Provides thread-safe and atomic synchronization objects, and wrappers to easily use web workers with async/await syntax.
Caution
This NPM package is in its experimental phase. Features may be incomplete or still requiring thorough testing.
Using web workers imply a call to Worker.postMessge()
to signal the worker you want the work done, and then expect
some notification back via a listener in Worker.onmessage
to at least know that the work completed, but usually to
get a result back in the form of data (the result of the work). This is just the core, though. You should also add
a listener to Worker.onerror
just in case the worker has issues processing your request. Otherwise you'll be waiting
forever for the notification, ignorant that an error has occurred and nothing will ever be returned.
Oh, but this is just on the user interface side. Then there's the matter of doing the web worker side. No point in
continuing the explanation. The point is made: This is incredibly cumbersome. Multi-threaded runtimes like .Net can
use async/await
with threads and is far more convenient. The whole point of this NPM package is to bring this
convenience to the web workers world.
These are the recommended steps to get things going:
- Write the web worker as an object whose properties are the discrete worker tasks. Use
workerListener()
to listen to incoming messages. - Export the tasks worker object.
- Create a new instance of
Worker
the way is recommended by your bundler, usually with the syntaxnew Worker("./myworker.js", impot.meta.url)
. However, this forces you to write the worker in JavaScript, at least for Vite-powered projects. - Create a new instance of
AsyncWorker
(from this package) by passing the worker object and the tasks object from the previous points. - Start worker tasks by using the
AsyncWorker.enqueue
property. The functions found in this object return an object of typeWorkItem
that exposes thepromise
property and thecancel()
method. - Await the promise to obtain the worker's result. The promise completes when the task finishes. The promise rejects on unhandled errors in the worker side or when the task is cancelled.
How can I cancel the task? Use
terminate()
. NO! Just kidding. We have the good stuff. Keep reading.
Write your worker. The following example is a simple worker that works in steps: Initialize the data, then sort it the way you need to, then calculate something (the running total of some property):
// ./my-types.d.ts
import type { MyData } from './my-types.js';
import { workerListener } from '@wjfe/async-workers';
let workerData: MyData[];
function getComparerForKey(key: string; desc: boolean) {
return (a, b) => { ... };
}
function runningTotal() {
// Process workerData;
return result;
}
// This is the tasks object.
export const myWorker = {
init(payload: MyData[]) {
workerData = payload;
},
sortBy(payload: { sortKey: string; desc: boolean; }) {
workerData.sort(getComparerForKey(payload.sortKey, payload.desc));
},
calculateRunningTotal() {
return runningTotal();
}
};
// OPTIONAL: For easy typing of props or variables along the way.
export type MyWorker = typeof myWorker;
// Now listen for messages.
self.onmessage = workerListener(myWorker);
This is a 3-step worker. The worker simply waits to be informed which step to run from the user interface thread.
This is what needs to be done in order to obtain an object that commands the worker:
Important
This example is using TypeScript and the following assumes a Vite-powered project. We are deviating from the
recommended way of obtaining a worker because the recommended way requires the worker to be written in JavaScript
while in serve mode (npm run dev
).
import { myWorker } from './myWorker.js';
// Vite-specific. May also work with other bundlers. Consult your bundler's documentation.
import myWorkerCtor from './myWorker.js?worker';
import { AsyncWorker } from '@wjfe/async-workers';
const myWorkerController = new AsyncWorker(new myWorkerCtor(), myWorker);
// Done. Do what you must to get this controller to the places where is needed.
// For example, this could be a module and the controller could be exported.
export myWorkerController;
Now it is a matter of using the controller (async worker) wherever needed:
import { myWorkerController } from './myModule.js';
// Use the "enqueue" property to enqueue the worker's tasks and obtain a WorkItem object.
const initWorkItem = myWorkerController.enqueue.init(aBunchOfData);
const defaultSortWorkItem = myWorkerController.enqueue.sortBy({ key: 'eventDate', desc: false });
const defaultRunningTotalWorkItem = myWorkerController.enqueue.calculateRunningTotal();
Yes! The above is valid: You may queue up as many tasks as you wish without having to await for the completion of
previous ones, even if the worker is asynchronous (uses async/await
). The worker controller will keep perfect record
of the order in which the tasks must be run.
