What is p-retry?
The p-retry package is a utility module that allows you to retry a promise-returning or async function. It is useful for handling operations that may fail due to transient errors and can be retried successfully after a short delay. This package provides a simple API to manage the number of retries, the delay between retries, and the condition for retrying.
What are p-retry's main functionalities?
Basic retry functionality
This code sample demonstrates how to use p-retry to attempt a function that returns a promise up to 5 times before giving up and throwing an error.
const pRetry = require('p-retry');
const runOperation = () => {
return new Promise((resolve, reject) => {
// Your operation here, e.g., a fetch request
if (Math.random() > 0.5) {
resolve('Success!');
} else {
reject(new Error('Failed!'));
}
});
};
pRetry(runOperation, {retries: 5}).then(result => console.log(result)).catch(error => console.error(error));
Custom retry options
This code sample shows how to provide custom retry options such as the number of retries, the backoff factor, and the minimum and maximum timeout between retries. It also demonstrates how to log information about failed attempts.
const pRetry = require('p-retry');
const runOperation = async () => {
// Your async operation here
};
const onFailedAttempt = error => {
console.log(`Attempt ${error.attemptNumber} failed. There are ${error.retriesLeft} retries left.`);
};
const options = {
onFailedAttempt,
retries: 3,
factor: 2,
minTimeout: 1000,
maxTimeout: 5000
};
pRetry(runOperation, options).catch(error => console.error(error));
Conditional retry
This code sample illustrates how to use p-retry with a conditional check to determine whether to retry the operation based on the type of error encountered. If the error is not an instance of a specific error class, the retry is aborted.
const pRetry = require('p-retry');
const runOperation = async () => {
// Your async operation here
};
const shouldRetry = error => error instanceof SpecificError;
pRetry(runOperation, { retries: 5, onFailedAttempt: error => {
if (!shouldRetry(error)) {
throw new pRetry.AbortError(error);
}
}}).catch(error => console.error(error));
Other packages similar to p-retry
retry
The 'retry' package provides similar functionality to p-retry, allowing you to retry asynchronous functions. It is more low-level and does not return promises, which means it can be more flexible but also requires more boilerplate code to handle asynchronous operations.
async-retry
The 'async-retry' package is another alternative that offers a similar API to p-retry. It supports both promise-returning and async functions and provides options to customize retry strategies. It is comparable to p-retry but has its own syntax and options for configuration.
retry-as-promised
The 'retry-as-promised' package is designed to work with promises and provides a mechanism to retry a promise a certain number of times. It is similar to p-retry but has a different API and may offer different options for configuring retries.
p-retry
Retry a promise-returning or async function
It does exponential backoff and supports custom retry strategies for failed operations.
Install
$ npm install p-retry
Usage
const pRetry = require('p-retry');
const fetch = require('node-fetch');
const run = async () => {
const response = await fetch('https://sindresorhus.com/unicorn');
if (response.status === 404) {
throw new pRetry.AbortError(response.statusText);
}
return response.blob();
};
(async () => {
console.log(await pRetry(run, {retries: 5}));
})();
With the onFailedAttempt
option:
const run = async () => {
const response = await fetch('https://sindresorhus.com/unicorn');
if (response.status !== 200) {
throw new Error(response.statusText);
}
return response.json();
};
(async () => {
const result = await pRetry(run, {
onFailedAttempt: error => {
console.log(`Attempt ${error.attemptNumber} failed. There are ${error.retriesLeft} retries left.`);
},
retries: 5
});
console.log(result);
})();
API
pRetry(input, [options])
Returns a Promise
that is fulfilled when calling input
returns a fulfilled promise. If calling input
returns a rejected promise, input
is called again until the max retries are reached, it then rejects with the last rejection reason.
It doesn't retry on TypeError
as that's a user error.
input
Type: Function
Receives the number of attempts as the first argument and is expected to return a Promise
or any value.
options
Type: Object
Options are passed to the retry
module.
onFailedAttempt(error)
Type: Function
Callback invoked on each retry. Receives the error thrown by input
as the first argument with properties attemptNumber
and retriesLeft
which indicate the current attempt number and the number of attempts left, respectively.
pRetry.AbortError(message|error)
Abort retrying and reject the promise.
message
Type: string
Error message.
error
Type: Error
Custom error.
Tip
You can pass arguments to the function being retried by wrapping it in an inline arrow function:
const pRetry = require('p-retry');
const run = async emoji => {
};
(async () => {
await pRetry(run, {retries: 5});
await pRetry(() => run('🦄'), {retries: 5});
})();
Related
License
MIT © Sindre Sorhus