request-scheduler

1.0.4 • Public • Published

request-scheduler

There are cases where you may want to execute only the last requests that the users has triggered.

Usually, in order to do that, you should implement some kind of system to assign an AbortController.signal to fetch or axios in order to delete the flying request and execute the latest one that user has just triggered.

This may take you a few time in order to implement, test and write a bit of documentation.

So this is likely what you'd have done in your project. This is a package that allows you to control the flow of the request without all that overhead.

Table of contents

Dependencies

This library expect AbortController to exists if you use it in the browser. If you're targeting IE or Samsung Browser, please make sure you have a polifill.

Install

npm i request-scheduler

or

yarn add request-scheduler

Usage

import Scheduler from 'request-scheduler'
import debounce from 'lodash/fp/debounce'

const fetchData = Scheduler((signal, search) => fetch('/api/v1/feed', {
  body: JSON.stringify({ search })
  signal
}))

const DEBOUNCE_DELAY = 300
document.getElementById('searchbox')
  .addEventListener(
    'input',
    debounce(DEBOUNCE_DELAY, e => {
      const value = e.target.value;
      fetchData(value);
    })
  )

In the above example we are catching every single change in the input text, which is a search box used by the user to filter the data he's watching. Thanks to the scheduler, we are canceling every request "on the air" when the user trigger a change.

API

Scheduler

The scheduler accept a function that will be executed and then canceled if another call to the function has been made.

const fetchDataConsistently = Scheduler(fetchDataApiCall)
//  ...
fetchDataConsistently()

Parameters

  • TaskFunction: The function you want to execute and eventually cancel.

Returns

Returns a new function that will call and eventually cancel your TaskFunction. This function will return the result returned from TaskFunction.

TaskFunction

The function you want to be execute

const taskFunction = (signal, ...params) => {
  //  ...
}

Parameters

  • signal: This is the signal from the AbortController. You must use it if you want request-scheduler to be able to cancel your task execution.
  • ...params: The params that will be passed to the scheduled function.

Return

You can return whatever you want. The returned value will be passed directly to the caller of the scheduled task wrapped with the scheduler.

Why you should use it

This approach allows you to:

  • save network traffic
  • keep your UI consistent with your data

Sometimes, when two idetical request are triggered, the lastest could be faster than the first one to resolve. This causes an inconsistency in the UI because the user set a certain filter but the result of the page in not what the user expected.

Examples

Simple data fetching

import Scheduler from 'request-scheduler'

const fetchFeed = ({ ...options }) =>
  fetch(FEED_URL, { ...options }).then(res => res.json())

const consistentFetchFeed = Scheduler(signal =>
  fetchFeed({
    signal
  })
)

//  ... In your UI ...
const data = await consistentFetchFeed()

Data fetching with parameters

import Scheduler from 'request-scheduler'

const fetchDataByFreeTextSearch = (freeTextSearch, { ...options }) =>
  fetch(FEED_URL, {
    ...options,
    body: JSON.stringify({
      freeTextSearch
    })
  }).then(res => res.json())

const consistentFetchFeed = Scheduler((signal, freeTextSearch) =>
  fetchFeed(freeTextSearch, {
    signal
  })
)

//  ... In your UI ...
const data = await consistentFetchFeed('Text')

Inspiration

This little utility was inspired by this great article from Sébastien Lorber: https://sebastienlorber.com/handling-api-request-race-conditions-in-react

Package Sidebar

Install

npm i request-scheduler

Weekly Downloads

0

Version

1.0.4

License

MIT

Unpacked Size

6.34 kB

Total Files

5

Last publish

Collaborators

  • nicholasperetti