Shared workers are also supported through the same AsyncWorker
class. Note, however, the following key differences:
- Shared workers cannot be terminated. Calling
AsyncWorker.terminate()
will throw an error. - Shared workers don't have per-connection error handling. It cannot be guaranteed that an error belongs to a
particular connection or work item. All connected (started) work items from all
AsyncWorker
objects that point to the same shared worker script will have their promises rejected. - Not related to this NPM package, but note that the listening code of shared workers is different. See below.
self.onconnect = (ev) => {
const port = ev.ports[0];
port.onmessage = workerListener(myWorker);
}
The default functionality is fine for many cases: A worker task is started, the user interface waits for its
completion and when the task finishes, the work item's promise
property spits out the resultant object when awaited.
There are also many cases where "interim" communcation between the worker and the UI thread is desired, most commonly:
- Progress reports
- Partial results
How can a worker send data while the task is still in progress? By using the provied post()
function.
In reality, the functions of the worker's tasks object in the quickstart are simplified. In reality we can re-write the tasks object like this:
import { workerListener, type PostFn, Token } from '@wjfe/async-workers';
...
// This is the tasks object.
export const myWorker = {
init(payload: MyData[], post: PostFn, cancelToken?: Token) {
workerData = payload;
},
sortBy(payload: { sortKey: string; desc: boolean; }, post: PostFn, cancelToken?: Token) {
workerData.sort(getComparerForKey(sortKey, desc));
return workerData;
},
calculateRunningTotal(_: undefined, post: PostFn, cancelToken?: Token) {
return runningTotal();
}
};
Try not to be distracted with the cancelToken
parameter. Yes, worker tasks can be cancelled in real-time with this
package. This is explained in the CancellationSource section, later in the document.
A worker task may use post()
to send data back to the UI thread at any point:
calculateRunningTotal(_: undefined, post: PostFn, cancelToken?: Token) {
...
// Only one parameter: The payload (say, progress report or partial result) to send back to the UI.
post(partialResult);
...
return runningTotal();
}
Doing this, however and by default, incorrectly makes the work item's promise in the UI thread to resolve. You must account for these extra messages in the UI side. This is done when the work item is queued:
const defaultRunningTotalWorkItem = myWorkerController.enqueue.calculateRunningTotal(undefined, {
processMessage: (payload: any) => {
// Examine the payload and determine whether or not, based on its contents, the work item's
// promise should resolve or not.
if (payloadIsProgressReport(payload) || payloadIsPartialResult(payload)) {
// A progress report or partial result. Don't resolve the work item yet.
return false;
}
// Payload is not a known payload. There are 2 options: It's the task's return value, or it's
// an unknown message, which should be impossible, but have this in the back of your head.
if (isExpectedReturnValue(payload)) {
// Ok, this is the return value, so the task completed. Allow the work item's promise to resolve.
return true;
}
else {
// You may choose to ignore the unknown payload by doing nothing and returning false,
// or you may do something else. Your choice.
return false;
}
}
});
This is it. Bi-directional communcation is fully set up.
You might be tempted to develop a worker that uses post()
to request extra data mid-flight. Don't. This is
difficult to maintain, not to mention that it requires releasing the worker thread using await
so the queue of
messages can be processed, which could contain instructions to start an entirely different task, and the list of
problems probably goes on.
At your own risk, do "partial update" tasks in the worker's tasks object:
export const myWorker = {
init(payload: MyData[]) {
workerData = payload;
},
sortBy(payload: { sortKey: string; desc: boolean; }) {
workerData.sort(getComparerForKey(sortKey, desc));
return workerData;
},
calculateRunningTotal(_: undefined, post: PostFn, cancelToken?: Token) {
return runningTotal();
}
supplyMissingOrUpdatedDataWhileInTheAir(theData: UpdatedData) {
...
}
};
Inside processMessage
, do myWorkerController.enqueue.supplyMissingOrUpdatedDataWhileInTheAir(theData, { outOfOrder: true })
and hope for the best.
This package provides synchronization objects that use Atomics
to cross the thread boundary safely.
Important
This implementation uses Atomics
on SharedArrayBuffer
objects which demands certain
security requirements.
This is the web worker equivalent of AbortController
and provides a token that can be passed to workers in a task's
payload.
The worker can use CancellationSource.isSignaled()
or CancellationSource.throwIfSignaled()
through polling in order
to abort the current work:
import { CancellationSource, type Token } from '@wjfe/async-workers';
function computeSomeStuff(cancelToken?: Token) {
for (let i = 0; i < Number.MAX_SAFE_INTEGER; ++i) {
// No thowing will be done if cancelToken is undefined.
CancellationSource.throwIfSignaled(cancelToken);
...
}
}
The throw option is the preferred, and if used, this package will take care of catching the exception and making sure
the work item's promise rejects with an object of type CancelledMessage
. This object has the
cancelledBeforeStarted
property that will be true
if cancellation took place before the worker task even got
started.
