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A +page.svelte or +layout.svelte gets its data from a load function.

If the load function is defined in +page.js or +layout.js it will run both on the server and in the browser. If it's instead defined in +page.server.js or +layout.server.js it will only run on the server, in which case it can (for example) make database calls and access private environment variables, but can only return data that can be serialized as JSON.

src/routes/+page.js
ts
/** @type {import('./$types').PageLoad} */
export function load(event) {
return {
some: 'data'
};
}

Input propertiespermalink

The argument to a load function is a LoadEvent (or, for server-only load functions, a ServerLoadEvent which inherits clientAddress, locals, platform and request from RequestEvent). All events have the following properties:

datapermalink

Very rarely, you might need both a +page.js and a +page.server.js (or the +layout equivalent). In these cases, the data for +page.svelte comes from +page.js, which in turn receives data from the server:

src/routes/my-route/+page.server.js
ts
/** @type {import('./$types').PageServerLoad} */
export function load() {
return {
a: 1
};
}
src/routes/my-route/+page.js
ts
/** @type {import('./$types').PageLoad} */
export function load({ data }) {
return {
b: data.a * 2
};
}
src/routes/my-route/+page.svelte
<script>
  /** @type {import('./$types').PageData} */  export let data;

  console.log(data.a); // `undefined`, it wasn't passed through in +page.js
  console.log(data.b); // `2`
</script>

In other words +page.server.js passes data along to +page.js, which passes data along to +page.svelte.

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"
}

routeIdpermalink

The name of the current route directory, relative to src/routes:

src/routes/blog/[slug]/+page.js
ts
/** @type {import('./$types').PageLoad} */
export function load({ routeId }) {
console.log(routeId); // 'blog/[slug]'
}

urlpermalink

An instance of URL, containing properties like the origin, hostname, pathname and searchParams (which contains the parsed query string as a URLSearchParams object). url.hash cannot be accessed during load, since it is unavailable on the server.

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.

Input methodspermalink

LoadEvent also has the following methods:

dependspermalink

This function declares that the load function has a dependency on one or more URLs, which can subsequently be used with invalidate() to cause load to rerun.

Most of the time you won't need this, as fetch calls depends on your behalf — it's only necessary if you're using a custom API client that bypasses fetch.

URLs can be absolute or relative to the page being loaded, and must be encoded.

ts
import * as api from '$lib/api';
 
/** @type {import('./$types').PageLoad} */
export async function load({ depends }) {
depends(`${api.base}/foo`, `${api.base}/bar`);
 
return {
foo: api.client.get('/foo'),
bar: api.client.get('/bar')
};
}

fetchpermalink

fetch is equivalent to the native fetch web API, with a few additional features:

  • it can be used to make credentialed requests on the server, as it inherits the cookie and authorization headers for the page request
  • it can make relative requests on the server (ordinarily, fetch requires a URL with an origin when used in a server context)
  • internal requests (e.g. for +server.js routes) go direct to the handler function when running on the server, without the overhead of an HTTP call
  • during server-side rendering, the response will be captured and inlined into the rendered HTML
  • during hydration, the response will be read from the HTML, guaranteeing consistency and preventing 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.

parentpermalink

await parent() returns data from parent layout load functions. In +page.server.js or +layout.server.js it will return data from load functions in parent +layout.server.js files:

src/routes/+layout.server.js
ts
/** @type {import('./$types').LayoutLoad} */
export function load() {
return { a: 1 };
}
src/routes/foo/+layout.server.js
ts
/** @type {import('./$types').LayoutLoad} */
export async function load({ parent }) {
const { a } = await parent();
console.log(a); // `1`
 
return { b: 2 };
}
src/routes/foo/+page.server.js
ts
/** @type {import('./$types').PageLoad} */
export async function load({ parent }) {
const { a, b } = await parent();
console.log(a, b); // `1`, `2`
 
return { c: 3 };
}

In +page.js or +layout.js it will return data from load functions in parent +layout.js files. Implicitly, a missing +layout.js is treated as a ({ data }) => data function, meaning that it will also return data from parent +layout.server.js files.

Be careful not to introduce accidental waterfalls when using await parent(). If for example you only want to merge parent data into the returned output, call it after fetching your other data.

