seem to outweigh this advantage. Also, arguably (see this section), the <template shadowrootmode> under this proposal is not "removed", but rather transformed into its equivalent #shadowroot in the final DOM tree.

Syntax: Attributes directly on elements

Instead of a dedicated <template shadowrootmode> node that denotes the shadow root contents directly, an alternative would be to mark up the shadow host (any element that supports shadow root attachment) with a "shadow-host" attribute, and then mark up any direct child elements that should reside within the shadow root with another attribute, "shadow-child":

<host-element shadow-host="open">
  <div shadow-child>..</div>
  <div></div>
  <span shadow-child>..</span>
</host-element>

This approach might be perceived to be less confusing, since it avoids an HTML tag that doesn’t end up in the final tree, like <template shadowrootmode>. One downside is that it doesn't support text or comment nodes within the shadow root, and requires that the nodes are removed from their textual position. Also, this approach might end up actually being more confusing to developers than a single <template shadowrootmode> element, which clearly divides #shadowroot content from light DOM content.

Performance

As a very simple test, I naively implemented the proposed declarative shadow attachment algorithm, mostly as written above with all operations occurring at the closing </template> tag. This has been built into Chrome as of version 82.0.4060.0, and must be tested with the --enable-blink-features=DeclarativeShadowDOM flag provided on the command line. I tested this locally on Chrome v82.0.4068.4 on Linux, on a fairly high-powered Lenovo P920 workstation. I used tachometer for all testing. I provided three different inputs, all loaded from local files. Each input consisted of 10,000 copies of the same code snippet, one of which used declarative Shadow DOM, and the other two as baselines. See below for descriptions of each type of snippet. Care was taken to eliminate forced style/layout, by wrapping the set of copies inside a <div> with display:none and contain:strict. All code can be found here.

Template-based declarative Shadow DOM

The declarative Shadow DOM snippet uses the <template shadowrootmode> element as described in this document:

<div><template shadowrootmode=open></template></div>

Baseline #1 - inline script-based shadow root attachment

The first baseline snippet replicates a proposed alternative to native declarative Shadow DOM, which uses an inline script placed just after each <template> to attach the shadow root and move the template contents into the root. For completeness, this snippet also removes the <template> element and the inline <script> node, so that the resulting tree is identical to the declarative output. I found that the results did not change appreciably if both the <template> and <script> were left in the document instead.

This approach is the most straightforward replica of a declarative shadow dom solution - the shadow root is attached and populated immediately after it is parsed, so that content streaming is possible.

<div><template></template>
    <script>
        var template = document.currentScript.previousElementSibling;
        var shadowRoot = template.parentElement.attachShadow({mode: "open"});
        shadowRoot.appendChild(template.content);
        // These two lines didn't affect performance appreciably:
        template.remove();
        document.currentScript.remove();
    </script>
</div>

Baseline #2 - single script-based shadow root attachment

The second baseline snippet uses a single script at the end of the HTML that loops over all templates to attach the shadow roots and move the template contents into each root. This snippet also removes the <template> elements and the final <script> node.

This approach is optimized for speed - the entire page is parsed first, and then one script does all of the shadow root attachment and population. The advantage here is that the parser is not blocked for script on each shadow root. The major disadvantages are:

  1. Streaming is no longer possible. The entire page will consist of inert <template> elements that do not render, until the final script loops through and "converts" them into shadow roots.
  2. Content shifts will likely occur. The initially-parsed result, if rendered, will not contain the shadow content. Once the final loop runs, and shadow roots are attached, the page layout will likely change, leading to CLS problems.
<!-- Repeated chunk: -->
<div><template class=shadowroot></template></div>

...
<!-- Single script at the end: -->
<script>
    const shadowroots = document.querySelectorAll('.shadowroot');
    for (var i=0; i<shadowroots.length; ++i) {
        const shadowRoot = shadowroots[i].parentElement.attachShadow({mode: "open"});
        shadowRoot.appendChild(shadowroots[i].content);
        shadowroots[i].remove();
    }
    document.currentScript.remove();
</script>

Baseline #3 - single MutationObserver-based polyfill script

The third baseline snippet uses a single synchronous polyfill script at the top of the HTML, which installs a MutationObserver that attaches shadow roots to any <template shadowrootmode> elements that it finds, and moves the template contents into each root. Similarly, this snippet removes the <template> element.

