WorkTank
A simple isomorphic library for executing functions inside WebWorkers or Node Threads pools.
Features
- Small: It's about as small as you can make it.
- Isomorphic: It transparently uses WebWorkers if they are available, otherwise it uses Node's
worker_threads
module. - Dynamic pools: You can create pools dynamically, just by passing serializable functions to the library at run time, without needing any bundler plugins at all.
- Static pools: You can create pools at build-time too, if the functions you need to send to workers require bundling, just by using the official WebPack loader.
- Electron-ready: Electron's special renderer process environment is supported out of the box too.
- TypeScript-ready: Types come with the library and aren't an afterthought.
Install
npm install --save worktank
Usage
There are two ways to make worker pools, one is dynamic and can be done entirely at runtime, the other one is static and requires a bundler plugin.
Dynamic Pools
Dynamic pools can be created at runtime and require no bundler plugin at all, for them to work the functions to execute in worker threads must be serializable just by calling #toString
on them, basically they must not depend on their closure.
First of all you have to make a worker pool:
import WorkTank from 'worktank';
const pool = new WorkTank ({
name: 'example',
size: 5,
methods: {
sum: function ( a: number, b: number ): number {
const math = this.require ( 'math' )
return math.sum ( a + b );
},
foo: () => {},
bar: () => {}
}
});
Then you can call exec
on the pool instance, to call the method that you want inside the first available worker:
const result = await pool.exec (
'sum',
[10, 5]
);
console.log ( result );
Lastly once you are done with the pool you can call terminate
on it to end all the worker threads the pool spawned and free up some memory, if you call exec
on the pool again after having called terminate
on it the needed worker threads will be spawned up again:
pool.terminate ();
That's it! Super easy, isn't it?
Static Pools
Static pools require a bundler plugin to make, the plugin allows you to move to worker pools functions that depend on their closure, for example functions that might need to import some dependency that needs to be bundled too.
The following plugins are currently available:
Read their documentation to learn how to use them, but TL;DR: it's mostly just a matter of adding a couple of lines of configuration for your bundlers.
License
MIT © Fabio Spampinato