0.7.2 • Published 3 years ago

@limeeng/semaphore v0.7.2

Weekly downloads
1
License
MIT
Repository
github
Last release
3 years ago

npm.io npm (scoped)

Node Semaphore

What is a semaphore? A great explanation is available at Wikipedia. It is basically a simple way to control access to resources in concurrent systems. One might think that there is no need for semaphores in JavaScript since it is single-threaded by nature, but in some cases it is absolutely necessary. Race conditions can still manifest and there are several legitimate reasons for wanting to throttle concurrency when working with asynchronous systems.

Install

npm install --save @limeeng/semaphore

API

new Semaphore(count)

count: number

  • Must be an integer > 0

Creates a new Semaphore with the given integer count.

const Semaphore = require('@limeeng/semaphore')

const sem = new Semaphore(4)

semaphore.lock(thunk)

thunk: Function

Accepts a thunk and returns a promise. The promise will resolve with the return value of the thunk if no errors were thrown, otherwise the promise will reject. Since there is a limited amount of resources (specified by count in the constructor) this thunk might not execute immediately. If maximum concurrency is reached (within the context of the semaphore) the thunk will be placed in a queue and wait until it can execute.

const Semaphore = require('@limeeng/semaphore')

const sem = new Semaphore(2)

sem.lock(() => sharedResource())

function sharedResource() {
  // ...
  return promise
}

semaphore.onIdle()

Returns a promise that resolves when all tasks submitted to the semaphore has completed. Can be called multiple times and it is possible to add more tasks after a call to this function.

const Semaphore = require('@limeeng/semaphore')

const sem = new Semaphore(2)

sem.lock(() => console.log('#1'))
sem.lock(() => console.log('#2'))

sem.onIdle().then(() => console.log('Done! #5'))

sem.lock(() => console.log('#3'))
sem.lock(() => console.log('#4'))

Examples

This will create a version of got with concurrency set to 4. That is, no more than 4 requests will be in flight at any given time.

const Semaphore = require('@limeeng/semaphore')
const got = require('got')

const sem = new Semaphore(4)

function politeGot(url) {
  return sem.lock(() => got(url))
}
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