A trivial implementation of timeouts for Promise
s, built on top of ReactPHP.
Table of contents
This lightweight library consists only of a few simple functions.
All functions reside under the React\Promise\Timer
namespace.
The below examples refer to all functions with their fully-qualified names like this:
React\Promise\Timer\timeout(…);
As of PHP 5.6+ you can also import each required function into your code like this:
use function React\Promise\Timer\timeout;
timeout(…);
Alternatively, you can also use an import statement similar to this:
use React\Promise\Timer;
Timer\timeout(…);
The timeout(PromiseInterface<T> $promise, float $time, ?LoopInterface $loop = null): PromiseInterface<T>
function can be used to
cancel operations that take too long.
You need to pass in an input $promise
that represents a pending operation
and timeout parameters. It returns a new promise with the following
resolution behavior:
-
If the input
$promise
resolves before$time
seconds, resolve the resulting promise with its fulfillment value. -
If the input
$promise
rejects before$time
seconds, reject the resulting promise with its rejection value. -
If the input
$promise
does not settle before$time
seconds, cancel the operation and reject the resulting promise with aTimeoutException
.
Internally, the given $time
value will be used to start a timer that will
cancel the pending operation once it triggers. This implies that if you
pass a really small (or negative) value, it will still start a timer and will
thus trigger at the earliest possible time in the future.
If the input $promise
is already settled, then the resulting promise will
resolve or reject immediately without starting a timer at all.
This function takes an optional LoopInterface|null $loop
parameter that can be used to
pass the event loop instance to use. You can use a null
value here in order to
use the default loop. This value
SHOULD NOT be given unless you're sure you want to explicitly use a given event
loop instance.
A common use case for handling only resolved values looks like this:
$promise = accessSomeRemoteResource();
React\Promise\Timer\timeout($promise, 10.0)->then(function ($value) {
// the operation finished within 10.0 seconds
});
A more complete example could look like this:
$promise = accessSomeRemoteResource();
React\Promise\Timer\timeout($promise, 10.0)->then(
function ($value) {
// the operation finished within 10.0 seconds
},
function ($error) {
if ($error instanceof React\Promise\Timer\TimeoutException) {
// the operation has failed due to a timeout
} else {
// the input operation has failed due to some other error
}
}
);
Or if you're using react/promise v3:
React\Promise\Timer\timeout($promise, 10.0)->then(function ($value) {
// the operation finished within 10.0 seconds
})->catch(function (React\Promise\Timer\TimeoutException $error) {
// the operation has failed due to a timeout
})->catch(function (Throwable $error) {
// the input operation has failed due to some other error
});
As discussed above, the timeout()
function will take care of
the underlying operation if it takes too long. In this case, you can be
sure the resulting promise will always be rejected with a
TimeoutException
. On top of this, the function will
try to cancel the underlying operation. Responsibility for this
cancellation logic is left up to the underlying operation.
-
A common use case involves cleaning up any resources like open network sockets or file handles or terminating external processes or timers.
-
If the given input
$promise
does not support cancellation, then this is a NO-OP. This means that while the resulting promise will still be rejected, the underlying input$promise
may still be pending and can hence continue consuming resources
On top of this, the returned promise is implemented in such a way that it can be cancelled when it is still pending. Cancelling a pending promise will cancel the underlying operation. As discussed above, responsibility for this cancellation logic is left up to the underlying operation.
$promise = accessSomeRemoteResource();
$timeout = React\Promise\Timer\timeout($promise, 10.0);
$timeout->cancel();
For more details on the promise cancellation, please refer to the Promise documentation.
If you want to wait for multiple promises to resolve, you can use the normal promise primitives like this:
$promises = array(
accessSomeRemoteResource(),
accessSomeRemoteResource(),
accessSomeRemoteResource()
);
$promise = React\Promise\all($promises);
React\Promise\Timer\timeout($promise, 10)->then(function ($values) {
// *all* promises resolved
});
The applies to all promise collection primitives alike, i.e. all()
,
race()
, any()
, some()
etc.
