[funcool/promesa "2.0.0"]
A promise library for Clojure and ClojureScript.
On the JVM paltform promesa is built on top of completable futures (requires jdk8). On JS engines it is built on top of the builtin Promise implementation.
Since promesa is a young project there may be some API breakage.
Just include the following lines in your dependency vector on project.clj:
[funcool/promesa "2.0.0"]
This package requires JDK8 if you are using it on the JVM and all environments that the bluebird library supports on JS engines.
A promise is an abstraction that represents the result of an asynchronous operation that has the notion of error.
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.
There are several different ways to create a promise instance:
(require '[promesa.core :as p])
;; Create a fulfilled promise
(p/promise 1)
;; => #<Promise [1]>
If a promise
function receives a plain value, it returns a resolved promise with
the provided plain value. If it receives an instance of Error
, it returns a
rejected promise.
Also, it accepts a factory callback that receives two callable parameters: resolve
and reject
. So you can use one or other to resolve or reject the promise
respectively.
(p/promise (fn [resolve reject]
(resolve 1)))
An other way to create a promise is using the do*
macro which works similar to the
factory callback with the exception that to resolve the promise instead of calling
the resolve
callback we just need to return the value:
(p/do*
(let [a (rand-int 10)
b (rand-int 10)]
(+ a b)))
do*
block work similarly to clojure’s do
block, so you can put any
expression but only the last one will be returned and that expression can be a
plain value or an other 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.
In both platforms the promise factory function is executed synchronously and making it blocking or not blocking is the user’s responsibility. |
The most common way to apply a function to a promise (or in other words, to chain
its execution) is using the well known map
function:
(def result (->> (p/promise 1)
(p/map inc)))
@result ; only on the jvm
;; => 2
For people coming from the JS world, there is also the then
function that works
in the same way as map
but with the parameters inverted:
(def result (-> (p/promise 1)
(p/then inc)))
@result ; only on the jvm
;; => 2
If you want to apply multiple functions instead of using multiple then
or
map`s, you can use the `chain
function:
(def result (-> (p/promise 1)
(p/chain inc inc inc))
@result ; only on the jvm
;; => 4
There is also the mapcat
function that removes one level of nesting when dealing
with multiple promises. It is specially useful if the function that you want to
apply to also returns a promise instead of a value:
(def incp #(p/resolved (inc %)))
(def result (->> (p/promise 1)
(p/mapcat incp)))
@result ; only on the jvm
;; => 2
Important: The mapcat
function is only useful in the JVM platform. In JS engines, the map
function already flattens the result magically (because the underlying implementation
does that).
alet
macro (async let)The promesa library comes with convenient syntax-sugar that allows you to create a
compositions that looks like synchronous code while using the clojure’s familiar let
syntax:
(require '[promesa.core :as p])
(defn sleep-promise
[wait]
(p/promise (fn [resolve reject]
(p/schedule wait #(resolve wait)))))
(def result
(p/alet [x (p/await (sleep-promise 42))
y (p/await (sleep-promise 41))
z 2]
(+ x y z)))
@result ; only on the jvm
;; => 85
The alet
macro behaves identical to the let
with the exception that it always
return a promise and allows you to mark async operations with the await
placeholder making it looks like a synchronous operation.
If an error occurs at any step the entire composition will be short-circuited, returning exceptionally resolved promise.
async
macro (general purpose)In contrast to the alet
macro, the async
macro is more general purpose
and enables the usage of await
in any place (not only on the let
bindings). Let see an example:
(def p (async
(dotimes [i 3]
(p/await (p/delay 100))
(println "i=" i))
10))
@p
;; i=0
;; i=1
;; i=2
;; => 10
As expected, it returns a promise which will be resolved with result of the body when completed.
If you are familiar with core.async go
macro, async
macro works
in the same way (in fact, it uses core.async machinery to archive
that).
Because of some differences in the macro implementation in clj and cljs, the
clojure version of macro is available in Example importing
async macro in Clojure
Example importing
async macro in ClojureScript
|
If you are not familiar with async
/await
syntax, you can read more about it
here.
experimental |
One of the advantages of using promise abstraction is that it natively has a notion of error, so you don’t need reinvent it. If some of the computations of the composed promise chain/pipeline raises an exception, that one is automatically propagated to the last promise making the effect of short-circuiting.
Let see an example:
(-> (p/promise (ex-info "error" nil))
(p/catch (fn [error]
(.log js/console error))))
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 that will happen inside the catch hanlder.
If you prefer map
like parameters order, it there err
function (and error
alias) that works in same way as catch
but has the parameters like map
:
(->> (p/promise (ex-info "error" nil))
(p/error (fn [error]
(.log js/console error))))
On the JVM platform the reject value is mandatory to be an instance of |
For adding both success and error handlers to a promise at the same time you can use
the branch
function:
(p/branch a-promise
(fn [v]
(println "Ok" v))
(fn [err]
(println err)))
JavaScript due its nature, does not allow you to block or sleep. But with promises
you can emulate the 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 case the async task is slow, in the example more that 200ms, the promise will be
rejected with timeout error and successfully captured with the catch
handler.
In some circumstances you will want wait a completion of few promises at same time, and promesa also provides helpers for that.
Imagine that you have a collection of promises and you want to wait until all of
them are resolved. This can be done using the all
combinator:
(let [p (p/all [(do-some-io)
(do-some-other-io)])]
(p/then p (fn [[result1 result2]]
(do-something-with-results result1 result2))))
It there are also circumstances where you only want arbitrary select of the first
resolved promise. For this case, you can use the any
combinator:
(let [p (p/any [(p/delay 100 1)
(p/delay 200 2)
(p/delay 120 3)])]
(p/then p (fn [x]
(.log js/console "The first one finished: " x))))
Additionally to the promise abstraction, this library also comes with lightweight abstraction for scheduling task to be executed at some time in future:
schedule
function.(p/schedule 1000 (fn []
(println "hello world")))
This example shows you how you can schedule a function call to be executed 1 second in the future. It works in the same way for both plaforms (clj and cljs).
The tasks can be cancelled using its return value:
(def task (p/schedule 1000 #(do-stuff)))
(p/cancel! task)
Unlike Clojure and other Clojure contrib libs, does not have many restrictions for contributions. Just open a issue or pull request.
promesa is open source and can be found on github.
You can clone the public repository with this command:
git clone https://github.com/funcool/promesa
To run the tests execute the following:
For the JVM platform:
lein test
And for JS platform:
./scripts/build
node out/tests.js
You will need to have nodejs installed on your system.
promesa is licensed under BSD (2-Clause) license:
Copyright (c) 2015-2019 Andrey Antukh <niwi@niwi.nz> All rights reserved. Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions are met: * Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer. * Redistributions in binary form must reproduce the above copyright notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer in the documentation and/or other materials provided with the distribution. THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY THE COPYRIGHT HOLDERS AND CONTRIBUTORS "AS IS" AND ANY EXPRESS OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, THE IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE ARE DISCLAIMED. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE COPYRIGHT HOLDER OR CONTRIBUTORS BE LIABLE FOR ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL, SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY, OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES (INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, PROCUREMENT OF SUBSTITUTE GOODS OR SERVICES; LOSS OF USE, DATA, OR PROFITS; OR BUSINESS INTERRUPTION) HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON ANY THEORY OF LIABILITY, WHETHER IN CONTRACT, STRICT LIABILITY, OR TORT (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY OUT OF THE USE OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGE.
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