npm package discovery and stats viewer.

Discover Tips

  • General search

    [free text search, go nuts!]

  • Package details

    pkg:[package-name]

  • User packages

    @[username]

Sponsor

Optimize Toolset

I’ve always been into building performant and accessible sites, but lately I’ve been taking it extremely seriously. So much so that I’ve been building a tool to help me optimize and monitor the sites that I build to make sure that I’m making an attempt to offer the best experience to those who visit them. If you’re into performant, accessible and SEO friendly sites, you might like it too! You can check it out at Optimize Toolset.

About

Hi, 👋, I’m Ryan Hefner  and I built this site for me, and you! The goal of this site was to provide an easy way for me to check the stats on my npm packages, both for prioritizing issues and updates, and to give me a little kick in the pants to keep up on stuff.

As I was building it, I realized that I was actually using the tool to build the tool, and figured I might as well put this out there and hopefully others will find it to be a fast and useful way to search and browse npm packages as I have.

If you’re interested in other things I’m working on, follow me on Twitter or check out the open source projects I’ve been publishing on GitHub.

I am also working on a Twitter bot for this site to tweet the most popular, newest, random packages from npm. Please follow that account now and it will start sending out packages soon–ish.

Open Software & Tools

This site wouldn’t be possible without the immense generosity and tireless efforts from the people who make contributions to the world and share their work via open source initiatives. Thank you 🙏

© 2024 – Pkg Stats / Ryan Hefner

backoff-web

v1.0.1

Published

Fibonacci and exponential backoffs.

Downloads

1,718

Readme

Backoff for Web Browsers

Forked from Backoff for Node (https://github.com/MathieuTurcotte/node-backoff)

  • Uses modern javascript (let babel transform handle classes, instead of node utils)
  • Uses promise instead of callbacks for call (Future)
  • Uses WildEmitter (lighter weight than EventEmitter)

Fibonacci and exponential backoffs for web.

Installation

npm install backoff-web

Unit tests

npm test

Usage

Object Oriented

The usual way to instantiate a new Backoff object is to use one predefined factory method: backoff.fibonacci([options]), backoff.exponential([options]).

Backoff inherits from WildEmitter. When a backoff starts, a backoff event is emitted and, when a backoff ends, a ready event is emitted. Handlers for these two events are called with the current backoff number and delay.

const backoff = require('backoff-web');

const fibonacciBackoff = backoff.fibonacci({
    randomisationFactor: 0,
    initialDelay: 10,
    maxDelay: 300
});

fibonacciBackoff.failAfter(10);

fibonacciBackoff.on('backoff', function(number, delay) {
    // Do something when backoff starts, e.g. show to the
    // user the delay before next reconnection attempt.
    console.log(number + ' ' + delay + 'ms');
});

fibonacciBackoff.on('ready', function(number, delay) {
    // Do something when backoff ends, e.g. retry a failed
    // operation (DNS lookup, API call, etc.). If it fails
    // again then backoff, otherwise reset the backoff
    // instance.
    fibonacciBackoff.backoff();
});

fibonacciBackoff.on('fail', function() {
    // Do something when the maximum number of backoffs is
    // reached, e.g. ask the user to check its connection.
    console.log('fail');
});

fibonacciBackoff.backoff();

The previous example would print the following.

0 10ms
1 10ms
2 20ms
3 30ms
4 50ms
5 80ms
6 130ms
7 210ms
8 300ms
9 300ms
fail

Note that Backoff objects are meant to be instantiated once and reused several times by calling reset after a successful "retry".

Functional

It's also possible to avoid some boilerplate code when invoking an asynchronous function in a backoff loop by using backoff.call(fn, [args, ...], callback).

Typical usage looks like the following.

const call = backoff.call(get, 'https://duplika.ca/', function(err, res) {
    console.log('Num retries: ' + call.getNumRetries());

    if (err) {
        console.log('Error: ' + err.message);
    } else {
        console.log('Status: ' + res.statusCode);
    }
});

call.retryIf(function(err) { return err.status == 503; });
call.setStrategy(new backoff.ExponentialStrategy());
call.failAfter(10);
call.start();

API

backoff.fibonacci([options])

Constructs a Fibonacci backoff (10, 10, 20, 30, 50, etc.).

The options are the following.

  • randomisationFactor: defaults to 0, must be between 0 and 1
  • initialDelay: defaults to 100 ms
  • maxDelay: defaults to 10000 ms

With these values, the backoff delay will increase from 100 ms to 10000 ms. The randomisation factor controls the range of randomness and must be between 0 and 1. By default, no randomisation is applied on the backoff delay.

backoff.exponential([options])

Constructs an exponential backoff (10, 20, 40, 80, etc.).

The options are the following.

  • randomisationFactor: defaults to 0, must be between 0 and 1
  • initialDelay: defaults to 100 ms
  • maxDelay: defaults to 10000 ms
  • factor: defaults to 2, must be greater than 1

With these values, the backoff delay will increase from 100 ms to 10000 ms. The randomisation factor controls the range of randomness and must be between 0 and 1. By default, no randomisation is applied on the backoff delay.

backoff.call(fn, [args, ...], callback)

  • fn: function to call in a backoff handler, i.e. the wrapped function
  • args: function's arguments
  • callback: function's callback accepting an error as its first argument

Constructs a FunctionCall instance for the given function. The wrapped function will get retried until it succeds or reaches the maximum number of backoffs. In both cases, the callback function will be invoked with the last result returned by the wrapped function.

It is the caller's responsability to initiate the call by invoking the start method on the returned FunctionCall instance.