This approach is an attempt to get closer to the streaming (and lower CLS) inline script solution, while attempting to mitigate the parsing and compilation time required for repeated inline scripts. The major disadvantages here are:

  • This MutationObserver must be placed on document.body, and must observe all node additions to the document. This significantly slows down tree building, given the JS overhead for each element.
  • There is no "children finished parsing" mutation event. This means that the mutation observer in this polyfill must simply assume that by the time the callback is called, all of the children of the given <template> have already been parsed and appended to the tree. If the parser happens to yields in the middle of a <template> block, part of the children will be lost by this polyfill.

It has been proposed that a localNameFilter be added to MutationObserver, similar to the existing attributeFilter. This would potentially reduce some of the overhead of this approach. To see how that might affect this benchmark, these tests were conducted with a locally-patched version of Chromium that only issues calls to MutationObservers for <template> elements, simulating the localNameFilter feature. All results shown in this section utilize this same version of Chromium, which is otherwise a Tip-of-Tree version 90 build. Without this local change, the MutationObserver version exhibits more than 2X worse performance.

<!-- Single script at the beginning: -->
<script>
function attachShadowRoots(mutationsList) {
  for (let mutation of mutationsList) {
    for (let n of mutation.addedNodes) {
      if (n.classList.contains('shadowroot')) {
        const shadowRoot = n.parentElement.attachShadow({mode: "open"});
        shadowRoot.appendChild(n.content);
        n.remove();
      }
    }
  }
}
(new MutationObserver(attachShadowRoots)).observe(document.body,
     { childList: true, subtree: true });
</script>
...

<!-- Repeated chunk: -->
<div><template class=shadowroot></template></div>

Results

The (very preliminary) results were:

Version
Browser chrome
90.0.4400.0
Sample size 100

Data table

So the declarative snippet is ~33% faster than the single loop script, ~65% faster than the MutationObserver approach (including the simulated localNameFilter), and around 15 times faster than the one-script-per-shadow-root approach. It is very important to emphasize that this is just a preliminary look into performance. Clearly the code snippets used are not optimized, and particularly in the case of the inline <script> snippets, there are likely some optimizations that can be made to tailor these scripts to the particular site. These are just the straightforward, not-too-fancy comparisons that can be made. Having said that, it is interesting to look into a trace of the results (on similar time scales), to see where the extra time is being spent/saved for these naive examples:

Declarative Shadow DOM trace

Inline Scripts trace

Single Loop Script trace

MutationObserver Script trace

In the inline-script-based snippet, not only does the inline script cause a significant amount (more than half) of time to be spent in the JS engine, but additionally, each inline script causes the parser to yield to run microtasks. Both of those significantly slow down rendering for the inline script example. The single loop script defers all script execution time until the end, so the parsing/loading is faster, but then more than half of the total time is spent at the end within the script loop, and there is significant layout shift. And the MutationObserver trace shows an even greater percentage of the total time spent executing the JS MutationObserver callbacks, after each parser yield point. In contrast to all of the above, the declarative snippet continuously runs parsing, including attaching shadow roots, until the parser yields for other reasons. There is no JS overhead to be seen.

Shadow DOM vs Light DOM Speed

As a bit of an aside, I also put together a microbenchmark in Chromium that compares the parsing and tree-attachment time for a "regular" light DOM node (e.g. a <div>) and a shadow host element (e.g. <div><template shadowrootmode=open></template></div>). In Chromium, that overhead is roughly 3X. I.e. it will take about three times as long to parse and append a shadow host than a regular light dom node. This is not totally unexpected, given that the shadow host carries quite a bit more "state" than a normal DOM node, including the shadow tree DocumentFragment, CSS Scoping information (a TreeScope in Chromium), etc. Note also that this overhead factor assumes the use of declarative Shadow DOM. The overhead of purely-imperative Shadow DOM would be even higher, because of the need to parse and execute the Javascript to call attachShadow(). It is also important to note that this does not mean pages using Shadow DOM will be three times slower - the total page load time consists of many factors, including network loading time, style and layout, etc., and typically a small fraction of the total nodes in a document are shadow hosts. Therefore, in practice, this overhead should be negligible. But we should strive to reduce it as much as possible.