For more details on the promise primitives, please refer to the Promise documentation.
The sleep(float $time, ?LoopInterface $loop = null): PromiseInterface<void>
function can be used to
create a new promise that resolves in $time
seconds.
React\Promise\Timer\sleep(1.5)->then(function () {
echo 'Thanks for waiting!' . PHP_EOL;
});
Internally, the given $time
value will be used to start a timer that will
resolve the promise once it triggers. This implies that if you pass a really
small (or negative) value, it will still start a timer and will thus trigger
at the earliest possible time in the future.
This function takes an optional LoopInterface|null $loop
parameter that can be used to
pass the event loop instance to use. You can use a null
value here in order to
use the default loop. This value
SHOULD NOT be given unless you're sure you want to explicitly use a given event
loop instance.
The returned promise is implemented in such a way that it can be cancelled
when it is still pending. Cancelling a pending promise will reject its value
with a RuntimeException
and clean up any pending timers.
$timer = React\Promise\Timer\sleep(2.0);
$timer->cancel();
Deprecated since v1.8.0, see
sleep()
instead.
The resolve(float $time, ?LoopInterface $loop = null): PromiseInterface<float>
function can be used to
create a new promise that resolves in $time
seconds with the $time
as the fulfillment value.
React\Promise\Timer\resolve(1.5)->then(function ($time) {
echo 'Thanks for waiting ' . $time . ' seconds' . PHP_EOL;
});
Internally, the given $time
value will be used to start a timer that will
resolve the promise once it triggers. This implies that if you pass a really
small (or negative) value, it will still start a timer and will thus trigger
at the earliest possible time in the future.
This function takes an optional LoopInterface|null $loop
parameter that can be used to
pass the event loop instance to use. You can use a null
value here in order to
use the default loop. This value
SHOULD NOT be given unless you're sure you want to explicitly use a given event
loop instance.
The returned promise is implemented in such a way that it can be cancelled
when it is still pending. Cancelling a pending promise will reject its value
with a RuntimeException
and clean up any pending timers.
$timer = React\Promise\Timer\resolve(2.0);
$timer->cancel();
Deprecated since v1.8.0, see
sleep()
instead.
The reject(float $time, ?LoopInterface $loop = null): PromiseInterface<never>
function can be used to
create a new promise which rejects in $time
seconds with a TimeoutException
.
React\Promise\Timer\reject(2.0)->then(null, function (React\Promise\Timer\TimeoutException $e) {
echo 'Rejected after ' . $e->getTimeout() . ' seconds ' . PHP_EOL;
});
Internally, the given $time
value will be used to start a timer that will
reject the promise once it triggers. This implies that if you pass a really
small (or negative) value, it will still start a timer and will thus trigger
at the earliest possible time in the future.
This function takes an optional LoopInterface|null $loop
parameter that can be used to
pass the event loop instance to use. You can use a null
value here in order to
use the default loop. This value
SHOULD NOT be given unless you're sure you want to explicitly use a given event
loop instance.
The returned promise is implemented in such a way that it can be cancelled
when it is still pending. Cancelling a pending promise will reject its value
with a RuntimeException
and clean up any pending timers.
$timer = React\Promise\Timer\reject(2.0);
$timer->cancel();
The TimeoutException
extends PHP's built-in RuntimeException
.
The getTimeout(): float
method can be used to
get the timeout value in seconds.
The recommended way to install this library is through Composer. New to Composer?
This project follows SemVer. This will install the latest supported version:
composer require react/promise-timer:^1.11
See also the CHANGELOG for details about version upgrades.
This project aims to run on any platform and thus does not require any PHP extensions and supports running on legacy PHP 5.3 through current PHP 8+ and HHVM. It's highly recommended to use the latest supported PHP version for this project.
To run the test suite, you first need to clone this repo and then install all dependencies through Composer:
composer install
To run the test suite, go to the project root and run:
vendor/bin/phpunit
MIT, see LICENSE file.