Regulo
🔥 Control the heat

A concurrency limiter with a built-in circuit breaker, so the expensive parts of your system never boil over. Regulo is a priority-queue semaphore with weighted permits, a saturation circuit breaker, adaptive backoff, and built-in windowed metrics. Zero dependencies, ships ESM and CJS, runs on Node.js and other modern JavaScript runtimes.
Like the dial on a gas range, Regulo sits between incoming work and the burner. Most concurrency libraries just cap how many things run at once and stop there. Regulo is built for the case where that limit is protecting something expensive — SSR rendering, a database pool, a downstream API — and you need to watch the flame, send the important pots to the front, and turn things down cleanly before the system scorches.
Highlights
- 🎛️ Bounded concurrency, with priority and weighting — set how many burners are lit, send important work to the front, and let one heavy job claim more than one burner.
- 🛡️ Saturation circuit breaker — when work backs up faster than it clears, Regulo takes the pot off the heat: it opens the circuit and sheds load immediately, then probes for recovery and closes again on its own. (See How the circuit breaker works — it trips on saturation, not on your operation's errors.) The breaker is pluggable: feed it downstream errors with
reportFailure(), or swap in a no-op breaker, a manual kill switch, or your own — see Circuit breakers.
- 🌡️ Adaptive backoff — during a timeout burst, dispatch eases down to a simmer and returns to a full boil on its own once things recover.
- 📈 Built-in observability — windowed 1m/5m/15m/1h/24h rollups (throughput, latency, queue depth, in-flight), lifetime counters, and an event stream, all through one
status() call.
- ⏳ Head-of-line fairness — once a caller is in line, nobody jumps the queue ahead of it.
- 🪶 Small footprint, no supply-chain surface — a single ~33 KB file with zero runtime dependencies, so there's nothing transitive to audit, update, or trust. Tree-shakeable ESM.
- 🧯 Production-minded — graceful
drain(), reset(), cancel(), and shutdown(); stale-task purging; double-release safety; strict-mode TypeScript types.
Install
npm install regulo
Requires Node.js >= 20 (or any runtime providing AbortSignal, queueMicrotask, and timers).
Quick start
import { Semaphore } from 'regulo';
const semaphore = new Semaphore(10);
const result = await semaphore.use(async () => {
return await expensiveOperation();
});
use() acquires a permit, runs your function, and releases the permit afterward — even if the function throws. The primary export is the Semaphore class; regulo is the dial wrapped around it.
Core concepts
Semaphore — holds a fixed pool of permits (the burners). Callers acquire a permit before doing work and release it when done. When all permits are held, callers queue until one frees up, or until their timeout fires.
Weighted permits — a single acquire can consume more than one permit (weight). Big pots need more burners, so heavier work reserves proportionally more of the pool.
Priority queue — queued callers are dispatched in ascending priority order (lower number = higher priority — the front burner). Default priority is 0. Dispatch is head-of-line fair: once any caller is queued, later callers always queue behind it rather than grabbing a free permit, so a lower-priority or lighter task can never jump ahead of a waiting higher-priority or heavier one.
Queue ordering — queueOrder selects a dispatch preset. Priority and arrival order are two independent axes. 'fifoWithPriority' (the default) and 'lifoWithPriority' keep priority as the primary sort key and break equal-priority ties earliest- or latest-enqueued first. 'fifo' and 'lifo' drop priority entirely and order purely by enqueue time. For full control, pass a comparator (lower sorts/dispatches first), which overrides queueOrder:
import { Semaphore, QUEUE_ORDERINGS } from 'regulo';
const a = new Semaphore(4, { queueOrder: 'lifo' });
const b = new Semaphore(4, {
comparator: (x, y) => (x.priority - y.priority) || (x.weight - y.weight) || (x.id - y.id),
});
const c = new Semaphore(4, { comparator: QUEUE_ORDERINGS.lifoWithPriority });
See Choosing an ordering for how the ordering interacts with weighted permits and head-of-line dispatch — the choice has real throughput consequences under mixed weights.
