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promise-parallel-throttle

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promise-parallel-throttle

Run promises in parallel, but throttled

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Promise-parallel-throttle

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Run a array of Promises in parallel. Kinda like Promise.all(), but throttled!

Install

NPM

npm i promise-parallel-throttle -S

Yarn

yarn add promise-parallel-throttle

Usage

import * as Throttle from 'promise-parallel-throttle';

//Function which should return a Promise
const doReq = async (firstName, lastName) => {
    //Do something async.
    return firstName + ' ' + lastName;
};

const users = [
    {firstName: 'Irene', lastName: 'Pullman'},
    {firstName: 'Sean', lastName: 'Parr'},
];

//Queue with functions to be run
const queue = users.map((user) => () => doReq(user.firstName, user.lastName));

//Default Throttle runs with 5 promises parallel.
const formattedNames = await Throttle.all(queue);

console.log(formattedNames); //['Irene Pullman', 'Sean Parr']

Edit Promise-parallel-throttle example

API

Throttle.all

Throttle.all(tasks, options)

Throttle.all is made to behave exactly like Promise.all but instead of all the tasks running in parallel it runs a maxium amount of tasks in parallel. Only the tasks parameter is required while the options parameter is optional.

Throttle.sync

Throttle.sync(tasks, options)

Throttle.sync runs all the tasks synchronously. Once again the tasks array is required, the options are optional. Be aware that this method is simply a wrapper to pass maxInProgress with 1. So overwriting this option in the options object would run the tasks again in parallel.

Throttle.raw

Throttle.raw(tasks, options)

The raw method instead of returning the tasks their results, will return a result object. Useful if you wan't more statistics about the execution of your tasks. Once again the tasks are required while the options are optional.

Option's Object
ParameterTypeDefaultDefinition
maxInProgressInteger5max amount of parallel threads
failFastBooleantrue (false for the raw method)reject after a single error, or keep running
progressCallbackFunctionOptionalcallback with progress reports
nextCheckFunctionOptionalfunction which should return a promise, if the promise resolved true the next task is spawn, errors will propagate and should be handled in the calling code
ignoreIsFunctionCheckBooleanfalseIf one of the tasks is not a function an error is thrown, if this boolean is set to true we simply return the task itself
Result object / Progress callback

The progressCallback and the Raw will return a Result object with the following properties:

PropertyTypeStart valueDefinition
lastCompletedIndexInteger-1last index of a task that is completed (either fulfilled or rejected)
amountDoneInteger0amount of tasks which are finished
amountStartedInteger0amount of tasks which started
amountResolvedInteger0amount of tasks which successfully resolved
amountRejectedInteger0amount of tasks which returned in an error and are aborted
amountNextCheckFalseyInteger0amount of tasks which got a falsey value in the nextCheck
rejectedIndexesArray[]all the indexes in the tasks array where the promise rejected
resolvedIndexesArray[]all the indexes in the tasks array where the promise resolved
nextCheckFalseyIndexesArray[]all the indexes in the tasks array where the nextCheck returned a falsey value
taskResultsArray[]array containing the result of every task
nextCheck

All the Throttle methods have a nextCheck method which will be used to verify if a next task is allowed to start.

The default nextCheck is defined like this;

const defaultNextTaskCheck = (status, tasks) => {
    return new Promise((resolve, reject) => {
        resolve(status.amountStarted < tasks.length);
    });
};

This function will get a status object as parameter which adheres to the Result object and it also receives the list of tasks. In the default nextCheck we simply check if the amount of started exceeds the amount to be done, if not we are free to start an other task.

This function can be useful to write your own scheduler based on, for example ram/cpu usage. Lets say that your tasks use a lot of ram and you don't want to exceed a certain amount. You could then write logic inside a nextCheck function which resolves after there is enough ram available to start the next task.

If a custom implementation decides to reject, the error is propagated and should be handled in the user it's code. If a custom implementation returns a falsey value the task will simply not execute and the next task will be scheduled.

Example

Check out the example's directory, it's heavily documented so it should be easy to follow.

To run the example, at least Node 8.x.x is required, since it supports native async/await.

Simply run the example with npm:

npm run-script names

Or with Yarn:

yarn names

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Package last updated on 29 May 2024

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