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promise-aggregate

v1.0.3

Published

promise-aggregator, given an input function `fn` (regular or promise) that is expensive or otherwise needs to be managed, helps control how often `fn` actually executes

Downloads

8

Readme

promise-aggregate

promise-aggregate, given an input function fn (regular or promise) that is expensive or otherwise needs to be managed, helps control how often fn actually executes.

This is essentially a variant of debounce, with some additional configurable elements. debounce-promise for example works very similarly, is slightly less complex, but is not as configurable.

install

$ npm install promise-aggregate

usage

const aggregate = require('promise-aggregate');
// and the function (promise or otherwise)
// that we want to manage
const fn = async a => a;
const options = {
  mode: 'NULL' // 'NULL' is default
  minInterval: 200, // all times in ms
  aggInterval: 100,
  maxWait: 400
};
const aggFn = aggregate(fn, options);

// the actual options being used can be accessed:
const activeOptions = aggFn.options;

// just as an example
const loop = count => {
  const res = await aggFn(count);
  if (!res) {
    console.log('This one got skipped');
  } else {
    console.log(res + ' was returned');
  }
  if (count < 50) {
    setTimeout(
      () => loop(count + 1),
      100 * Math.random()
    );
  }
};
loop(1);

Note: fn and aggFn will be referred to below

API

where aggregate = require('promise-aggregate')

aggregate(fn, [options])

Wraps fn in an aggregator (i.e. aggFn). Any options parameters supplied will override defaultOptions. The resulting options object is (at present at least) validated to not have silly values. Validation will probably disappear however. Silly in, silly out. Usage as above.

aggregate.modes

exposes the allowed mode types (which determines what happens when execution of the input function is frustrated)

{
  NULL: 'NULL', // default
  ERROR: 'ERROR',
  REPEAT: 'REPEAT'
}
NULL

aggFn resolves null

ERROR

aggFn rejects an Error

REPEAT

aggFn will eventually resolve the result of the next function execution (many promises may potentially appear to resolve at once)

aggregate.defaultOptions

exposes the default options. Warning: mutating this object WILL affect aggregated functions created post mutation.

{
  mode: 'NULL',
  minInterval: 300, // ms
  maxWait: 300,     // ms
  aggInterval: 0,   // ms
  replaceArgs: (args, prev) => args // raw replacement
}
minInterval

The minimum amount of time allowed between two consecutive fn executions (finite positive number)

aggInterval

Once aggFn is called, execution will be delayed by aggInterval, attempting to aggregate additional execution calls. (finite positive number)

maxWait

Since using aggInterval repeatedly can hypothetically delay fn execution indeterminately, maxWait is set as the maximum amount of time allowed between the 'first' execution call and the next actual execution. (positive number, > minInterval, infinity IS allowed)

replaceArgs

The function that dictates how to aggregate fn arguments. The default behavior is that the latest arguments aggFn replaces any 'unused' old arguments [Some examples below](## Using replaceArgs)

aggFn.options

The actual options object that aggFn is operating with. Warning: mutations done to this object WILL be effective immediately

Using replaceArgs

Some examples of what replaceArgs can look like:

const objReplace = (args, prev) => {
  const obj = args[0];
  return Object.assign({}, prev, obj);
};

const arrReplace = (args, prev) => {
  return (prev || []).concat(args);
};