// @filename: $types.d.ts
export type PageLoad = import('@sveltejs/kit').Load<{}, null, { a: number, b: number }>;

// @filename: index.js
// ---cut---
/** @type {import('./$types').PageLoad} */
export async function load({ parent, fetch }) {
	const parentData = await parent();
  const data = await fetch('./some-api');
	const parentData = await parent();

  return {
    ...data
    meta: { ...parentData.meta, ...data.meta }
  };
}

setHeaderspermalink

If you need to set headers for the response, you can do so using the setHeaders method. This is useful if you want the page to be cached, for example:

src/routes/blog/+page.js
ts
/** @type {import('./$types').PageLoad} */
export async function load({ fetch, setHeaders }) {
const url = `https://cms.example.com/articles.json`;
const response = await fetch(url);
 
setHeaders({
age: response.headers.get('age'),
'cache-control': response.headers.get('cache-control')
});
 
return response.json();
}

setHeaders has no effect when a load function runs in the browser.

Setting the same header multiple times (even in separate load functions) is an error — you can only set a given header once.

The exception is set-cookie, which can be set multiple times and can be passed an array of strings:

src/routes/+layout.server.js
ts
/** @type {import('./$types').LayoutLoad} */
export async function load({ setHeaders }) {
setHeaders({
'set-cookie': 'a=1; HttpOnly'
});
 
setHeaders({
'set-cookie': 'b=2; HttpOnly'
});
 
setHeaders({
'set-cookie': ['c=3; HttpOnly', 'd=4; HttpOnly']
});
}

Outputpermalink

Any promises on the returned data object will be resolved, if they are top-level properties. This makes it easy to return multiple promises without creating a waterfall:

ts
/** @type {import('./$types').PageLoad} */
export function load() {
return {
a: Promise.resolve('a'),
b: Promise.resolve('b'),
c: {
value: Promise.resolve('c')
}
};
}
<script>
  /** @type {import('./$types').PageData} */  export let data;

  console.log(data.a); // 'a'
  console.log(data.b); // 'b'
  console.log(data.c.value); // `Promise {...}`
</script>

Errorspermalink

If an error is thrown during load, the nearest +error.svelte will be rendered. For expected errors, use the error helper from @sveltejs/kit to specify the HTTP status code and an optional message:

src/routes/admin/+layout.server.js
ts
import { error } from '@sveltejs/kit';
 
/** @type {import('./$types').LayoutServerLoad} */
export function load({ locals }) {
if (!locals.user) {
throw error(401, 'not logged in');
}
 
if (!locals.user.isAdmin) {
throw error(403, 'not an admin');
}
}

If an unexpected error is thrown, SvelteKit will invoke handleError and treat it as a 500 Internal Server Error.

In development, stack traces for unexpected errors are visible as $page.error.stack. In production, stack traces are hidden.

Redirectspermalink

To redirect users, use the redirect helper from @sveltejs/kit to specify the location to which they should be redirected alongside a 3xx status code.

import { error } from '@sveltejs/kit';
import { error, redirect } from '@sveltejs/kit';

/** @type {import('./$types').LayoutLoad} */
export function load({ locals }) {
  if (!locals.user) {
		throw error(401, 'not logged in');
		throw redirect(307, '/login');
  }

  if (!locals.user.isAdmin) {
    throw error(403, 'not an admin');
  }
}

Invalidationpermalink

SvelteKit tracks the dependencies of each load function to avoid re-running it unnecessarily during navigation. For example, a load function in a root +layout.js doesn't need to re-run when you navigate from one page to another unless it references url or a member of params that changed since the last navigation.

Using invalidate(url), you can re-run any load functions that depend on the invalidated resource (either implicitly, via fetch), or explicitly via depends. You can also invalidate all load functions by calling invalidate() without an argument.

If a load function is triggered to rerun, the page will not remount — instead, it will update with the new data.

Shared statepermalink

In many server environments, a single instance of your app will serve multiple users. For that reason, per-request state must not be stored in shared variables outside your load functions, but should instead be stored in event.locals. Similarly, per-user state must not be stored in global variables, but should instead make use of $page.data (which contains the combined data of all load functions) or use Svelte's context feature to create scoped state.

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