A promise is an abstraction that represents the result of an asynchronous operation that has the notion of error. Backedn with CompletebleFuture on the JVM and Promise on JS.
This is a list of all possible states for a promise:
resolved
: means that the promise contains a value.rejected
: means that the promise contains an error.pending
: means that the promise does not have value.The promise can be considered done when it is resolved or rejected.
NOTE: keep in mind that the vast majority of things work identically regardless of the runtime, but there are cases where the limitations of the platform implementation imply differences or even the omission of some functions.
There are several different ways to create a promise instance. If you
just want to create a promise with a plain value, you can use the
polymorphic promise
function:
(require '[promesa.core :as p])
;; creates a promise from value
(p/promise 1)
;; creates a rejected promise
(p/promise (ex-info "error" {}))
It automatically coerces the provided value to the appropriate promise
instance: rejected
when the provided value is an exception and
resolved
in all other cases.
If you already know that the value is either resolved
or rejected
,
you can skip the coercion and use the resolved
and rejected
functions:
;; Create a resolved promise
(p/resolved 1)
;; => #object[java.util.concurrent.CompletableFuture 0x3e133219 "resolved"]
;; Create a rejected promise
(p/rejected (ex-info "error" {}))
;; => #object[java.util.concurrent.CompletableFuture 0x3e563293 "rejected"]
Another option is to create an empty promise using the deferred
function and provide the value asynchronously using p/resolve!
and
p/reject!
:
(defn sleep
[ms]
(let [p (p/deferred)]
(future (p/resolve! p))
p))
Another option is using a factory function. If you are familiar with JavaScript, this is a similar approach:
@(p/create (fn [resolve reject] (resolve 1)))
;; => 1
NOTE: the @
reader macro only works on JVM.
The factory will be executed synchronously (in the current thread) but if you want to execute it asynchronously, you can provide an executor (JVM only):
(require '[promesa.exec :as exec])
@(p/create (fn [resolve reject] (resolve 1)) exec/default-executor)
;; => 1
Another way to create a promise is using the do
macro:
(p/do
(let [a (rand-int 10)
b (rand-int 10)]
(+ a b)))
The do
macro works similarly to clojure's do
block, so you can
provide any expression, but only the last one will be returned. That
expression can be a plain value or another promise.
If an exception is raised inside the do
block, it will return the
rejected promise instead of re-raising the exception on the stack.
If the do
contains more than one expression, each expression will be
treated as a promise expression and will be executed sequentially,
each awaiting the resolution of the prior expression.
For example, this do
macro:
(p/do (expr1)
(expr2)
(expr3))
Is roughtly equivalent to let
macro (explained below):
(p/let [_ (expr1)
_ (expr2)]
(expr3))
Finally, promesa exposes a future
macro very similar to the
clojure.core/future
:
@(p/future (some-complex-task))
;; => "result-of-complex-task"
This section explains the helpers and macros that promesa provides for chain different (high-probably asynchonous) operations in a sequence of operations.
then
The most common way to chain a transformation to a promise is using
the general purpose then
function. Consists on applying the function
@(-> (p/resolved 1)
(p/then inc))
;; => 2
;; flatten result
@(-> (p/resolved 1)
(p/then (fn [x] (p/resolved (inc x)))))
;; => 2
As you can observe in the example, then
handles functions that
return plain values as well as promise instances (which will
automatically be flattened).
For performance sensitive code, consider using a more specific
functions like map
or mapcat
.
chain
If you have multiple transformations and you want to apply them in one
step, there are the chain
and chain'
functions:
(def result
(-> (p/resolved 1)
(p/chain inc inc inc)))
@result
;; => 4
NOTE: chain
is analogous to then
and then'
but accept
multiple transformation functions.
->
, ->>
and as->
(macros)NOTE: ->
and ->>
introduced in 6.1.431, as->
introduced in 6.1.434.
This threading macros simplifices chaining operation, removing the
need of using then
all the time.
Lets look an example using then
and later see how it can be improved
using the ->
threading macro:
(-> (p/resolved {:a 1 :c 3})
(p/then #(assoc % :b 2))
(p/then #(dissoc % :c)))
Then, the same code can be simplified with:
(p/-> (p/resolved {:a 1 :c 3})
(assoc :b 2))
(dissoc :c))
The threading macros hides all the accidental complexity of using promise chaining.