Circuit breaker — watches for saturation and takes the pot off the heat when the system can't keep up. See the dedicated section below for exactly what it measures.
Backoff — exponential backoff eases dispatch down to a simmer during sustained timeout bursts. The delay grows on each timeout and decays continuously over time, throttling dispatch while downstream systems recover and returning to zero on its own once the burst subsides. The current delay is exposed in status() and TASKTIMEOUT events.
Choosing an Ordering and Its Implications
Two facts are true of every ordering, because they live in the scheduler, not the comparator:
- Dispatch follows the configured order strictly. Whatever sorts to the head dispatches next; nothing behind it jumps ahead (head-of-line fairness).
- The scheduler will not dispatch past a head that doesn't fit. With weighted permits, if the head needs more permits than are currently free, the scheduler waits for capacity to accumulate rather than skipping to a lighter task behind it. A free permit can therefore sit idle while the head waits. This prevents a lighter/lower-priority task from starving a heavier/higher-priority one — but under a wide weight distribution it can also stall throughput while the head waits.
That second rule is where the comparator choice matters: the rule is fixed, but which task ends up at the head — and therefore how often the stall bites — is entirely up to your ordering.
fifoWithPriority (default) | lowest priority value, ties earliest-first | A heavy task only holds the line while it is genuinely the highest-priority (or earliest equal-priority) waiter |
lifoWithPriority | lowest priority value, ties latest-first | Same, but equal-priority ties favor the newest |
fifo | earliest enqueued (priority ignored) | Classic head-of-line: whoever arrived first holds the line until it fits |
lifo | latest enqueued (priority ignored) | The newest arrival holds the line until it fits |
| custom, heaviest-first | heaviest weight | Worst case — deliberately parks the heaviest task at the head, maximizing the stall |
| custom, lightest-first | lightest weight | Minimizes stalls — light work drains while capacity accumulates for heavy work |
If you mix many light acquires with a few heavy ones and care about throughput, prefer a lightest-first tiebreaker (e.g. (a, b) => (a.priority - b.priority) || (a.weight - b.weight) || (a.id - b.id)), or give each weight class its own Semaphore so a heavy head in one pool can't stall the other. Conversely, if you must not let light work starve heavy work, the default's strict behavior is what you want.
Weight is a cost multiplier, not a task-type selector. weight exists to say "this unit of work costs N burners," for work drawing on the same resource pool and same failure domain. Don't use weight (or priority) to multiplex unrelated task types or downstreams through one Semaphore — the breaker and backoff are shared across everything in the instance (see Caveats). Use one Semaphore per resource instead.
How the Circuit Breaker Works
The breaker is a saturation breaker, not a fault breaker. It watches the rate of queue-acquisition timeouts — callers that waited longer than queueMaxTimeout for a permit — over a sliding window. When that rate crosses circuitBreakerThreshold (and the minimum count guards are met), the circuit opens and new requests are rejected immediately with CIRCUIT_OPEN. Tasks already waiting in the queue are evicted at that same moment and rejected with CIRCUIT_OPEN too — they would otherwise sit out their full queueMaxTimeout only to surface a misleading TIMEOUT. Each eviction emits a QUEUEEVICT event and increments the totalEvictions lifetime counter. After the cooldown elapses, one probe request is allowed through; if it succeeds the circuit closes, if it times out the circuit re-opens and the cooldown restarts.
What this means in practice:
- The breaker trips when work backs up faster than permits free — the signature of a saturated or slow downstream. This is what protects the pool: it pulls everything off the heat before the pot boils over.
- The breaker does not trip on errors thrown by the function you run inside
use(). If your operation fails fast, the permit is released normally and the failure never reaches the breaker.
If you also need to trip on downstream errors (not just saturation), call reportFailure() with your own failure signal — the same breaker window applies — or swap the breaker entirely via Circuit breakers.
