When you build a WebGL project, Unity creates a folder with the following files:
An index.html file which browsers can navigate to load your content.
A TemplateData folder (when building with the default template) containing the build logo, loading bar and other template Assets. The build template folder is normally used to customize the appearance of the build while loading. See the User Manual page on WebGL templates for more information.
A Build folder containing your generated build output files.
The Build folder contains the following files (the MyProject file name represents the name of your project).
A UnityLoader.js JavaScript file containing the code needed to load up the Unity content in the web page.
A MyProject.json JSON file containing all the necessary information about your build. The URL of this JSON file is provided as an argument for the Unity Loader when the build is instantiated. JSON file contains URLs of all the other build files, which can be absolute or relative to the location of the JSON file. JSON may contain additional Module parameters, such as the splash screen style or the initial size of the memory heap.
A MyProject.asm.framework.unityweb file containing the asm.js runtime and JavaScript plugins.
A MyProject.asm.code.unityweb file containing the asm.js module for your player.
A MyProject.asm.memory.unityweb file containing a binary image to initialize the heap memory for your player.
A MyProject.data.unityweb file containing the Asset data and Scenes.
The contents of the *.unityweb files in the Build folder may be compressed with gzip, brotli or may be uncompressed, depending on the Publishing Settings. See documentation on deploying compressed builds for more information
You can view your WebGL player directly in most browsers by opening the index.html file. However, for security reasons, Chrome places restrictions on scripts opened from local file URLs, so this technique does not work in Chrome. To work round Chrome’s restrictions, use Unity’s Build & Run command ( File > Build & Run); the file is then temporarily hosted in a local web server and opened from a local host URL. Alternatively, you can run Chrome with the --allow-file-access-from-files
command line option which allows it to load content from local file URLs. This is required on a PC to allow execution of the build.
On some servers you need to explicitly make .unityweb files accessible, because the server needs to provide these files to clients.
Access the WebGL options via the in the Build Settings dialog box. (menu: File > Build Settings…). In the dialog box, select WebGL from the Platform list, then select Player Settings….
When you check the Development Build checkbox, Unity generates a development build which has Profiler support and a development console to see errors. In addition, development builds do not compress content (that is, content is not minified); they maintain JavaScript in human-readable form, preserving function names so you get useful stack traces for errors. Note, however, that this means development builds are very large, and too large to distribute.
This option only appears when you have the Development Build checkbox checked. Use the Use pre-built Engine option in the Build Settings dialog box to speed up build iteration time during development. When this option is enabled, Unity rebuilds only the managed code and then links dynamically with the pre-build Unity engine, so the project is rebuilt approximately 30–40% faster. Note that this type of build is only suited for development purposes, as it always produces unstripped engine code. Due to the dynamic linking overhead, the performance of this type of build is slower than a normal build.
This option can only be enabled when you have the Development Build checkbox checked. Check the Autoconnect Profiler option to profile your Unity WebGL content. For WebGL, it is not possible to connect the Profiler to a running build as on other platforms, so you have to use this option to connect the content to the Editor. This is because the Profiler connection is handled using WebSockets on WebGL, but a web browser only allows outgoing connections from the content.
WebGL has some additional options in the Player settings (menu: Edit ^gt; Project Settings, then select the Player category).
Open Other Settings to access the Strip Engine Code option. This option is checked by default to enable code stripping for WebGL. With this option checked, Unity does not include code for any classes you don’t use. For example, if you don’t use any physics components or functions, the whole physics engine is removed from your build. See the Stripping section below for more details.
Open Publishing Settings to access the Memory Size field. Here, you can specify how much memory (in MB) the content should allocate for its heap. If this value is too low, an “out of memory” error message appears. This means your loaded content and Scenes cannot fit into the available memory. However if this value is too high, your content might fail to load in some browsers or on some machines, because the browser might not have enough available memory to allocate the requested heap size. This value is written to a property named TOTAL_MEMORY
in the generated .json file, so if you want to experiment with this setting without having to rebuild your project, you can either edit the .json file or provide the updated TOTAL_MEMORY
value as an additional WebGL instantiation parameter. See the User Manual page on WebGL memory usage for more details.
Open Publishing Settings to access Enable Exceptions. Enable Exceptions allows you to specify how unexpected code behavior (generally considered errors) is handled at run time. It has these options:
throw
statement in your scripts and to also ensure finally
blocks are called. Note that selecting this option makes the generated JavaScript code from your scripts longer and slower; This might only be an issue if scripts are the main bottleneck in your project.throw
statements in your scripts (the same as in the Explicitly Thrown Exceptions Only option)Select Publishing Settings to access Data Caching. Select this to enable automatic local caching of your player data. This option sets asset storage as a local cached in the browser’s IndexedDB database, so that assets won’t have to be downloaded again in subsequent runs of your content. Note that different browsers have different rules on allowing IndexedDB storage; browsers may ask the user for permission to store the data, and your build may exceed a size limit defined by the browser.
When publishing for WebGL, it is important to keep your build size low so users get reasonable download times before the content starts. For generic tips on reducing asset sizes, see documentation on Reducing the file size of the build.
Specify the Crunch texture compression format for all your compressed textures in the Texture Importer.
Don’t deploy development builds; they are not compressed or minified, and so have much larger file sizes.
Open the Player settings (menu: Edit > Project Settings, then select the Player category), open the Publishing Settings panel and set Enable Exceptions to None if you don’t need exceptions in your build.