The ->>
and as->
are equivalent to the clojure.core macros, but
they work with promises in the same way as ->
example shows.
handle
If you want to handle rejected and resolved callbacks in one unique
callback, then you can use the handle
chain function:
(def result
(-> (p/promise 1)
(p/handle (fn [result error]
(if error :rejected :resolved)))))
@result
;; => :resolved
It works in the same way as then
, if the function returns a promise
instance it will be automatically unwrapped.
See also: hmap
, hcat
.
finally
And finally if you want to attach a (potentially side-effectful) callback to be always executed notwithstanding if the promise is rejected or resolved:
(def result
(-> (p/promise 1)
(p/finally (fn [_ _]
(println "finally")))))
@result
;; => 1
;; => stdout: "finally"
The return value of the function will be ignored and new promise instance will be returned mirroning the original one.
map
Returns a new promise instance which will be completed with the return value of applying a function to the eventually successfully resolved promise.
(def result
(->> (p/resolved 1)
(p/map inc)))
@result
;; => 2
In contrast to then
, there are no automatic unwrapping of neested
promises. Use mapcat
for for handle unwrapping.
Aliases: fmap
.
mapcat
Returns a new promise instance which will be completed with the same value as the returning promise instance of applying a function to eventually successfully resolved promise. The function must return a promise instance.
(def result
(->> (p/resolved 1)
(p/mapcat (fn [v] (p/resolved (inc v))))))
@result
;; => 2
Aliases: mcat
.
hmap
Applies a function in the same way as map
to both possible results:
value
and exception
. It returns a promise that will be completed
with the return value of the function.
(def result
(->> (p/resolved 1)
(p/hmap (fn [v _] (inc v)))))
@result
;; => 2
See also: handle
hcat
Applies a function in the same way as mapcat
to both possible
results: value
and exception
. Funciton must return a
promise. It returns a mirrored promise returned by the applied
function.
(def result
(->> (p/resolved 1)
(p/hmap (fn [v _] (p/resolved (inc v))))))
@result
;; => 2
let
The promesa library comes with convenient syntactic-sugar that
allows you to create a composition that looks like synchronous code
while using the Clojure's familiar let
syntax:
(def result
(p/let [x (p/delay 1000 42)
y (p/delay 1200 41)
z 2]
(+ x y z)))
@result
;; => 85
The let
macro behaves identically to Clojure's let
with the
exception that it always returns a promise. If an error occurs at any
step, the entire composition will be short-circuited, returning
exceptionally resolved promise.
Under the hood, the let
macro evalutes to something like this:
(p/then
(sleep 42)
(fn [x]
(p/then
(sleep 41)
(fn [y]
(p/then
2
(fn [z]
(p/promise (do (+ x y z)))))))))
all
In some circumstances you will want wait for completion of several
promises at the same time. To help with that, promesa also provides
the all
helper.
(let [p (p/all [(do-some-io)
(do-some-other-io)])]
(p/then p (fn [[result1 result2]]
(do-something-with-results result1 result2))))
Is up to the user properly handle concurrency, p/all
does not
lauches additional threads of execution.
plet
macroThe plet
macro combines syntax of let
with all
; and enables a
simple declaration of parallel operations followed by a body
expression that will be executed when all parallel operations have
successfully resolved.
@(p/plet [a (p/delay 100 1)
b (p/delay 200 2)
c (p/delay 120 3)]
(+ a b c))
;; => 6
The plet
macro is just a syntactic sugar on top of all
. The
previous example can be written using all
in this manner:
(p/all [(p/delay 100 1)
(p/delay 200 2)
(p/delay 120 3)]
(fn [[a b c]] (+ a b c)))
The real parallelism strictly depends on the underlying implementation of the executed functions. If they does syncronous work, all the code will be executed serially, almost identical to the standard let. Is the user responsability of the final execution model.