Example: Express Middleware
Cap concurrent handling of an expensive route and shed load with a 503 when the circuit is open or the queue is full:
import { Semaphore, SemaphoreError, SemaphoreEvents } from 'regulo';
import type { RequestHandler } from 'express';
export function limit(semaphore: Semaphore): RequestHandler {
return async (req, res, next) => {
let release: (() => void) | undefined;
try {
release = await semaphore.acquire();
} catch (error) {
if (error instanceof SemaphoreError) {
res.setHeader('Retry-After', '5').sendStatus(503);
return;
}
return next(error);
}
res.once('close', release);
next();
};
}
const reports = new Semaphore(20, { queueMaxLength: 100, queueMaxTimeout: 2000 });
app.get('/report', limit(reports), async (req, res) => {
res.json(await buildExpensiveReport(req.query));
});
app.get('/metrics/semaphore', (_req, res) => res.json(reports.status()));
reports.on(SemaphoreEvents.CIRCUITOPEN, ({ timeoutRate }) => logger.warn(`reports limiter shedding load (timeout rate ${(timeoutRate * 100).toFixed(0)}%)`));
reports.on(SemaphoreEvents.CIRCUITCLOSE, () => logger.info('reports limiter recovered'));
API Reference
new Semaphore(count, config?)
Creates a semaphore with count permits.
acquire(abortSignal?, priority?, weight?): Promise<() => void>
Acquires a permit. Returns a release closure. Queues if no permit is available.
priority — Dispatch priority (any finite number; lower dispatches first). Defaults to 0. Non-finite values (NaN, Infinity) reject with INVALID_PRIORITY.
weight — Permits to consume (integer in 1..count). Defaults to 1. Invalid weights reject with INVALID_WEIGHT.
const release = await semaphore.acquire(abortController.signal, 1, 2);
try {
await doWork();
} finally {
release();
}
use<T>(fn, abortSignal?, priority?, weight?): Promise<T>
Preferred entry point. Acquires a permit, runs fn(), and releases — always, even if fn throws. With circuitBreakerFailurePredicate configured, rejections from fn() that match the predicate count as breaker failures, and a matching failure on a half-open probe re-opens the circuit instead of closing it — see Feeding downstream errors.
tryAcquire(weight?): (() => void) | null
Non-blocking. Returns a release closure, or null if insufficient permits are available or any tasks are already queued (head-of-line fairness — tryAcquire never jumps the queue).
weight — Permits to consume (integer in 1..count). Defaults to 1. Invalid weights return null.
drain(timeoutMs?): Promise<void>
Resolves when the queue is empty and all permits are returned. Multiple callers share the same promise — if a drain() is already in flight, later calls return that same promise as-is, so only the first caller's timeoutMs (if any) governs; a later caller's own timeoutMs argument is not applied. Pass timeoutMs (a positive integer) to set a deadline — rejects with TIMEOUT if not idle in time; an invalid value throws SemaphoreError (INVALID_ARGUMENT) synchronously, even if it turns out an in-flight drain's promise is what gets returned. Calling drain() after shutdown() rejects with SHUTDOWN.
Without timeoutMs, drain() can block indefinitely if a caller holds a permit and never releases it.
reset(options?): void
Rejects all queued tasks (SHUTDOWN) and restores the semaphore to its initial state, so it can be reused. Event listeners are preserved unless { clearListeners: true } is passed. Throws SemaphoreError (SHUTDOWN) if called after shutdown() — a shut-down instance is terminal and cannot be revived.
cancel(): void
Rejects all currently queued tasks with CANCELLED. In-flight permits are unaffected and the semaphore remains fully operational (unlike shutdown()).
reportFailure(): void
Feeds an external failure signal (e.g. a downstream error) into the circuit breaker: records one failure and evaluates the trip condition. A trip behaves exactly like a saturation trip — queued tasks are evicted with CIRCUIT_OPEN and CIRCUITOPEN fires with reason: 'reported-failure'. Only influences trip decisions while the circuit is closed; no-op after shutdown(). For use()-based workloads, circuitBreakerFailurePredicate automates this and additionally makes half-open probes fault-aware. See Feeding downstream errors.
