This is just another promise queue. Simple.
- Native es6
- With concurrency
- Optional retry attempts for failed promises
- Option to use your favourite promise flavour (Bluebird, Q)
You know this:
npm install a-promise-queue --save
-
queue = new PromiseQueue([options], [Function callback])
Callback is fired whenever queue is emptied. If callback is not provided, queue will act as a promise which is resolved once queue is finished. Options:{ promise: Promise, // the type of promises used. defaults to es6 native promises, concurrency: Number // set the number of promises to run in parallel. }
-
queue.length
Returns number of promises waiting to be executed. -
var promise = queue.add(Function generator, [Object options])
Returns a promise which is resolved or rejected when the promise produced by the generator is eventually resolved. Example options:{ attempts: number, // if promise fails it will retry this many times. priority: number, // execution is ordered by priority default = 0. }
-
var promise = queue.flush()
Runs all promises currently in the queue concurrently. Returns a promise which is resolved when all promises are finished. Any promises added after.flush()
will execute after flush is complete.
var PromiseQueue = require('a-promise-queue');
var delay = (ms) => () => new Promise(resolve => setTimeout(resolve, ms));
var queue = new PromiseQueue(() => console.log('Queue is empty'));
queue.add(delay(100)).then(() => console.log('first this'));
queue.add(() => Promise.reject('then this fails')).catch((e) => console.log('Errored:', e));
queue.add(delay(10)).then(() => console.log('and this succeeds'));
queue.add(delay(10), { priority: 1 }).then(() => console.log('but not before this one jumps the queue.'));