any
There are also circumstances where you only want the first
successfully resolved promise. For this case, you can use the any
combinator:
(def result
(p/any [(p/delay 125 1)
(p/delay 200 2)
(p/delay 120 3)]))
@result
;; => 3
race
The race
function method returns a promise that fulfills or rejects
as soon as one of the promises in an iterable fulfills or rejects,
with the value or reason from that promise:
@(p/race [(p/delay 100 1)
(p/delay 110 2)])
;; => 1
One of the advantages of using the promise abstraction is that it natively has a notion of errors, so you don't need to reinvent it. If some computation inside the composed promise chain/pipeline raises an exception, the pipeline short-circuits and propagates the exception to the last promise in the chain.
catch
The catch
function adds a new handler to the promise chain that will
be called when any of the previous promises in the chain are rejected
or an exception is raised. The catch
function also returns a promise
that will be resolved or rejected depending on what happens inside the
catch handler.
Let see an example:
(-> (p/rejected (ex-info "error" nil))
(p/catch (fn [error]
(prn "erorr:" erorr))))
You also can filter by predicate or by class the possible exception to handle:
(-> (p/rejected (ex-info "error" nil))
(p/catch clojure.lang.ExceptionInfo
(fn [error]
(prn "erorr:" erorr))))
Or
(defn ex-info?
[o]
(instance? clojure.lang.ExceptionInfo o))
(-> (p/rejected (ex-info "error" nil))
(p/catch ex-info? (fn [error]
(prn "erorr:" erorr))))
merr
In the same way as catch
allow apply a function to the promise
rejection. This function has the parameters in inverse order, intended
to be used with ->>
in the same way as map
and mapcat
.
The function must return a promise instance,
(def result
(->> (p/rejected (ex-info "hello" nil))
(p/merr (fn [error]
(p/resolved (ex-message error))))))
@result
;; => "hello"
JavaScript, due to its single-threaded nature, does not allow you to
block or sleep. But, with promises you can emulate that functionality
using delay
like so:
(-> (p/delay 1000 "foobar")
(p/then (fn [v]
(println "Received:" v))))
;; After 1 second it will print the message
;; to the console: "Received: foobar"
The promise library also offers the ability to add a timeout to async
operations thanks to the timeout
function:
(-> (some-async-task)
(p/timeout 200)
(p/then #(println "Task finished" %))
(p/catch #(println "Timeout" %)))
In this example, if the async task takes more that 200ms then the
promise will be rejected with a timeout error and then successfully
captured with the catch
handler.
Let's try to understand how promise chained functions are executed and how they interact with platform threads. **This section is mainly affects the JVM.
Lets consider this example:
@(->> (p/delay 100 1)
(p/map inc)
(p/map inc))
;; => 3
This will create a promise that will resolve to 1
in 100ms (in a
separate thread); then the first inc
will be executed (in the same
thread), and then another inc
is executed (in the same thread). In
total only one thread is involved.
This default execution model is usually preferrable because it don't abuse the task scheduling and leverages function inlining on the JVM.
But it does have drawbacks: this approach will block the thread until all of the chained callbacks are executed. For small chains this is not a problem. However, if your chain has a lot of functions and requires a lot of computation time, this might cause unexpected latency. It may block other threads in the thread pool from doing other, maybe more important, tasks.
For such cases, promesa exposes an additional arity for provide a user-defined executor to control where the chained callbacks are executed:
(require '[promesa.exec :as px])
@(->> (p/delay 100 1)
(p/map :default inc)
(p/map :default inc))
;; => 3
This will schedule a separate task for each chained callback, making the whole system more responsive because you are no longer executing big blocking functions; instead you are executing many small tasks.
The :default
keyword will resolve to px/*default-executor*
, that
is a ForkJoinPool
instance that is highly optimized for lots of
small tasks.
On JDK19 with Preview enabled you will also have the
px/*vthread-executor*
(:vthread
keyword can be used) that is an
instance of Virtual Thread per task executor.
promesa is a lightweight abstraction built on top of native
facilities (CompletableFuture
in the JVM and js/Promise
in
JavaScript). Internally we make heavy use of protocols in order to
expose a polymorphic and user friendly API, and this has little
overhead on top of raw usage of CompletableFuture
or Promise
.
For performance sensitive code, prefer using functions designed to be
used for ->>
; they are more optimized because they don't perform
automatic unwrapping handling (unlike the then
or handle
functions). This applies only to CLJ, on CLJS all they work the same
way because of how the underlying implementation works.
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