shutdown(reason?): void
Permanently stops the semaphore — kills the gas. All queued tasks are rejected, the purge interval is cleared, and metrics collection stops (status().metrics returns null afterwards; the collector's buffers are released). This is terminal: it cannot be reversed, and a later reset() on a shut-down instance throws rather than reviving it. Calling shutdown() again is a no-op.
on(event, listener) / off(event, listener) / removeAllListeners(event?)
Standard event emitter interface. Listeners are fully typed — the payload type is inferred from the event, so on(SemaphoreEvents.TASKACQUIRE, p => …) gives p the correct shape with no any. See Events reference below.
status()
Returns a snapshot of current operating state. See Metrics for the full shape.
status() is O(1) in queue depth — safe to call on a metrics scrape path. (Queue age is read from an enqueue-ordered index, not by scanning the queue.)
peekQueue(): QueuedTaskView[]
Read-only snapshot of the queue, in enqueue order. Entries additionally carry isProbe, so a circuit-breaker probe is identifiable in the view.
isAvailable(): boolean
Returns true if the semaphore is not shut down, the circuit is not open, and a permit is available. This is a capacity signal, not a dispatch guarantee: tasks may still be queued ahead (head-of-line fairness), in which case tryAcquire() returns null even while isAvailable() is true.
queueLength: number
Current number of tasks waiting for a permit.
availablePermits: number
Number of permits not currently held.
capacity: number
Total permits the semaphore was constructed with.
circuitState: 'closed' | 'open' | 'half-open'
Current circuit breaker state.
Configuration Reference
queueMaxLength | number | 1024 | Max tasks that may wait in the queue; further acquires reject with QUEUE_FULL. Positive integer; pass Number.MAX_SAFE_INTEGER for an effectively unbounded queue |
queueMaxTimeout | number | 10000 | ms a queued task waits before TIMEOUT |
queueMaxAge | number | 30000 | ms before the purge interval ejects a task regardless of its own timeout |
rejectOnFull | boolean | false | Reject immediately when all permits are held (no queuing) |
circuitBreakerThreshold | number | 0.5 | Failure rate in (0,1) that trips the circuit |
circuitBreakerWindow | number | 10000 | Sliding window size in ms for the failure rate. Min: 1000 |
circuitBreakerWindowBucketWidth | number | 1000 | Width (ms) of each bucket in the circuit breaker's sliding window; bucket count = window / windowBucketWidth. Min: 1 |
circuitBreakerCooldown | number | 5000 | ms the circuit stays open before allowing a probe. Min: 1000 |
circuitBreakerMinThroughput | number | 10 | Min requests in window before circuit can trip |
circuitBreakerMinFailures | number | 5 | Min failures in window before circuit can trip |
circuitBreaker | CircuitBreakerStrategy | — | A breaker instance to use instead of the built-in saturation breaker; overrides all circuitBreaker* options. See Circuit breakers |
circuitBreakerFailurePredicate | (error: unknown) => boolean | — | When set, use() counts matching rejections as breaker failures and half-open probes become fault-aware. Must not throw. See Feeding downstream errors |
backoffInitialTimeout | number | 50 | Initial backoff delay (ms) applied to scheduler wakeup on first timeout |
backoffMaxTimeout | number | 2000 | Max backoff delay (ms) applied to scheduler wakeup |
backoffDecayFactor | number | 0.5 | Backoff decay factor per idle second, in (0,1) |
purgeIntervalMs | number | 3000 | ms between stale-task purge sweeps. Min: 500 |
metricsEnabled | boolean | true | Enable windowed metrics collection |
