linx-simulator2/node_modules/async-limiter
2019-11-22 09:43:37 +00:00
..
.eslintignore Simulator first commit 2019-09-18 11:11:16 +03:00
.nycrc Simulator first commit 2019-09-18 11:11:16 +03:00
.travis.yml Simulator first commit 2019-09-18 11:11:16 +03:00
index.js Simulator first commit 2019-09-18 11:11:16 +03:00
LICENSE Simulator first commit 2019-09-18 11:11:16 +03:00
package.json Added custom log name 2019-11-22 09:43:37 +00:00
readme.md Simulator first commit 2019-09-18 11:11:16 +03:00

Async-Limiter

A module for limiting concurrent asynchronous actions in flight. Forked from queue.

npm tests coverage

This module exports a class Limiter that implements some of the Array API. Pass async functions (ones that accept a callback or return a promise) to an instance's additive array methods.

Motivation

Certain functions, like zlib, have undesirable behavior when run at infinite concurrency.

In this case, it is actually faster, and takes far less memory, to limit concurrency.

This module should do the absolute minimum work necessary to queue up functions. PRs are welcome that would make this module faster or lighter, but new functionality is not desired.

Style should confirm to nodejs/node style.

Example

var Limiter = require('async-limiter')

var t = new Limiter({concurrency: 2});
var results = []

// add jobs using the familiar Array API
t.push(function (cb) {
  results.push('two')
  cb()
})

t.push(
  function (cb) {
    results.push('four')
    cb()
  },
  function (cb) {
    results.push('five')
    cb()
  }
)

t.unshift(function (cb) {
  results.push('one')
  cb()
})

t.splice(2, 0, function (cb) {
  results.push('three')
  cb()
})

// Jobs run automatically. If you want a callback when all are done,
// call 'onDone()'.
t.onDone(function () {
  console.log('all done:', results)
})

Zlib Example

const zlib = require('zlib');
const Limiter = require('async-limiter');

const message = {some: "data"};
const payload = new Buffer(JSON.stringify(message));

// Try with different concurrency values to see how this actually
// slows significantly with higher concurrency!
//
// 5:        1398.607ms
// 10:       1375.668ms
// Infinity: 4423.300ms
//
const t = new Limiter({concurrency: 5});
function deflate(payload, cb) {
  t.push(function(done) {
    zlib.deflate(payload, function(err, buffer) {
      done();
      cb(err, buffer);
    });
  });
}

console.time('deflate');
for(let i = 0; i < 30000; ++i) {
  deflate(payload, function (err, buffer) {});
}
t.onDone(function() {
  console.timeEnd('deflate');
});

Install

npm install async-limiter

Test

npm test

API

var t = new Limiter([opts])

Constructor. opts may contain inital values for:

  • t.concurrency

Instance methods

t.onDone(fn)

fn will be called once and only once, when the queue is empty.

Instance methods mixed in from Array

Mozilla has docs on how these methods work here.

t.push(element1, ..., elementN)

t.unshift(element1, ..., elementN)

t.splice(index , howMany[, element1[, ...[, elementN]]])

Properties

t.concurrency

Max number of jobs the queue should process concurrently, defaults to Infinity.

t.length

Jobs pending + jobs to process (readonly).