gracefulize

1.0.0 • Public • Published

gracefulize

Why

A Node.js HTTP server object, once listening on a handle (e.g. a port number), is expected to take that "handle resource" for itself until it is closed.

Except when it doesn't.

Say you have a Node.js HTTP server in your server.js file, then start it, then stop it with Ctrl + C, that HTTP server can be killed together with the host process (the server.js process itself), but sometimes it doesn't cleanly release the aforementioned "handle resource". In my experience, most times it does, but it's plain annoying when it doesn't, e.g. when the resource is a unix- socket.

While there are "scientific" explanations for all this (when it does, and when not), they are beyond the scope of this document, the purpose of which is to explain why this module exists & how it should be used.

What this helper module does is to ensure when the main Node.js process terminates, (e.g. on SIGINT), it first politely asks the Node.js HTTP server to peacefully shutdown, then it waits until the Node.js HTTP server has properly done so before allowing the main Node.js process to finally terminate.

However, if the Node.js HTTP server fails to cooperate politely (e.g. it hangs trying to serve some unresponsive client, or deal with a cyclic I/O operation - you name it), then the main Node.js process can still be "coldly" terminated by sending subsequent SIGINT signals to it.

Hopefully this module provides an acceptable middle ground to properly exit a Node.js process parenting a Node.js HTTP server. If you find a use case where this module is inappropriate, please raise an issue so we could improve this documentation accordingly.

How

If you already have done something like this before:

let express = require('express');
let myServer = express.listen(3000, () => {
  console.log('server started at port 3000');
});

Then you only need to add 1 additional line now:

let express = require('express');
let myServer = express.listen(3000, () => {
  console.log('server started at port 3000');
});
// the following line is new
require('gracefulize')(myServer);

Please note that the above example uses ExpressJS, but it is essentially the same for Koa or any other Node.js-based HTTP server.

Do I need this?

  • If you have never implemented anything to ensure a graceful shutdown of your Node.js HTTP server for your server app before, then yes
  • Otherwise, probably not

Package Sidebar

Install

npm i gracefulize

Weekly Downloads

3

Version

1.0.0

License

MIT

Unpacked Size

5.07 kB

Total Files

5

Last publish

Collaborators

  • thesephi