Feature Detection and Polyfilling

To detect support for declarative Shadow DOM, something like this could be used:

function supportsDeclarativeShadowDOM() {
  return HTMLTemplateElement.prototype.hasOwnProperty("shadowRootMode");
}

Polyfilling is also relatively easy:

document.querySelectorAll('template[shadowrootmode]').forEach(template => {
  const mode = template.getAttribute('shadowrootmode');
  const shadowRoot = template.parentNode.attachShadow({ mode });
  shadowRoot.appendChild(template.content);
  template.remove();
});

Example Custom Element

To make use of declarative Shadow DOM, in the most typical use case of custom elements, something like this could be used (hat tip to @Rich-Harris for the idea). This example can be seen live, here.

<my-clock>
    <template shadowrootmode=open>
        <!-- This is the SSR content -->
        <style> Clock styles here </style>
        <div>
          <span id=hour>12</span> : <span id=min>34</span> : <span id=sec>56</span>
        </div>
    </template>
</my-clock>
<script>
 customElements.define('my-clock', class extends HTMLElement {
    #internals = null;
    constructor() {
      super();
      this.#internals = this.attachInternals();
      if (!this.#internals.shadowRoot) {
        // If we don't have SSR content, build the shadow root
        this.attachShadow({mode: 'open'}).innerHTML = `
          <style> Clock styles here </style>
          <div>
            <span id=hour></span> : <span id=min></span> : <span id=sec></span>
          </div>
        `;
      }
      const shadow = this.#internals.shadowRoot;
      this.hours = shadow.querySelector('#hour');
      this.minutes = shadow.querySelector('#min');
      this.seconds = shadow.querySelector('#sec');
    }

    connectedCallback() {
      this.update();
      this.interval = setInterval(() => this.update(), 1000);
    }

    disconnectedCallback() {
      clearInterval(this.interval);
    }

    update() {
      const pad = v => {return String(v).padStart(2,'0')}
      const d = new Date();
      this.hours.textContent = pad(d.getHours());
      this.minutes.textContent = pad(d.getMinutes());
      this.seconds.textContent = pad(d.getSeconds());
    }
  });
</script>

Note that in the above code, the only thing added to support SSR is the if (!this.#internals.shadowRoot) block, which handles building the shadow root if none was already present from declarative content. This code assumes that any declarative SSR content always matches the hydrated content, as it does not include any code to diff the two. This proposal is for the declarative Shadow DOM primitive, and does not propose a particular way to handle SSR vs. CSR content matching.

Other Details & Questions

  • Once the declarative shadow root has been parsed, it should behave exactly as if it were created using the existing imperative API. E.g. host.shadowRoot should return the shadow root, etc.
  • Invalid situations result in a "normal" <template>:
    • If the "shadowrootmode" attribute is anything other than "open" or "closed", then the element is parsed as a "normal" <template> element.
    • If the parent element of the <template shadowrootmode> element already has a shadow root attached, an error will be fired at Window, and the content will be parsed as if it is within a normal <template> element.
    • If the parent element of the <template shadowrootmode> element is not a valid element to host a shadow root, then an error will be fired at Window, and the content will be parsed as if it is within a normal <template> element.
  • It is legal to nest a <template shadowrootmode> inside a "normal" <template>. In this case, the shadow root attachment behavior occurs only when the "normal" template contents are cloned into the document, and not while parsing the (non-declarative shadow root) <template>.
  • The most straightforward way to share stylesheets across similar components would be to embed a <link rel=stylesheet> within the declarative shadow root:
<host-element>
   <template shadowrootmode=open>
       <link rel=stylesheet href="component_styles.css">
       <slot></slot>
   </template>
   <h2>Light content</h2>
</host-element>

With the snippet above, the browser will load and parse the component_styles.css stylesheet once, and will re-use it for each occurrence of this component. This will, of course, suffer from performance problems if there are many different component CSS stylesheet links on the page.