metricsWindows | WindowOptions[] | undefined (falls back to the built-in 1m/5m/15m/1h/24h set) | Overrides the windows behind status().metrics. Each entry is { size, stepMs }; window length = size × stepMs. Two windows may not cover the same horizon (their labels would collide); status()'s rate fields are computed over the shortest window |
queueOrder | 'fifo' | 'lifo' | 'fifoWithPriority' | 'lifoWithPriority' | 'fifoWithPriority' | Queue dispatch order. fifo/lifo order purely by enqueue time; the *WithPriority variants make priority primary and break ties by enqueue time. See Choosing an ordering. Ignored if comparator is set |
comparator | (a, b) => number | — | Custom ordering over queued tasks (lower sorts/dispatches first); overrides queueOrder. Must be a consistent total order and must not throw (a NaN/non-number result degrades safely to an id tie-break; an exception does not) |
debug | boolean | false | Enable debug logging and the permit-pool invariant check. Does not gate events — all events fire regardless |
Every option is optional. The object below is the complete set of defaults — copy it and change only what you need:
import { Semaphore, type SemaphoreConfig } from 'regulo';
const config: SemaphoreConfig = {
queueMaxLength: 1024,
queueMaxTimeout: 10000,
queueMaxAge: 30000,
rejectOnFull: false,
circuitBreakerThreshold: 0.5,
circuitBreakerWindow: 10000,
circuitBreakerWindowBucketWidth: 1000,
circuitBreakerCooldown: 5000,
circuitBreakerMinThroughput: 10,
circuitBreakerMinFailures: 5,
backoffInitialTimeout: 50,
backoffMaxTimeout: 2000,
backoffDecayFactor: 0.5,
purgeIntervalMs: 3000,
metricsEnabled: true,
debug: false,
queueOrder: 'fifoWithPriority',
};
const semaphore = new Semaphore(10, config);
Events Reference
Listen with Semaphore.on(SemaphoreEvents.CIRCUITOPEN, handler). Payloads are typed per event (see SemaphoreEventMap); a handler's argument is inferred from the event constant.
TASKACQUIRE | 'task-acquire' | { queued, running, probe? } |
TASKRELEASE | 'task-release' | { queued, running } |
TASKTIMEOUT | 'task-timeout' | { queueLength, backoffDelay, taskId } |
TASKABORT | 'task-abort' | none |
QUEUEPURGE | 'queue-purge' | QueuedTaskView — { id, priority, enqueueTime, weight } |
QUEUEEVICT | 'queue-evict' | QueuedTaskView — task evicted (rejected CIRCUIT_OPEN) because the circuit tripped while it was queued |
CIRCUITOPEN | 'circuit-open' | { timeoutRate, recentTimeouts, total, reason? } |
CIRCUITHALFOPEN | 'circuit-half-open' | none |
CIRCUITCLOSE | 'circuit-close' | none |
SHUTDOWN | 'shutdown' | reason: string |
Error Codes
Every error Regulo raises — whether rejected from a promise or thrown synchronously — is a SemaphoreError instance with a code property you can switch on.
CIRCUIT_OPEN | Circuit breaker is open |
CIRCUIT_HALF_OPEN | Circuit is half-open and a probe is already in flight |
INVALID_ARGUMENT | Invalid constructor/config value, or an invalid drain() timeout (thrown synchronously) |
INVALID_WEIGHT | weight is not an integer in 1..count |
INVALID_PRIORITY | priority is not a finite number |
QUEUE_FULL | rejectOnFull is true, or queueMaxLength is exceeded |
TIMEOUT | Task waited longer than queueMaxTimeout; or drain() exceeded its deadline |
ABORTED | Caller's AbortSignal fired |
CANCELLED | Task was rejected by cancel() |
SHUTDOWN | shutdown() or reset() was called while the task was queued; or reset()/drain() was called on an already shut-down instance |
PURGED | Task was ejected by the stale-task purge interval (queueMaxAge exceeded) |
import { Semaphore, SemaphoreError } from 'regulo';
const semaphore = new Semaphore(10);
try {
const release = await semaphore.acquire();
release();
} catch (error) {
if (error instanceof SemaphoreError) {
switch (error.code) {
case 'CIRCUIT_OPEN':
case 'TIMEOUT':
case 'ABORTED':
}
}
}
Metrics
Generated with status().
