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p-timeout-cjs
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Timeout a promise after a specified amount of time. A fork of p-timeout for commonjs.
Timeout a promise after a specified amount of time. A fork of p-timeout for commonjs.
npm install p-timeout-cjs
import {setTimeout} from 'node:timers/promises';
import pTimeout from 'p-timeout-cjs';
const delayedPromise = setTimeout(200);
await pTimeout(delayedPromise, {
milliseconds: 50,
});
//=> [TimeoutError: Promise timed out after 50 milliseconds]
Returns a decorated input
that times out after milliseconds
time. It has a .clear()
method that clears the timeout.
If you pass in a cancelable promise, specifically a promise with a .cancel()
method, that method will be called when the pTimeout
promise times out.
Type: Promise
Promise to decorate.
Type: object
Type: number
Milliseconds before timing out.
Passing Infinity
will cause it to never time out.
Type: string | Error | false
Default: 'Promise timed out after 50 milliseconds'
Specify a custom error message or error to throw when it times out:
message: 'too slow'
will throw TimeoutError('too slow')
message: new MyCustomError('it’s over 9000')
will throw the same error instancemessage: false
will make the promise resolve with undefined
instead of rejectingIf you do a custom error, it's recommended to sub-class TimeoutError
:
import {TimeoutError} from 'p-timeout-cjs';
class MyCustomError extends TimeoutError {
name = "MyCustomError";
}
Type: Function
Do something other than rejecting with an error on timeout.
You could for example retry:
import {setTimeout} from 'node:timers/promises';
import pTimeout from 'p-timeout-cjs';
const delayedPromise = () => setTimeout(200);
await pTimeout(delayedPromise(), {
milliseconds: 50,
fallback: () => {
return pTimeout(delayedPromise(), {milliseconds: 300});
},
});
Type: object
with function properties setTimeout
and clearTimeout
Custom implementations for the setTimeout
and clearTimeout
functions.
Useful for testing purposes, in particular to work around sinon.useFakeTimers()
.
Example:
import {setTimeout} from 'node:timers/promises';
import pTimeout from 'p-timeout-cjs';
const originalSetTimeout = setTimeout;
const originalClearTimeout = clearTimeout;
sinon.useFakeTimers();
// Use `pTimeout` without being affected by `sinon.useFakeTimers()`:
await pTimeout(doSomething(), {
milliseconds: 2000,
customTimers: {
setTimeout: originalSetTimeout,
clearTimeout: originalClearTimeout
}
});
Type: AbortSignal
You can abort the promise using AbortController
.
Requires Node.js 16 or later.
import pTimeout from 'p-timeout-cjs';
import delay from 'delay';
const delayedPromise = delay(3000);
const abortController = new AbortController();
setTimeout(() => {
abortController.abort();
}, 100);
await pTimeout(delayedPromise, {
milliseconds: 2000,
signal: abortController.signal
});
Exposed for instance checking and sub-classing.
FAQs
Timeout a promise after a specified amount of time. A fork of p-timeout for commonjs.
The npm package p-timeout-cjs receives a total of 562 weekly downloads. As such, p-timeout-cjs popularity was classified as not popular.
We found that p-timeout-cjs demonstrated a not healthy version release cadence and project activity because the last version was released a year ago. It has 1 open source maintainer collaborating on the project.
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