Abortable async function helpers.
Installation
yarn add abort-controller-x
Abort Controller
See
AbortController
MDN page.
Use
node-abort-controller
to polyfill AbortController
in NodeJS.
Abortable Functions
We define abortable function as a function that obeys following rules:
- It must accept
AbortSignal
in its arguments. - It must return a
Promise
. - It must add
abort
event listener to the AbortSignal
. Once the AbortSignal
is aborted, the
returned Promise
must reject with AbortError
either immediately, or after
doing any async cleanup. It's also possible to reject with other errors that
happen during cleanup. - Once the returned
Promise
is fulfilled or rejected, it must remove
abort
event listener.
An example of abortable function is the standard
fetch
function.
Composing Abortable Functions
This library provides a way to build complex abortable functions using standard
async
/await
syntax, without the burden of manually managing
abort
event listeners. You can reuse a single AbortSignal
between many operations
inside a parent function:
async function makeRequests(signal: AbortSignal): Promise<never> {
while (true) {
await fetch('...', {signal});
await delay(signal, 1000);
}
}
const abortController = new AbortController();
makeRequests(abortController.signal).catch(catchAbortError);
process.on('SIGTERM', () => {
abortController.abort();
});
The above example can be rewritten in a more ergonomic way using run
helper.
Usually you should only create AbortController
somewhere on the top level, and
in regular code use async
/await
and pass AbortSignal
to abortable
functions provided by this library or custom ones composed of other abortable
functions.
API
all
function all<T>(
signal: AbortSignal,
executor: (innerSignal: AbortSignal) => readonly PromiseLike<T>[],
): Promise<T[]>;
Abortable version of Promise.all
.
Creates new inner AbortSignal
and passes it to executor
. That signal is
aborted when signal
is aborted or any of the promises returned from executor
are rejected.
Returns a promise that fulfills with an array of results when all of the
promises returned from executor
fulfill, rejects when any of the promises
returned from executor
are rejected, and rejects with AbortError
when
signal
is aborted.
The promises returned from executor
must be abortable, i.e. once innerSignal
is aborted, they must reject with AbortError
either immediately, or after
doing any async cleanup.
Example:
const [result1, result2] = await all(signal, signal => [
makeRequest(signal, params1),
makeRequest(signal, params2),
]);
race
function race<T>(
signal: AbortSignal,
executor: (innerSignal: AbortSignal) => readonly PromiseLike<T>[],
): Promise<T>;
Abortable version of Promise.race
.
Creates new inner AbortSignal
and passes it to executor
. That signal is
aborted when signal
is aborted or any of the promises returned from executor
are fulfilled or rejected.
Returns a promise that fulfills or rejects when any of the promises returned
from executor
are fulfilled or rejected, and rejects with AbortError
when
signal
is aborted.
The promises returned from executor
must be abortable, i.e. once innerSignal
is aborted, they must reject with AbortError
either immediately, or after
doing any async cleanup.
Example:
const result = await race(signal, signal => [
delay(signal, 1000).then(() => ({status: 'timeout'})),
makeRequest(signal, params).then(value => ({status: 'success', value})),
]);
if (result.status === 'timeout') {
} else {
const response = result.value;
}
delay
function delay(signal: AbortSignal, dueTime: number | Date): Promise<void>;
Return a promise that resolves after delay and rejects with AbortError
once
signal
is aborted.
The delay time is specified as a Date
object or as an integer denoting
milliseconds to wait.
Example:
while (true) {
await makeRequest(signal, params);
await delay(signal, 1000);
}
Example:
import {addMilliseconds} from 'date-fns';
let date = new Date();
while (true) {
await makeRequest(signal, params);
date = addMilliseconds(date, 1000);
await delay(signal, date);
}
waitForEvent
function waitForEvent<T>(
signal: AbortSignal,
target: EventTargetLike<T>,
eventName: string,
options?: EventListenerOptions,
): Promise<T>;
Returns a promise that fulfills when an event of specific type is emitted from
given event target and rejects with AbortError
once signal
is aborted.
Example:
const webSocket = new WebSocket(url);
const openEvent = await race(signal, signal => [
waitForEvent<WebSocketEventMap['open']>(signal, webSocket, 'open'),
waitForEvent<WebSocketEventMap['close']>(signal, webSocket, 'close').then(
event => {
throw new Error(`Failed to connect to ${url}: ${event.reason}`);
},
),
]);
forever
function forever(signal: AbortSignal): Promise<never>;
Return a promise that never fulfills and only rejects with AbortError
once
signal
is aborted.
spawn
function spawn<T>(
signal: AbortSignal,
fn: (signal: AbortSignal, effects: SpawnEffects) => Promise<T>,
): Promise<T>;
type SpawnEffects = {
defer(fn: () => void | Promise<void>): void;
fork<T>(fn: (signal: AbortSignal) => Promise<T>): ForkTask<T>;
};
type ForkTask<T> = {
abort(): void;
join(): Promise<T>;
};
Run an abortable function with fork
and defer
effects attached to it.
spawn
allows to write Go-style coroutines.
-
SpawnEffects.defer
Schedules a function to run after spawned function finishes.
