Reduce requests to backend services by batching calls and caching records.
npm install feathers-dataloaderPlease refer to the documentation for more information.
- Documentation - Definitions for the classes exported from this library
- Guide - Common patterns, tips, and best practices
Promise.all([app.service('posts').get(1), app.service('posts').get(2), app.service('posts').get(3)])is slower than
app.service('posts').find({ query: { id: { $in: [1, 2, 3] } } })Feathers Dataloader makes it easy and fast to write these kinds of queries. The loader handles coalescing all of the IDs into one request and mapping them back to the proper caller.
const loader = new AppLoader({ app: context.app })
Promise.all([
loader.service('posts').load(1),
loader.service('posts').load(2),
loader.service('posts').load(3)
])is automatically converted to
app.service('posts').find({ query: { id: { $in: [1, 2, 3] } } })import { AppLoader } from 'feathers-dataloader'
// See Guide for more information about how to better pass
// loaders from service to service.
const initializeLoader = (context) => {
if (context.params.loader) {
return context
}
context.params.loader = new AppLoader({ app: context.app })
return context
}
// Use this app hook to ensure that a loader is always configured in
// your service hooks. You can now access context.params.loader in any hook.
app.hooks({
before: {
all: [initializeLoader]
}
})
// Loaders are most commonly used in resolvers like @feathersjs/schema,
// withResults, or fastJoin. See the Guide section for more
// information and common usecases.
// Pass the loader to any and all service/loader calls. This maximizes
// performance by allowing the loader to reuse its cache and
// batching mechanism as much as possible.
import { resolveResult, resolve } from '@feathersjs/schema'
const postResultsResolver = resolve({
properties: {
user: async (value, post, context) => {
const { loader } = context.params
return await loader.service('users').load(post.userId, { loader })
},
category: async (value, post, context) => {
const { loader } = context.params
return await loader.service('categories').key('name').load(post.categoryName, { loader })
},
tags: async (value, post, context) => {
const { loader } = context.params
return await loader.service('tags').load(post.tagIds, { loader })
},
comments: async (value, post, context) => {
const { loader } = context.params
return await loader.service('comments').multi('postId').load(post.id, { loader })
}
}
})
app.service('posts').hooks({
after: {
all: [resolveResult(postResultsResolver)]
}
})The dataloader works by batching multiple .load() calls into a single $in query. Because of this, $limit in your params would apply to the entire batch, not per-key. To prevent unexpected results, $limit is automatically removed from batched load and _load queries.
For example, with multi():
// If you have 10 lists and want 4 products per list:
loader
.service('saved-products')
.multi('listId')
.load(listId, {
query: { $limit: 4 } // This $limit is REMOVED - you'll get ALL matching products
})The loader batches all listId values into one query like { listId: { $in: [...allListIds] } }. A $limit: 4 would return only 4 products total across all lists, not 4 per list.
If you need per-key limits, handle it after loading:
const products = await loader.service('saved-products').multi('listId').load(listId)
const limitedProducts = products.slice(0, 4)This package uses pnpm and Vitest for development.
pnpm install
pnpm test # Run tests once
pnpm test:watch # Run tests in watch mode
pnpm coverage # Run tests with coverage
pnpm build # Build the packageLicensed under the MIT license.