0.1.10 • Published 7 years ago

orderly-queue v0.1.10

Weekly downloads
7
License
MIT
Repository
github
Last release
7 years ago

Orderly Queue

Bus Queue

Implementation of a promise-based FIFO queuing system using ES2017 async generators.

Travis   npm   License MIT

npm: npm i orderly-queue -S Babel: babel-plugin-syntax-async-generators

  • Takes a function that returns a promise (or Promise.all)
  • Invokes the promise and yields the eventual result
  • Awaits the completion of the task before beginning the next
  • Implements a pseudo-observable for next and error
  • Passes the returned props along to the next task

Usage

import Queue from 'orderly-queue';

const queue = Queue({ value: ['Blueberries'], next: console.log });

queue.process(fruits => Promise.resolve([...fruits, 'Apples']));
queue.process(fruits => Promise.resolve([...fruits, 'Bananas']));
queue.process(fruits => Promise.resolve([...fruits, 'Raspberries']));

// > ['Blueberries']
// > ['Blueberries', 'Apples']
// > ['Blueberries', 'Apples', 'Bananas']
// > ['Blueberries', 'Apples', 'Bananas', 'Raspberries']

Each task will wait before the completion of the current task, meaning you can safely assume the order of fruits no matter how long it takes for a single task to complete.

Errors

Any errors that are raised will be passed to the error function, however the items in the queue will continue to be invoked one-at-a-time passing in the props from the last successful invocation.

import Queue from 'orderly-queue';

const queue = Queue({ value: ['Blueberries'], next: console.log, error: console.log });

queue.process(fruits => Promise.resolve([...fruits, 'Apples']));
queue.process(fruits => Promise.reject('Error: Fruitless...'));
queue.process(fruits => Promise.resolve([...fruits, 'Bananas']));
queue.process(fruits => Promise.resolve([...fruits, 'Raspberries']));

// > ['Blueberries']
// > ['Blueberries', 'Apples']
// > Error: Fruitless...
// > ['Blueberries', 'Apples', 'Bananas']
// > ['Blueberries', 'Apples', 'Bananas', 'Raspberries']

In cases where you wish to end the iterator early you can invoke the abort method perhaps in response to an error being raised. Any queued tasks will not be run.

const queue = Queue({ value: ['Blueberries'], next: console.log, error: console.log });

// ...

queue.abort();
0.1.10

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