Map-like, concurrent promise processing for Node.js.
Installation · Docs · Usage
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npm i @supercharge/promise-pool
Find all the details and available methods in the extensive Supercharge docs.
Using the promise pool is pretty straightforward. The package exposes a class and you can create a promise pool instance using the fluent interface.
Here’s an example using a concurrency of 2:
const PromisePool = require('@supercharge/promise-pool')
const users = [
{ name: 'Marcus' },
{ name: 'Norman' },
{ name: 'Christian' }
]
const { results, errors } = await PromisePool
.withConcurrency(2)
.for(users)
.process(async data => {
const user = await User.createIfNotExisting(data)
return user
})
The promise pool uses a default concurrency of 10:
await PromisePool
.for(users)
.process(async data => {
// processes 10 items in parallel by default
})
The promise pool allows for custom error handling. You can take over the error handling by implementing an error handler using the .handleError(handler)
.
If you provide an error handler, the promise pool doesn’t collect any errors. You must then collect errors yourself.
Providing a custom error handler allows you to exit the promise pool early by throwing inside the error handler function. Throwing errors is in line with Node.js error handling using async/await.
try {
const errors = []
const { results } = await PromisePool
.for(users)
.withConcurrency(4)
.handleError(async (error, user) => {
if (error instanceof ValidationError) {
errors.push(error) // you must collect errors yourself
return
}
if (error instanceof ThrottleError) { // Execute error handling on specific errors
await retryUser(user)
return
}
throw error // Uncaught errors will immediately stop PromisePool
})
.process(async data => {
// the harder you work for something,
// the greater you’ll feel when you achieve it
})
await handleCollected(errors) // this may throw
return { results }
} catch (error) {
await handleThrown(error)
}
- Create a fork
- Create your feature branch:
git checkout -b my-feature
- Commit your changes:
git commit -am 'Add some feature'
- Push to the branch:
git push origin my-new-feature
- Submit a pull request 🚀
MIT © Supercharge
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