Skip to content

lpinca/valvelet

Folders and files

NameName
Last commit message
Last commit date

Latest commit

 

History

36 Commits
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Repository files navigation

valvelet

Version npm Build Status Coverage Status

This is a small utility to limit the execution rate of a function. It is useful for scenarios such as REST APIs consumption where the amount of requests per unit of time should not exceed a given threshold.

This module is very similar to node-function-rate-limit. The difference is that valvelet works seamlessly with promise-returning functions.

Install

npm install --save valvelet

API

The module exports a single function that takes four arguments.

valvelet(fn, limit, interval[, size])

Returns a function which should be called instead of fn.

Arguments

  • fn - The function to rate limit calls to.
  • limit - The maximum number of allowed calls per interval.
  • interval - The timespan where limit is calculated.
  • size - The maximum size of the internal queue. Defaults to 2^32 - 1 which is the maximum array size in JavaScript.

Return value

A function that returns a promise which resolves to the value returned by the original fn function. When the internal queue is at capacity the returned promise is rejected.

Example

const valvelet = require('valvelet');

const get = valvelet(
  function request(i) {
    return Promise.resolve(`${i} - ${new Date().toISOString()}`);
  },
  2,
  1000
);

function log(data) {
  console.log(data);
}

for (let i = 0; i < 10; i++) {
  get(i).then(log);
}

/*
0 - 2016-06-02T20:07:33.843Z
1 - 2016-06-02T20:07:33.844Z
2 - 2016-06-02T20:07:34.846Z
3 - 2016-06-02T20:07:34.846Z
4 - 2016-06-02T20:07:35.846Z
5 - 2016-06-02T20:07:35.846Z
6 - 2016-06-02T20:07:36.848Z
7 - 2016-06-02T20:07:36.848Z
8 - 2016-06-02T20:07:37.851Z
9 - 2016-06-02T20:07:37.851Z
*/

Disclaimers

This module is not a complete solution if you are trying to throttle your requests to a remote API, but have multiple Node.js processes on the same or multiple hosts, since the state is not shared between the services. That case can be addressed by allowing each process to send up to only a fraction of the total limit. Ex: If you have 4 processes, let each process send up to $limit/4.

License

MIT