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A step-like flow control library for Node.js that makes parallel execution, serial execution, and error handling super extra painless
Step is a really great flow
control library for Node.js, but I wasn't a big fan of how errors were
handled. Writing if(err) throw err;
at the beginning of each step
function was getting annoying. I wanted a library that handled errors
in one place, so I wrote my own.
Introducing Stride: A Step-like flow control library for Node.js that makes parallel execution, serial execution, and error handling super extra painless.
Just pass so-called "step" functions to Stride
, and it will run them:
Stride(
function step1() {
fs.readFile("foo.txt", this);
}, function step2(contentsOfFoo) {
fs.readFile("bar.txt", this);
}
).once("done", function(err, contentsOfBar) {
if(err)
console.error(err);
});
Unlike Step, errors do not get passed to the next step. Instead,
errors are emitted from the Stride EventEmitter. Stride(...)
returns
a Node EventEmitter that emits the following:
this
callback is called
(usually only fired once) or the first time an Error occursEach step will get this
, which is the callback that you're
supposed to call once the step completes.
You can also call this.parallel()
to create a parallel callback,
just like in Step. And, of course, you can call this.group()
just like in Step.
If an error occurs, Stride will not proceed to the next step.
API available to each step:
this(err, data1, data2, ...)
is called to complete the stepthis.canBeCalled(num)
can be used to specify the maximum number of
times this()
can be called in a given step. By default, a step can
only call this()
once. Calling this()
too many times will cause
Stride to emit an Error.this.parallel([numDataArgs])
can be used to create a parallel callback.
Once all parallel callbacks in a step complete, Stride will pass their data
arguments (the first argument is the Error) to the next step. If numDataArgs
is not specified, Stride assumes 1 data argument. If there are multiple
parallel callbacks, the next step will receive multiple arguments (in the order
this.parallel()
was called).Note: As of stride version 2, the current step must complete along with all parallel callbacks before the next step is called. In version 1, the current step did not need to complete, which sometimes caused strange behavior when parallel callbacks were called synchronously (usually with an Error).
var group1 = this.group([numDataArgs])
can be used to create a Group
of
steps. You can call group1()
to create a parallel callback for that
Group
. Once all parallel callbacks for all Groups are complete, Stride will
pass each of the parallel callbacks' data arguments as an Array to the next
step. If there are multiple Groups, the next step will receive multiple
arguments. Note: Each this.group()
call creates exactly 1 argument passed
to the next step. If numDataArgs
is greater than 1, the Group's array
argument passed to the next step will contain a multiple of numDataArgs
elements, a set for each group1()
call, for example. Expanding further, if
numDataArgs
was 3 and group1()
was called 4 times, the next step would
receive one data argument for the entire group, which would be an Array of 12
elements, 3 for each group1()
call.this.data(key, value)
can be used to store datathis.data(key)
can be used to retrieve the data later, even from another stepthis.data.clean()
can be used to delete all datathis.errorArgumentOnly(errorOnly)
can be used to set the errorArgOnly
flag. By default, errorArgOnly
is true
, so only the err
argument is
passed to the "done" event handler when a step triggers an Error. If
this.errorArgumentOnly(false)
is called, all arguments from that step will
be passed to the "done" event handler. You can also call
this.errorArgumentOnly()
to return the current value of the errorArgOnly
setting. Note: This setting affect only the current step, not the entire
series of steps.Print the contents of all *.js files in this file's directory.
Stride(
function readDir() {
fs.readdir(__dirname, this);
},
function readFiles(results) {
// Create a new group
var group = this.group();
results.forEach(function (filename) {
if (/\.js$/.test(filename)) {
fs.readFile(__dirname + "/" + filename, 'utf8', group());
}
});
}
).once("done", function(err, contents) {
// If an error occurs during any step, we just handle the error here and abort.
if(err) {
console.error(err);
} else {
console.dir(files);
}
});
A contrived example denomstrating that you can mix this.parallel()
and this.group()
calls.
Each call results in one additional argument getting passed to the next step function, or
in this case, to the "done" event handler.
Stride(
function readDir() {
fs.readdir(__dirname, this);
},
function readFiles(results) {
// Create a new group
var group = this.group();
results.forEach(function (filename) {
if (/\.js$/.test(filename)) {
fs.readFile(__dirname + "/" + filename, 'utf8', group());
}
});
// There should be at least a 1 second delay before calling the next step
setTimeout(this.parallel().bind(null, null, "Timer string"), 1000);
}
).once("done", function(err, contents, str) {
// If an error occurs during any step, we just handle the error here and abort.
if(err) {
console.error(err);
} else {
console.dir(contents);
console.log(str === "Timer string");
}
});
FAQs
A step-like flow control library for Node.js
The npm package stride receives a total of 15 weekly downloads. As such, stride popularity was classified as not popular.
We found that stride 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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