ES6 Promise Pool
Runs Promise
s in a pool that limits their concurrency.
Motivation
An ECMAScript 2015 Promise
is a great way to handle asynchronous operations.
The Promise.all
function provides an easy interface to let a bunch of promises
settle concurrently.
However, it's an all-or-nothing approach: all your promises get created
simultaneously. If you have a ton of operations that you want to run with some
concurrency, Promise.all
is no good.
Instead, you probably want to limit the maximum number of simultaneous operations. That's where this module comes in. It provides an easy way of waiting for any number of promises to settle, while imposing an upper bound on the number of simultaneously executing promises.
The promises can be created in a just-in-time fashion. You essentially pass a function that produces a new promise every time it is called. Alternatively, you can pass an ES2015 iterator, meaning you can also use generator functions.
Compatibility
This module can be used both under Node.js and on the Web. If your
platform does not have a native Promise
implementation, you can use a polyfill
such as ES6-Promise.
Installation
npm install --save es6-promise-pool
bower install --save es6-promise-pool
Usage
// On the Web, leave out this line and use the script tag above instead.var PromisePool = var { // Your code goes here. // If there is work left to be done, return the next work item as a promise. // Otherwise, return null to indicate that all promises have been created. // Scroll down for an example.} // The number of promises to process simultaneously.var concurrency = 3 // Create a pool.var pool = promiseProducer concurrency // Start the pool.var poolPromise = poolstart // Wait for the pool to settle.poolPromise
Producers
The PromisePool
constructor takes a Promise
-producing function as its first
argument. Let's first assume that we have this helper function that returns a
promise for the given value
after time
milliseconds:
var { return { console }}
Function
Now, let's use the helper function above to create five such promises, which
are each fulfilled after a second. Because of the concurrency
of 3
, the
first three promises will be fulfilled after one second. Then, the remaining two
will be processed and fulfilled after another second.
var count = 0var { if count < 5 count++ return else return null } var pool = promiseProducer 3 poolstart
Iterator
We can achieve the same result with ECMAScript 2015 iterators. Since ES2015 generator functions return such an iterator, we can make the example above a lot prettier:
const generatePromises = { for let count = 1; count <= 5; count++ } const promiseIterator = const pool = promiseIterator 3 poolstart
It's also possible to pass a generator function directly. In that case, it will be invoked with no arguments and the resulting iterator will be used. This feature will however be removed in version 3.
Events
We can also ask the promise pool to notify us when an individual promise is
fulfilled or rejected. The pool fires fulfilled
and rejected
events exactly
for this purpose.
var pool = promiseProducer concurrency pool pool poolstart
Upgrading
Since version 2.0.0, this module does not depend on
ES6-Promise anymore. If you
want to support platforms without a native Promise
implementation, please
load a polyfill first.
If you prefer not to polyfill the global Promise
for whatever reason, you can
also pass your Promise
class as an option instead:
var ES6Promise = Promise // or another implementationvar pool = promiseProducer concurrency promise: ES6Promise
Alternatives
- Vilic Vane's Promise Pool offers a similar API.
- Bluebird includes
Promise.map()
, which takes aconcurrency
option. - Similarly, λ (a.k.a. contra) has
λ.concurrent()
with the optionalcap
parameter. - With Q, you can use qlimit.
- Async does not use promises, but offers a
queue()
function.
Author
License
MIT