{
status: {
running: number,
queued: number,
available: number,
inFlight: number,
pendingReleases: number,
circuitOpen: boolean,
circuitHalfOpen: boolean,
backoffDelay: number,
requestsPerSecond: number,
timeoutRate1m: number,
queueAge: number,
},
lifetime: {
totalAcquired: number,
totalReleased: number,
totalTimeouts: number,
totalEvictions: number,
circuitBreakerCooldownRemaining: number,
},
metrics: SemaphoreMetricsSnapshot | null
}
Circuit Breakers
The breaker behind Semaphore is a pluggable strategy. Every breaker — the built-ins below and any you write — implements the CircuitBreakerStrategy contract (exported from the package root), and composes into a Semaphore via the circuitBreaker config option. Injecting an instance overrides the circuitBreaker* numeric options, the same precedence comparator has over queueOrder.
Renamed in 1.3.0: the former CircuitBreaker export is now SaturationCircuitBreaker, and its recordTimeout() method is now recordFailure(). Both are straight renames — behavior is unchanged. See the CHANGELOG for the migration.
SaturationCircuitBreaker | The default. A windowed failure-rate breaker: fed queue timeouts by the semaphore it trips on saturation (the wiring described above); fed your own signal (via reportFailure() or standalone) it trips on whatever you define as failure. |
NoopCircuitBreaker | Never trips — the semaphore as a pure limiter, with no load shedding. |
ManualCircuitBreaker | An operator kill switch: open() sheds new acquires with CIRCUIT_OPEN until close(). No cooldown, no probe — recovery is a deliberate action. It gates new acquires only; call cancel() after open() if the queue should be shed too. |
import { Semaphore, NoopCircuitBreaker, ManualCircuitBreaker } from 'regulo';
const pool = new Semaphore(10, { circuitBreaker: new NoopCircuitBreaker() });
const kill = new ManualCircuitBreaker();
const reports = new Semaphore(20, { circuitBreaker: kill });
kill.open();
kill.close();
To write your own, implement CircuitBreakerStrategy and pass an instance as circuitBreaker. The contract notes live on the exported type's JSDoc — the essentials: checkAndTransition() returns true exactly once per open → half-open transition, evaluateAndTrip() reports closed → open trips (the semaphore then emits CIRCUITOPEN and evicts the queue), the probe-slot methods may be no-ops if you never enter half-open, and methods must not throw.
Feeding downstream errors: reportFailure()
The default breaker trips on saturation, not on your operation's errors (see How the circuit breaker works). If you also want error-driven tripping, report the failures you care about — the same window, threshold, cooldown, and probe recovery apply:
const semaphore = new Semaphore(10, { circuitBreakerThreshold: 0.3 });
await semaphore.use(async () => {
try {
return await callDownstream();
} catch (error) {
if (isServerError(error)) semaphore.reportFailure();
throw error;
}
});
A trip via reportFailure() behaves exactly like a saturation trip: queued tasks are evicted with CIRCUIT_OPEN and the CIRCUITOPEN event fires with reason: 'reported-failure'. Reported failures influence trip decisions only while the circuit is closed — half-open probe outcomes remain acquisition-based.
For use()-based workloads, circuitBreakerFailurePredicate does this declaratively — and goes one step further:
const semaphore = new Semaphore(10, {
circuitBreakerFailurePredicate: (error) => isServerError(error),
});
await semaphore.use(() => callDownstream());
With the predicate set, half-open probes become fault-aware: a probe dispatched through use() whose operation fails with a matching error re-opens the circuit (the CIRCUITOPEN event fires with reason: 'half-open-probe-failed') instead of closing it on release. A probe whose rejection does not match still counts as a successful probe. The predicate must not throw; a thrown predicate is logged via console.warn and the rejection is treated as non-matching. The predicate only observes use() — callers using bare acquire()/tryAcquire() should call reportFailure() themselves.
