Retries functions that throw or call back with an error, in crazily customizable ways.
In your project folder, type:
npm install attempt
Whenever you have code that looks like this:
function flakyApiCall(function(err, result) {
if (err)
console.log('Flaky API died AGAIN!', err);
else
doSomething(result);
});
Just drop that code in an attempt!
var attempt = require('attempt');
attempt(
function() {
flakyApiCall(this);
},
function(err, result) {
if (err)
console.log('Flaky API failed 3 times.', err);
else
doSomething(result);
});
Attempt will re-run your attempted function if it throws an error or if it calls back with a non-falsey first argument (following the first-arg-is-an-error standard Node.js convention). The function call looks like this:
attempt([options], tryFunc, [callback])
tryFunc is called with one argument: attempts. It is the number of times the tryFunc has been run before.
attempt(function(attempts) {
if (attempts)
console.log('This is retry #' + attempts);
else
console.log('This is the first attempt!');
});
The following options are set per request:
Default: 2 (for 3 total attempts). The number of times to retry the tryFunc before giving up and sending the error to the callback. The number of total attempts is one more than the number of retries.
attempt(
{ retries: 15 },
function() {
flakyApiCall(this);
},
function(err, result) {
if (err)
console.log('Failed first attempt + 15 retries = 16 failures.', err);
else
doSomething(result);
});
Default: 0. The number of milliseconds to wait between attempts.
attempt(
{ interval: 5000 },
function() {
flakyApiCall(this);
},
function(err, result) {
if (err)
console.log('3 attempts * 5 seconds = 15 seconds of failure.', err);
else
doSomething(result);
});
Default: 1. The factor by which the interval should be multiplied per attempt. If set to 2 with an interval of 5000, the first retry will execute after 5 seconds, the second after 10, the third after 20, and so on.
This allows an exponential back-off scheme. For a smaller gap between retries, floats like 1.2 can be used to grow the interval at a slower rate.
Default: null. Function to call when the tryFunc fails with an error. The first argument is the error.
attempt(
{
onError: function(err) {
console.log(err);
}
},
function() { flakyApiCall(this); },
function(err, result) { /* ... */ });
The second argument, if it exists, is a callback function that will need to be called in order for the next attempt to continue. This is useful if you have to do something asynchronous to fix the error.
attempt(
{
onError: function(err, done) {
log.write(err, done);
}
},
function() { flakyApiCall(this); },
function(err, result) { /* ... */ });
By default, calling done() will ignore the retry interval. If you still want it to be observed, call done(true).
Default: Infinity. The maximum number of milliseconds to wait before retrying. If the interval or factor causes a wait time larger than 'max', 'max' will be used.
Default: 0. Increase the wait interval by a random factor. Generally, this should be a number between 0 (no randomness) and 1 (wait time could double). For example, if .5 is used, the interval could be anywhere between 100% and 150% of its original calculated time.
Default: 0. The number of attempts to fake Attempt into believing were already completed. This is mostly used by Attempt internally, but can be useful for hacking interval times.
Attempt is distributed under the MIT license.
Attempt was created by Tom Frost in 2012. Because webservice APIs be flaky, man.