  • Why not wait for, or link this to, declarative custom elements? At first blush, it would seem that these two proposals go together. However, the primary motivating use case for declarative Shadow DOM is SSR and No-JS. Custom element definitions need javascript to function; therefore, this is a different use case/proposal and the two should not be tied together. Of course, they should be interoperable. Additionally, there are several use cases for declarative Shadow DOM that do not need custom elements at all: scoped styling, for example.
  • Because <template shadowrootmode> is detected only upon parsing the opening tag, this declarative API cannot be used to create a shadow root via JS. This is a parser-only API. E.g. doing this:
// This doesn't work:
const shadowroot = document.createElement('template');
shadowroot.setAttribute("shadowrootmode", "open");

just results in a "normal" <template> being created. The entire motivation for this feature is no-JS environments; therefore, to simplify the implementation, only parser-generated templates will create shadow roots, and adding the shadowrootmode attribute to a <template> after the fact will have no effect. To create a shadow root using JS, the existing element.attachShadow() API should be used.

Prior Discussion at Tokyo F2F

The last (major) discussion of declarative Shadow DOM occurred at the 2018 Tokyo Web Components Face-to-Face meeting. The resolution from that meeting was not to proceed with a declarative Shadow DOM feature. Here is the summary of that resolution:

Tokyo F2F: The outcome was we will not move forward with this proposal. Overloading <template> tag with more functionality (like the shadowrootmode attribute) may end up with lots of confusion for developers, especially given ongoing, not finalized progress with template instantiation. Specific new tag would require new parser macro to wait for the end tag to attach shadow root and remove the node, that could introduce similar security problems during implementation as it did for template element.

We need to make sure that before shadow root is attached its <style>s should not apply to the outer/host tree, scripts and custom elements should not have an access to the <shadowroot> ascendant node.

I actually do not feel competent enough in the parser area to give a correct rationale why do we need that macro and wait for the end tag.

@rniwa could you comment shortly why can't we attach shadow root to the parent and remove the element on start tag, then continue attaching descendants to the shadow root, or beside using the different name, use the mechanics of template element for parsing?

Supporting non-scripting/scripting-forbidden environments is not sufficient motivation for implementing new features into the Platform for the Group. All other cases should be solvable by a library/custom element that implements declarative shadow dom. Therefore it's up to the user-land and frameworks to adopt such convention.

So the important points from the above summary resolution were:

  • Building a new <shadowroot> element would require significant parser work, with significant security issues, similar to what was encountered while implementing <template>.
  • The stated use case of "no-JS" environments is not a sufficient motivation to implement this feature.
  • Re-using the <template> element, with a shadowrootmode attribute, for declarative Shadow DOM would be confusing for developers.

Taking each point individually:

  • The significance of the parser changes that would be needed for a new <shadowroot> element are not being disputed here. This is the primary reason that this proposal opts for the <template shadowrootmode> approach, rather than proposing a new element type.
  • Server side rendering, and it’s implied "no-JS" constraint, are not a passing phenomenon. This is now standard practice, and any solution (such as imperative-only shadow dom for style encapsulation) that does not support no-JS is verboten within many design systems. This is a very real constraint which is keeping multiple large enterprises from adopting Web Components. We need to solve this problem. There have also been suggestions that because people aren’t using the various "easy" polyfill solutions for this problem (such as inline <script>s to call attachShadow()), there must not be a real need for this feature. But that misses the point that the use case is "no-JS" environments - no javascript is allowed.
  • The user-confusion concern around re-using the template element for declarative Shadow DOM is valid. The <template> element can already cause developer confusion. However, as with all new web technologies, there must be some learning and movement of the platform forward. Given the other constraints around any declarative solution, this <template shadowrootmode> solution seems to be the best path forward.

Security and Privacy Considerations

There are no known security or privacy impacts of this feature itself. (See TAG review Security And Privacy Self Review.) There is, however, a potential sanitizer bypass, for "older" sanitizers that are not aware of declarative Shadow DOM.