Passing the token "by hand" via the payload
property to eventually get the token where is needed, is boilerplate that
is already simplified. Taking one line from the quickstart example:
const defaultRunningTotalWorkItem = myWorkerController.enqueue.calculateRunningTotal(undefined, { cancellable: true });
By adding the cancellable
option, a cancellation token will be avilable to calculateRunningTotal
in its third
parameter, as seen in the previous section.
Whenever cancellation is desired, simply call the work item's cancel()
method. For more information about this
method, refer to this section.
If you're using CancellationSource
on your own:
- Do
const cs = new CancellationSource()
to create a new cancellation source. - The token is available via
cs.token
. - Signalling the token to trigger cancellation is done with
cs.signal()
.
This is a synchronization object that can be used to signal multiple threads at once because it will remain signaled
until the reset()
event is invoked. A typical use case is to use it for pausing a worker's work.
This is a synchronization object that signals a single thread because once awaited, its state is automatically reset.
Typical use cases involve the need to unlock a single thread at a time.
Semaphores are synchronization objects that are created with an initial capacity (a positive, non-zero integer). This capacity can be thought as the number of threads that can access a resource simultaneously.
Use semaphores when you want to limit access to a thread-safe resource. For example: A battery of workers that upload files to a server via an HTTP request fulfills this description. In order to not overwhelm the HTTP server, a semaphore could be used to limit the number of files that can be simultaneously uploaded.
A mutex is a semaphore of capacity 1. Its name comes from the combination of the words "mutually exclusive". Since its capacity is 1, only one thread at a time can be the owner of a mutex.
Instances of the WorkItem
class is what is returned by the functions in the AsyncWorker.enqueue
property. The
class exposes the following properties and methods:
id
: A unique numeric identifier given to the work item upon creation. Payloads carry this ID behind the scenes.status
: A numeric value (enum) that tells the current status of the work item.promise
: A promise that accurately represents the lifetime of the worker's task and the one that returns the task's return value.cancel()
: A method that can potentially cancel a worker's task.
For a worker task to be cancelled using cancel()
, it must fulfill one of the following conditions:
- It must have been enqueued using the
cancellable
option and the worker's code uses the cancellation token. - The work item hasn't been transmitted to the worker.
In other words, cancellation is not magical. The good news is that any task is potentially cancellable as long as it hasn't been transmitted to the worker without the need of any extra coding, and if this is the case, the associated promise immediately rejects, meaning one doesn't have to wait for the task's turn in the queue of tasks to get it rejected.
The function returns true
if action was taken towards cancelling the work item, or false
otherwise. The latter
case can happen if the work item was already cancelled, or if none of the aforementioned conditions are met. Yes, the
function cannot know if the worker's code uses the cancellation token, so even if true
is returned, a worker's task
may still not cancel. Be wary of this edge case.
Out-of-order work items are created when enqueueing a task using the outOfOrder
queueing option. These work items
skip the queue of other "normal" work items and are immediately transmitted to the worker, skipping the waiting line.
Because of their nature, they are ghosts in the machine. Their running status is not tracked, their completions trigger no dequeueing of other tasks, and their execution delays, for seemingly no good reason, the execution of "normal" work items. Avoid the need for these ghosts as much as possible.
This is the top-level class used in the user interface side, and is the wrapper of the native Worker
class. It
combines the worker with the worker tasks and orchestrates things behind the scenes. It exposes the following
properties and methods:
enqueue
: The property used to enqueue worker tasks.terminate
: Terminates the worker.
Terminating the worker immediately rejects the promises of all work items, and further use of enqueue
will produce
work items whose promise immediately rejects as well. Promises that reject due to termination will have a reason
object of type WorkerTerminatedMessage
.
Generally speaking, terminated workers should be disposed. Do so as fast as possible.
This package, by design, is for use in the browser. However, there is this NPM package called web-worker that claims to bring the browser API into Node. If this is indeed the case, using these 2 packages together should work properly in Node.
Synchronization Objects | Dedicated Worker | Shared Worker |
---|---|---|
[x] ManualResetEvent | [x] Simple request/response scenario | [x] Simple request/response scenario |
[x] AutoResetEvent | [x] Request/multiple response scenario | [x] Request/multiple response scenario |
[x] Semaphore | [x] Strongly-typed tasks | [x] Strongly-typed tasks |
[x] CancellationSource | [x] Worker termination | |
[x] Mutex | [x] Out-of-order work items | [x] Out-of-order work items |
[x] Task cancellation | [x] Task cancellation |