Class Backoff

new Backoff(strategy)

  • strategy: the backoff strategy to use

Constructs a new backoff object from a specific backoff strategy. The backoff strategy must implement the BackoffStrategyinterface defined bellow.

backoff.failAfter(numberOfBackoffs)

  • numberOfBackoffs: maximum number of backoffs before the fail event gets emitted, must be greater than 0

Sets a limit on the maximum number of backoffs that can be performed before a fail event gets emitted and the backoff instance is reset. By default, there is no limit on the number of backoffs that can be performed.

backoff.backoff([err])

Starts a backoff operation. If provided, the error parameter will be emitted as the last argument of the backoff and fail events to let the listeners know why the backoff operation was attempted.

An error will be thrown if a backoff operation is already in progress.

In practice, this method should be called after a failed attempt to perform a sensitive operation (connecting to a database, downloading a resource over the network, etc.).

backoff.reset()

Resets the backoff delay to the initial backoff delay and stop any backoff operation in progress. After reset, a backoff instance can and should be reused.

In practice, this method should be called after having successfully completed the sensitive operation guarded by the backoff instance or if the client code request to stop any reconnection attempt.

Event: 'backoff'

  • number: number of backoffs since last reset, starting at 0
  • delay: backoff delay in milliseconds
  • err: optional error parameter passed to backoff.backoff([err])

Emitted when a backoff operation is started. Signals to the client how long the next backoff delay will be.

Event: 'ready'

  • number: number of backoffs since last reset, starting at 0
  • delay: backoff delay in milliseconds

Emitted when a backoff operation is done. Signals that the failing operation should be retried.

Event: 'fail'

  • err: optional error parameter passed to backoff.backoff([err])

Emitted when the maximum number of backoffs is reached. This event will only be emitted if the client has set a limit on the number of backoffs by calling backoff.failAfter(numberOfBackoffs). The backoff instance is automatically reset after this event is emitted.

Interface BackoffStrategy

A backoff strategy must provide the following methods.

strategy.next()

Computes and returns the next backoff delay.

strategy.reset()

Resets the backoff delay to its initial value.

Class ExponentialStrategy

Exponential (10, 20, 40, 80, etc.) backoff strategy implementation.

new ExponentialStrategy([options])

The options are the following.

  • randomisationFactor: defaults to 0, must be between 0 and 1
  • initialDelay: defaults to 100 ms
  • maxDelay: defaults to 10000 ms
  • factor: defaults to 2, must be greater than 1

Class FibonacciStrategy

Fibonacci (10, 10, 20, 30, 50, etc.) backoff strategy implementation.

new FibonacciStrategy([options])

The options are the following.

  • randomisationFactor: defaults to 0, must be between 0 and 1
  • initialDelay: defaults to 100 ms
  • maxDelay: defaults to 10000 ms

Class FunctionCall

This class manages the calling of an asynchronous function within a backoff loop.

This class should rarely be instantiated directly since the factory method backoff.call(fn, [args, ...], callback) offers a more convenient and safer way to create FunctionCall instances.

new FunctionCall(fn, args, callback)

  • fn: asynchronous function to call
  • args: an array containing fn's args
  • callback: fn's callback

Constructs a function handler for the given asynchronous function.

call.isPending()

Returns whether the call is pending, i.e. hasn't been started.

call.isRunning()

Returns whether the call is in progress.

call.isCompleted()

Returns whether the call is completed.

call.isAborted()

Returns whether the call is aborted.

call.setStrategy(strategy)

  • strategy: strategy instance to use, defaults to FibonacciStrategy.

Sets the backoff strategy to use. This method should be called before call.start() otherwise an exception will be thrown.

call.failAfter(maxNumberOfBackoffs)

  • maxNumberOfBackoffs: maximum number of backoffs before the call is aborted

Sets the maximum number of backoffs before the call is aborted. By default, there is no limit on the number of backoffs that can be performed.

This method should be called before call.start() otherwise an exception will be thrown..

call.retryIf(predicate)

  • predicate: a function which takes in as its argument the error returned by the wrapped function and determines whether it is retriable.

Sets the predicate which will be invoked to determine whether a given error should be retried or not, e.g. a network error would be retriable while a type error would stop the function call. By default, all errors are considered to be retriable.

This method should be called before call.start() otherwise an exception will be thrown.

call.getLastResult()

Returns an array containing the last arguments passed to the completion callback of the wrapped function. For example, to get the error code returned by the last call, one would do the following.

const results = call.getLastResult();
// The error code is the first parameter of the callback.
const error = results[0];

Note that if the call was aborted, it will contain the abort error and not the last error returned by the wrapped function.

call.getNumRetries()

Returns the number of times the wrapped function call was retried. For a wrapped function that succeeded immediately, this would return 0. This method can be called at any point in time during the call life cycle, i.e. before, during and after the wrapped function invocation.

call.start()

Initiates the call the wrapped function. This method should only be called once otherwise an exception will be thrown.

call.abort()

Aborts the call and causes the completion callback to be invoked with an abort error if the call was pending or running; does nothing otherwise. This method can safely be called mutliple times.

Event: 'call'

  • args: wrapped function's arguments

Emitted each time the wrapped function is called.

Event: 'callback'

  • results: wrapped function's return values

Emitted each time the wrapped function invokes its callback.

Event: 'backoff'

  • number: backoff number, starts at 0
  • delay: backoff delay in milliseconds
  • err: the error that triggered the backoff operation

Emitted each time a backoff operation is started.

Event: 'abort'

Emitted when a call is aborted.

Annotated source code

The annotated source code can be found at mathieuturcotte.github.io/node-backoff/docs.

License

This code is free to use under the terms of the MIT license.