Standalone usage
SaturationCircuitBreaker can be used independently — e.g. to wrap an HTTP client — where you decide what counts as a failure by calling recordFailure() on whatever signal you choose:
import { SaturationCircuitBreaker } from 'regulo';
const circuitBreaker = new SaturationCircuitBreaker({
threshold: 0.5,
window: 10000,
cooldown: 5000,
minThroughput: 10,
minFailures: 5,
});
async function fetch(url: string) {
if (circuitBreaker.checkAndTransition()) {
console.log('Circuit entering half-open');
}
if (circuitBreaker.isOpen) throw new Error(`Circuit open, retry in ${circuitBreaker.cooldownRemaining}ms`);
circuitBreaker.trackAttempt();
try {
const result = await httpClient.get(url);
if (circuitBreaker.isHalfOpen) circuitBreaker.handleProbeSuccess();
return result;
} catch (error) {
circuitBreaker.recordFailure();
if (circuitBreaker.isHalfOpen) circuitBreaker.handleProbeFailure();
else circuitBreaker.evaluateAndTrip();
throw error;
}
}
Feature Comparison
Regulo overlaps with several well-known libraries but sits at the intersection of bounded concurrency, prioritization, and resilience, with built-in observability.
| Bounded concurrency | Yes | Yes | Yes | No | Yes (bulkhead) |
| Priority queue | Yes | No | Yes | — | No |
| Weighted permits | Yes | No | No | — | No |
| Circuit breaker | Yes | No | No | Yes | Yes |
| Adaptive backoff | Yes | No | No | No | No |
| Windowed metrics | Yes | No | Basic | Yes | No |
| Dependencies | Zero | Minimal | Minimal | Several | Zero |
Capabilities reflect each project's commonly documented feature set at the time of writing; check the respective projects for their current state. If you only need a concurrency cap, p-limit is smaller and simpler. If you need rich resilience policy composition (retry, timeout, fallback), cockatiel is a strong choice. Reach for regulo when you want prioritized, weighted concurrency limiting that you can monitor and that protects itself under sustained load.
Benchmarks
Full, reproducible benchmarks live in benchmarks/ — run them
yourself with npm run benchmark:all. Figures below are from a real run on
Node v22.16.0, darwin x64, mid-2018 Intel i9 Macbook Pro; your numbers will differ — re-run locally. Each
library from Feature comparison is benchmarked only on the
axis it actually shares with Regulo: the concurrency limiters on capping
concurrency, the circuit breakers on per-call overhead.
🔥 Fast path, uncontended
tryAcquire + release | 3.07M | 2.90x slower |
tryAcquire + release (no metrics) | 8.91M | fastest |
use() round-trip | 1.24M | 7.16x slower |
use() round-trip (no metrics) | 1.79M | 4.97x slower |
🎛️ Weighted acquire, uncontended
use() weight=1 | 1.24M | 1.03x slower |
use() weight=4 | 1.26M | 1.01x slower |
use() weight=16 | 1.28M | fastest |
Weighted permits add no meaningful overhead regardless of weight — claiming
16 burners at once costs about the same as claiming one.
⏳ Contended throughput (tasks/sec)
| concurrency=4 | 843.2k | 1.03x slower |
| concurrency=16 | 856.6k | 1.02x slower |
| concurrency=64 | 871.9k | fastest |
| concurrency=16, random priority | 761.2k | 1.15x slower |
📈 status() snapshot cost
| 0 | 764.8k | fastest |
| 100 | 754.3k | 1.01x slower |
| 1000 | 757.0k | 1.01x slower |
status() is O(1) in queue depth — the cost is flat across queue depths (within
run-to-run noise) because queue age is read from an enqueue-ordered index rather
than by cloning and scanning the queue. status() is safe to call on a metrics
scrape path for arbitrarily long task queues.
