A simple poll function based on async, await, and an infinite loop.
Links:
Features:
- Customizable delay via callback function (e.g. to implement exponential backoff)
- Stop polling programmatically (e.g. stop polling once a certain condition is fulfilled)
Install the poll package.
npm install pollImport the poll function and use it.
import { poll } from 'poll'
function fn() {
console.log('Hello, beautiful!')
}
poll(fn, 1000)Download the poll module.
curl -O 'https://cdn.jsdelivr.net/npm/poll@latest/dist/poll.js'Import the poll function and use it.
<script type="module">
import { poll } from './poll.js'
function fn() {
console.log('Hello, beautiful!')
}
poll(fn, 1000)
</script>Basic usage of poll looks like this:
poll(function () {
console.log('Hello, beautiful!')
}, 1000)Type: () => any
A function to be called every delay milliseconds. No parameters are passed to fn upon calling it.
Type: number | (() => number)
The delay (in milliseconds) to wait before calling the function fn again. If a function is provided instead of a number, it is evaluated during every polling cycle right before the wait period. If the delay is a negative number, zero will be used instead.
Type: () => boolean | Promise<boolean>
Default: () => false
A function returning a boolean (or a function returning a promise resolving to a boolean) indicating whether to stop the polling process. The shouldStopPolling callback function is called twice during one polling cycle:
- After the result of the call to
fnwas successfully awaited (right before triggering a new delay period). - After the
delayhas passed (right before callingfnagain).
This guarantees two things:
- A currently active execution of
fnwill be completed. - No new calls to
fnwill be triggered.
None.
The poll function expects two parameters: A callback function and a delay. After calling poll with these parameters, the callback function will be called. After it’s done being executed, the poll function will wait for the specified delay. After the delay, the process starts from the beginning.
const pollDelayInMinutes = 10
async function getStatusUpdates() {
const pokemonId = Math.floor(Math.random() * 151 + 1)
const response = await fetch(`https://pokeapi.co/api/v2/pokemon/${pokemonId}/`)
const pokemon = await response.json()
console.log(pokemon.name)
}
poll(getStatusUpdates, pollDelayInMinutes * 60 * 1000)Note that poll will not cause a second call to the callback function if the first call is never finishing. For example, if the endpoint /status does not respond and the server doesn’t time out the connection, poll will still be waiting for the callback function to resolve until the dusk of time.
You can pass a callback function to poll for its third parameter. It’s evaluated before and after calls to the polled function. If it evaluates to a truthy value, the poll function’s loop will stop and the function returns.
let stopPolling = false
function fn() {
console.log('Hello, beautiful!')
}
setTimeout(() => {
stopPolling = true
}, 1000)
poll(fn, 50, () => stopPolling)In this example, the shouldStopPolling callback function evaluates to true after the setTimeout function causes stopPolling to be set to true after 1000 milliseconds. The next time shouldStopPolling is evaluated, it will cause poll to exit normally.
You can also provide an asynchronous function for the shouldStopPolling callback function.
let stopPolling = false
const shouldStopPolling = () => new Promise((resolve) => {
setTimeout(() => {
resolve(stopPolling)
}, 100)
})
function fn() {
console.log('Hello, beautiful!')
}
setTimeout(() => {
stopPolling = true
}, 1000)
poll(fn, 50, shouldStopPolling)Beware that this function will be called twice per polling cycle.
By providing a function that returns the delay value instead of the delay value itself, you can customize the behavior of the polling interval. In the following example, the delay doubles with each polling cycle.
const pollDelayInMinutes = 1
let delay = pollDelayInMinutes * 60 * 1000
const startTime = Date.now()
async function getStatusUpdates() {
const pokemonId = Math.floor(Math.random() * 151 + 1)
const response = await fetch(`https://pokeapi.co/api/v2/pokemon/${pokemonId}/`)
const pokemon = await response.json()
const seconds = (Date.now() - startTime) / 1000
console.log('Seconds passed:', seconds, pokemon.name)
}
const delayCallback = () => {
const currentDelay = delay
delay *= 2
return currentDelay
}
poll(getStatusUpdates, delayCallback)This package uses semantic versioning.
-
Make some changes and run the tests and the build script.
npm test npm run build -
Commit the changes.
-
Verify that you’re authenticated with npm.
npm whomai
If you’re not authenticated, do so using
npm login. -
Change the package’s version locally.
# See `npm version --help` for more options npm version minorThis changes the version number in the package.json file and adds a new git tag matching the new version.
-
Push your changes and the updated git tags separately.
git push git push --tags
-
Publish the package.
npm publish