promise-the-world
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1.0.1 • Public • Published

promise-the-world

A collection of utils to handle recurring patterns around Promises and async/await code.

Usage

The individual functions can be imported using the path promise-the-world/ + component name. For the defer function it would look like this:

const defer = require('promise-the-world/defer')

It's also possible to load the functions using the destructuring syntax. Using the path to the individual components is recommended to reduce the bundle sizes. Importing the components with the destructuring syntax would look like this:

const { defer } = require('promise-the-world')

defer()

Implements the obsolete Promise.defer() method which returns a Deferred object. In most cases, the Promise constructor is sufficient to create a Promise. defer can be used for the rare cases where resolve() or reject() must be called outside the executor callback of the Promise constructor. The returned Deferred object has the following properties/methods:

  • resolve(value): Resolves the Promise with the given value.
  • reject(error): Rejects the Promise with the given error.
  • promise: The Promise object

The following example uses defer to wrap the close event of a stream into a Promise:

const fs = require('fs')
const defer = require('promise-the-world/defer')
 
const closed = defer()
const stream = fs.createReadStream('README.md')
 
stream.once('close', closed.resolve)
stream.resume()
 
closed.promise.then(() => {
  console.log('closed')
})

delay(time)

Returns a Promise that resolves after the given time in milliseconds.

The following example code simply waits for 1s.

const delay = require('promise-the-world/delay')
 
delay(1000).then(() => {
  console.log('1s later')
})

mutex()

Returns a mutex/lock object. A mutex is useful to limit or sync access to a resource. Access can be requested with the lock method which will resolve immediately if the mutex is not locked. In the case that the mutex is locked, the lock method will resolve after unlock was called. The returned mutex object has the following methods:

  • lock(): Request access to the mutex. Returns a Promise which will resolve when the mutex is not / no longer locked.
  • unlock: Unlocks a locked mutex.

The following example wraps fetch and uses a mutex to do only one request at a time:

const mutex = require('promise-the-world/mutex')
 
const access = mutex()
 
async function limitedFetch (url) {
  await access.lock()
 
  try {
    const result = await fetch(url)
 
    access.unlock()
 
    return result
  } catch (err) {
    // make sure you unlock the mutex if an error was thrown!
    access.unlock()
 
    throw err
  }
}
 
Promise.all([
  limitedFetch('http://example.org/'),
  limitedFetch('http://example.com/')
])

queue(maxPending, maxQueued)

Returns a queue object to handle Promises in sequence. With the maxPending option, it's possible to limit the items handled in parallel. That can be useful for cases where resources are limited or expensive. The Promises must be wrapped in factory function to give the queue control over the time when the items should be started.

  • maxPending: The limit for the pending Promises. The value is copied from the constructor argument. The default value is 1.
  • maxQueued: The limit of queued factories. If the limit is reached, .add() will throw an error. The default value is Infinity
  • .add(factory): Adds a Promise wrapped in a factory to the queue. Returns a Promise which acts as a proxy for the actual Promise.
  • .length: The number of queue factories.
  • .pending: The number of pending Promises.

The following example uses a queue to limit the number of parallel fetch request to a maximum of 2:

const queue = require('promise-the-world/queue')
 
const fetchQueue = queue(2)
 
Promise.all([
  fetchQueue.add(() => fetch('http://example.org/1')),
  fetchQueue.add(() => fetch('http://example.org/2')),
  fetchQueue.add(() => fetch('http://example.org/3')),
  fetchQueue.add(() => fetch('http://example.org/4'))
])

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