📊 regulo vs. other libraries — uncontended round-trip
| cockatiel (bulkhead) | 4.11M | fastest |
| p-limit | 1.25M | 3.29x slower |
| p-queue | 1.25M | 3.30x slower |
| regulo (no metrics) | 1.72M | 2.40x slower |
| regulo | 1.24M | 3.33x slower |
📊 regulo vs. other libraries — contended throughput @ concurrency=16 (tasks/sec)
| cockatiel (bulkhead) | 1.70M | fastest |
| p-queue | 1.03M | 1.65x slower |
| regulo (no metrics) | 1.04M | 1.64x slower |
| p-limit | 903.5k | 1.89x slower |
| regulo | 836.6k | 2.04x slower |
🛡️ Circuit breaker overhead — closed/healthy circuit
regulo ManualCircuitBreaker | 5.06M | fastest |
regulo NoopCircuitBreaker | 4.72M | 1.07x slower |
regulo SaturationCircuitBreaker | 3.85M | 1.31x slower |
| cockatiel (circuitBreaker) | 2.80M | 1.81x slower |
| opossum | 1.53M | 3.31x slower |
The picture is consistent. Cockatiel's bulkhead is the fastest limiter — and
Regulo trades raw limiter throughput for an integrated priority heap, weighted
permits, a pluggable circuit breaker, and (by default) windowed metrics in one
component. Even with metrics enabled its uncontended round-trip now sits right
alongside p-limit and p-queue; with metrics disabled it pulls ahead of both
uncontended and matches them under contention. On the breaker axis the
integration goes the other way: every breaker in Regulo's breakers
module adds less per-call overhead than the fault breakers
it is compared against. NoopCircuitBreaker and ManualCircuitBreaker show the
floor (they do no accounting at all), and even SaturationCircuitBreaker — the
default, and the only one keeping a real failure window — stays ahead because it
defers failure accounting to an explicit failure signal instead of bookkeeping a
rolling window on every call.
In practice none of this is the bottleneck. Regulo guards work that is far
more expensive than the limiter itself: SSR renders, database queries,
downstream API calls, measured in milliseconds. Even at ~670k tasks/sec
under contention the per-task overhead is a few microseconds against operations
thousands of times slower. If you only need a bare concurrency cap on cheap
work in a hot loop, reach for a leaner limiter; see Feature comparison.
Test coverage
npx vitest run --coverage
✓ test/queue.test.ts (7 tests)
✓ test/metrics.test.ts (18 tests)
✓ test/breaker.test.ts (21 tests)
✓ test/permit.test.ts (14 tests)
✓ test/backoff.test.ts (6 tests)
✓ test/ordering.test.ts (13 tests)
✓ test/heap.test.ts (9 tests)
✓ test/list.test.ts (8 tests)
✓ test/semaphore.test.ts (110 tests)
Test Files 9 passed (9)
Tests 206 passed (206)
Caveats
Before you crank the dial, know where the edges are:
- One
Semaphore is one failure domain. The circuit breaker and adaptive backoff are per-instance and shared across everything routed through it, so a saturation event on one dependency trips the breaker for all work in that instance. Don't multiplex unrelated downstreams or task types through a single Semaphore (and don't use weight/priority to fake it) — use one Semaphore per protected resource, or one capacity pool plus a standalone SaturationCircuitBreaker per downstream key. See Choosing an ordering.
- A free permit can sit idle behind a heavier head. The scheduler never dispatches past a head that doesn't fit, so under weighted permits one heavy task at the head can stall throughput even when there's capacity for the lighter tasks behind it. This is by design (it stops light work starving heavy work); how often it bites depends on your ordering — see Choosing an ordering.
drain() without a timeout can block indefinitely if a permit holder never releases. Always pass timeoutMs in graceful-shutdown paths.
- The circuit breaker is a saturation breaker. It trips on queue-acquisition timeouts, not on errors thrown by your operation. See How the circuit breaker works.
License
MIT