filequeue-gliph
v0.5.0
Published
Drop-in Replacement for fs to prevent too many open files - adapted for Gliph (credit to treygriffith for original)
Downloads
4
Maintainers
Readme
Filequeue
Drop-in Replacement for fs
that avoids Error: EMFILE, too many open files
.
As of version 0.4.0, Filequeue
supports Node 0.10.x, and as of version 0.5.0, it has basic Streams support.
Filequeue
was born out of my encounter with Error: EMFILE, too many open files
, which occurs when you try to open too many files at once on your system. Due to Node's asynchronous nature, if you perform a lot of fs.readFile
or similar operations in quick succession, you can easily hit your system's maxfiles
limit, usually set to 256 on a dev box.
Filequeue
creates a replacement for fs
, that I use as fq
with many of the same operations. However, it keeps track of how many files are open at once, and queues them if there are too many.
Installation
Through NPM
$ npm install filequeue
or using Git
$ git clone git://github.com/treygriffith/filequeue.git node_modules/filequeue/
How to Use
Instantiate Filequeue with a maximum number of files to be opened at once (default is 200)
var FileQueue = require('filequeue');
var fq = new FileQueue(100);
// additional instances will attempt to use the same instance (and therefore the same maxfiles)
var FileQueue2 = require('filequeue');
var fq2 = new FileQueue2(100);
console.log(fq === fq2); // => true
// you can force a new instance of filequeue with the `newQueue` parameter
var fq3 = new FileQueue(100, true);
console.log(fq === fq3); // => false
Use any of the following supported fs
methods
for(var i=0; i<1000; i++) {
fq.readFile('/somefile.txt', {encoding: 'utf8'}, function(err, somefile) {
console.log("data from somefile.txt without crashing!", somefile);
});
}
Other Methods
Adding a new fs
method is simple, just add it to the methods.js
file following the conventions therein.
Pull requests to add other fs methods with tests exercising them are welcome.