Potential HTML sanitizer bypass

One security concern exists for HTML sanitizers that:

  1. Use the browser's parser (e.g. through DOMParser, innerHTML, etc.),
  2. Do not have built-in understanding of declarative Shadow DOM, and
  3. (Importantly) return live DOM rather than HTML.

Essentially, the problem here is that these sanitizers use the built-in parser to generate a DocumentFragment containing all of the parsed DOM content. They then walk the resulting DOM tree to filter and remove malicious nodes. And then, in the case that live DOM output was requested, they return the resulting tree. If a closed declarative Shadow Root was part of the malicious code, the tree pruning portion of the sanitizer can't detect or prune the closed shadow root, which allows an attack vector. Example code:

const xss = `
    <div>
      <template shadowrootmode=closed>
        <img src="nonexistent.png" onerror="alert('xss!')">
      </template>
    </div>
`;

const clean_html = SanitizerLibrary.sanitize(xss);
div.innerHTML = clean_html; // This is still safe.

const dom_element = SanitizerLibrary.sanitize(xss, {RETURN_RAW_DOM: true});
div.appendChild(dom_element); // XSS!

Note the example RETURN_RAW_DOM option above. If the library implements that option by simply returning the parsed/pruned DOM tree from DOMParser, it would still contain the declarative Shadow Root with XSS code. If, instead, a string containing the sanitized HTML is returned (as is the typical default behavior of most sanitizer libraries), this would still be safe. In that case, the .innerHTML attribute would have been used on the DOM tree to retrieve the HTML, and innerHTML (by spec) does not serialize shadow trees.

It is important for sanitizer libraries to be aware of this potential issue, and ensure safety in the presence of declarative Shadow DOM. The most straightforward way to ensure safety is to always use importNode() to import the DOM tree into the current document. Because importNode() is specified to return a clone of the node, which (by spec and spec) does not clone shadow trees, this will always remove all shadow trees.

Mitigation

To mitigate the risk of the above XSS issue, this feature (declarative Shadow DOM) will be disabled by default for all HTML fragment parser entry points. This includes:

  • Element.innerHTML = html
  • DOMParser.parseFromString(html);
  • Range.createContextualFragment(html);
  • XMLHttpRequest.open();
  • insertAdjacentHTML(position, html);
  • createHTMLDocument().write(html);
  • etc.

In order to imperatively parse HTML that contains declarative Shadow DOM using the fragment parser, DOMParser will need to be used, with the additional opt-in argument, includeShadowRoots:

  div.innerHTML = content; // DSD ignored
  (new DOMParser()).parseFromString(html, "text/html"); // DSD ignored

  (new DOMParser()).parseFromString(html, "text/html", {includeShadowRoots: true}); // DSD included

When page content is being parsed, e.g. for the main page or in an iframe, no such opt-in is necessary:

  <!DOCTYPE html>
  <body>
    <div>
      <template shadowrootmode=open>
        This will be inside a shadow root
      </template>
    </div>
  </body>

A simple polyfill can be used to get "setHTML()" type behavior:

Element.prototype.setHTML = function(content) {
  const fragment = (new DOMParser()).parseFromString(`<pre>${content}</pre>`,
        'text/html', {includeShadowRoots: true});
  (el instanceof HTMLTemplateElement ? el.content : el).replaceChildren(
        ...fragment.body.firstChild.childNodes);
};

References

This document borrows very heavily from this W3C proposal, this WHATWG proposal/discussion, this W3C discussion, and this WICG discussion. See also this related proposal for declarative custom elements.

Helpful links

Discussion: DOM issue 831 (and #912/#913)

Spec PRs:

  • Declarative Shadow DOM (HTML/DOM/XHR)
  • Add ElementInternals.shadowRoot (HTML/DOM) - Merged
  • Prevent attachInternals() pre-constructor (HTML/DOM) - Merged

TAG review: 494

Request for Mozilla Standards Position: 335

Requests for WebKit position: [May 26, 2020], [Aug 10, 2020], [Feb 18, 2021]

Sample page showing declarative Shadow DOM: JS Bin