Deferred functions run serially in last-in-first-out order.
Promise returned from spawn
resolves or rejects only after all deferred
functions finish.
-
SpawnEffects.fork
Executes an abortable function in background.
If a forked function throws an exception, spawned function and other forks are
aborted and promise returned from spawn
rejects with that exception.
When spawned function finishes, all forks are aborted.
-
ForkTask.abort
Abort a forked function.
-
ForkTask.join
Returns a promise returned from a forked function.
Example:
spawn(signal, async (signal, {defer}) => {
const db = await connectToDb();
defer(async () => {
await db.close();
});
const server = await startServer(db);
defer(async () => {
await server.close();
});
await forever(signal);
});
Example:
spawn(signal, async (signal, {defer}) => {
const db = await connectToDb();
defer(async () => {
await db.close();
});
while (true) {
await poll(signal, db);
await delay(signal, 5000);
}
});
Example:
import Redlock = require('redlock');
const lockTtl = 30_000;
function withLock<T>(
signal: AbortSignal,
redlock: Redlock,
key: string,
fn: (signal: AbortSignal) => Promise<T>,
): Promise<T> {
return spawn(signal, async (signal, {fork, defer}) => {
const lock = await redlock.lock(key, lockTtl);
defer(() => lock.unlock());
fork(async signal => {
while (true) {
await delay(signal, lockTtl / 10);
await lock.extend(lockTtl);
}
});
return await fn(signal);
});
}
const redlock = new Redlock([redis], {
retryCount: -1,
});
await withLock(signal, redlock, 'the-lock-key', async signal => {
});
retry
function retry<T>(
signal: AbortSignal,
fn: (signal: AbortSignal, attempt: number) => Promise<T>,
options?: RetryOptions,
): Promise<T>;
type RetryOptions = {
baseMs?: number;
maxDelayMs?: number;
maxAttempts?: number;
onError?: (error: any, attempt: number, delayMs: number) => void;
};
Retry a function with exponential backoff.
-
RetryOptions.baseMs
Starting delay before first retry attempt in milliseconds.
Defaults to 1000.
Example: if baseMs
is 100, then retries will be attempted in 100ms, 200ms,
400ms etc (not counting jitter).
-
RetryOptions.maxDelayMs
Maximum delay between attempts in milliseconds.
Defaults to 15 seconds.
Example: if baseMs
is 1000 and maxDelayMs
is 3000, then retries will be
attempted in 1000ms, 2000ms, 3000ms, 3000ms etc (not counting jitter).
-
RetryOptions.maxAttempts
Maximum for the total number of attempts.
Defaults to Infinity
.
-
RetryOptions.onError
Called after each failed attempt before setting delay timer.
Rethrow error from this callback to prevent further retries.
execute
function execute<T>(
signal: AbortSignal,
executor: (
resolve: (value: T) => void,
reject: (reason?: any) => void,
) => () => void | PromiseLike<void>,
): Promise<T>;
Similar to new Promise(executor)
, but allows executor to return abort callback
that is called once signal
is aborted.
Returned promise rejects with AbortError
once signal
is aborted.
Callback can return a promise, e.g. for doing any async cleanup. In this case,
the promise returned from execute
rejects with AbortError
after that promise
fulfills.
abortable
function abortable<T>(signal: AbortSignal, promise: PromiseLike<T>): Promise<T>;
Wrap a promise to reject with AbortError
once signal
is aborted.
Useful to wrap non-abortable promises. Note that underlying process will NOT be
aborted.
run
function run(fn: (signal: AbortSignal) => Promise<void>): () => Promise<void>;
Invokes an abortable function with implicitly created AbortSignal
.
Returns a function that aborts that signal and waits until passed function
finishes.
Any error other than AbortError
thrown from passed function will result in
unhandled promise rejection.
Example:
const stop = run(async signal => {
try {
while (true) {
await delay(signal, 1000);
console.log('tick');
}
} finally {
await doCleanup();
}
});
await stop();
This function is also useful with React useEffect
hook:
useEffect(
() =>
run(async signal => {
while (true) {
await makeRequest(signal);
await delay(signal, 1000);
}
}),
[],
);
AbortError
class AbortError extends Error
Thrown when an abortable function was aborted.
Warning: do not use instanceof
with this class. Instead, use
isAbortError
function.
isAbortError
function isAbortError(error: unknown): boolean;
Checks whether given error
is an AbortError
.
throwIfAborted
function throwIfAborted(signal: AbortSignal): void;
If signal
is aborted, throws AbortError
. Otherwise does nothing.
rethrowAbortError
function rethrowAbortError(error: unknown): void;
If error
is AbortError
, throws it. Otherwise does nothing.
Useful for try/catch
blocks around abortable code:
try {
await somethingAbortable(signal);
} catch (err) {
rethrowAbortError(err);
}
catchAbortError
function catchAbortError(error: unknown): void;
If error
is AbortError
, does nothing. Otherwise throws it.
Useful for invoking top-level abortable functions:
somethingAbortable(signal).catch(catchAbortError);
Without catchAbortError
, aborting would result in unhandled promise rejection.