Open the Player settings (menu: Edit > Project Settings, then select the Player category), open the Other Settings panel, and enable Strip Engine Code to ensure an efficient build.
Take care when using third-party managed dlls, as they might include a lot of dependencies and so significantly increase the generated code size.
If you make a release build, Unity compresses the build output files according to the Compression Format selected in the Publishing Settings panel of the WebGL Player settings.
See documentation on Deploying compressed builds for more info on these options, and on how to publish builds with them.
Since all your Asset data needs to be pre-downloaded before your content starts, you should consider moving Assets out of your main data files and into AssetBundles. That way, you can create a small loader Scene for your content which loads quickly. It then dynamically loads Assets on-demand as the user proceeds through your content. AssetBundles also help with Asset data memory management: You can unload Asset data from memory for Assets you don’t need any more by calling AssetBundle.Unload.
Some considerations apply when using AssetBundles on the WebGL platform:
When you use class types in your AssetBundle which are not used in your main build, Unity may strip the code for those classes from the build. This can cause a fail when trying to load Assets from the AssetBundle. Use BuildPlayerOptions.assetBundleManifestPath to fix that, or see the section on Stripping, below, for other options.
WebGL does not support threading, but http downloads only become available when they have finished downloading. Because of this, Unity WebGL builds need to decompress AssetBundle data on the main thread when the download is done, blocking the main thread. To avoid this interruption, LZMA AssetBundle compression is not available for AssetBundles on WebGL. AssetBundles are compressed using LZ4 instead, which is de-compressed very efficiently on-demand. If you need smaller compression sizes than LZ4 delivers, you can configure your web server to use gzip or Brotli compression (on top of LZ4 compression) on your AssetBundles. See documentation on Deploying compressed builds for more information on how to do this.
AssetBundle caching using WWW.LoadFromCacheOrDownload is supported in WebGL using the IndexedDB API from the browser to implement caching on the user’s computer. Note that IndexedDB may have limited support on some browsers, and that browsers may request the user’s authorization to store data on disk. See documentation on WebGL browser compatibility for more information.
Unity removes all unused code from your build by default. You can change this via the Player settings (menu: Edit > Project Settings, then select the Player category): Select the Other Settings panel to access the Strip Engine Code option. It is better to build with stripping enabled.
With code stripping, Unity scans your project for any UnityObject
-derived classes used (either by being referenced in your script code, or in the serialized data in your Scenes). It then removes from the build any Unity subsystems which have none of their classes used. This makes your build have less code, resulting in both smaller downloads and less code to parse (so code runs faster and uses less memory).
Code stripping might cause issues with your project if it strips code which is actually necessary. This can be the case when you load AssetBundles at run time which contain classes that are not included in the main build, and have therefore been stripped from the project. Error messages appear in your browser’s JavaScript console when this happens (possibly followed by more errors). For example:
Could not produce class with ID XXX
To troubleshoot these errors, look up the ID (such as XXX
in the example above) in the Class ID Reference to see which class it is trying to create an instance of. In such cases, you can force Unity to include the code for that class in the build, either by adding a reference to that class to your scripts or to your Scenes, or by adding a link.xml file to your project.
Below is an example which makes sure that the Collider class (and therefore the Physics module) gets preserved in a project. Add this XML code to a file called link.xml, and put that file into your Assets folder.
<linker>
<assembly fullname="UnityEngine">
<type fullname="UnityEngine.Collider" preserve="all"/>
</assembly>
</linker>
If you suspect that stripping is causing problems with your build, you can also try disabling the Strip Engine Code option during testing.
Unity does not provide a convenient way to see which modules and classes are included in a build, which would allow you to optimize your project to strip well. However, to get an overview of included classes and modules, you can look at the generated file Temp/StagingArea/Data/il2cppOutput/UnityClassRegistration.cpp after making a build.
Note that the Strip Engine Code option only affects Unity engine code. IL2CPP always strips byte code from your managed dlls and scripts. This can cause problems when you need to reference managed types dynamically through reflection rather than through static references in your code. If you need to access types through reflection, you may also need to set up a link.xml file to preserve those types. See the documentation page on iOS Build size optimization for more information on link.xml files.
To change the location of your Build folder, change the URL of the JSON file (the second argument of the UnityLoader.instantiate) in the index.html file.
To change the location of the files inside the Build folder, change their URLs (that is, dataUrl, asmCodeUrl, asmMemoryUrl, and asmFrameworkUrl) in the JSON file. All non-absolute URLs in the JSON file are treated as URLs relative to the location of the JSON file. You can specify URLs on external servers for these if you want to host your files on a content distribution network (CDN), but you need to make sure that the hosting server has enabled Cross Origin Resource Sharing (CORS) for this to work. See the manual page on WebGL networking for more information about CORS.
The C++ code generated for your project by IL2CPP is compiled incrementally; that is, only generated C++ code that has changed since the last build is compiled again. Unchanged source code re-uses the same object files generated for the previous build. The object files used for incremental C++ builds are stored in the Library/il2cpp_cache directory in your Unity project.
To perform a clean, from-scratch build of the generated C++ code which doesn’t use incremental compiling, delete the Library/il2cpp_cache directory in your Unity project. Note that if the Unity Editor version differs from the one used for the previous WebGL build, Unity does a clean, from-scratch build automatically.
2018–10–18 Page amended with limited editorial review
Full Without Stacktrace added in Unity 2017.3