Tips for using async functions (ES2017)

[2016-10-22] dev, javascript, esnext
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This blog post gives tips for using async functions. If you are unfamiliar with them, you can read chapter “Async functions” in “Exploring ES2016 and ES2017”.

Know your Promises  

The foundation of async functions is Promises. That’s why understanding the latter is crucial for understanding the former. Especially when connecting old code that isn’t based on Promises with async functions, you often have no choice but to use Promises directly.

For example, this is a “promisified” version of XMLHttpRequest:

function httpGet(url, responseType="") {
    return new Promise(
        function (resolve, reject) {
            const request = new XMLHttpRequest();
            request.onload = function () {
                if (this.status === 200) {
                    // Success
                    resolve(this.response);
                } else {
                    // Something went wrong (404 etc.)
                    reject(new Error(this.statusText));
                }
            };
            request.onerror = function () {
                reject(new Error(
                    'XMLHttpRequest Error: '+this.statusText));
            };
            request.open('GET', url);
            xhr.responseType = responseType;
            request.send();
        });
}

The API of XMLHttpRequest is based on callbacks. Promisifying it via an async function would mean that you’d have to fulfill or reject the Promise returned by the function from within callbacks. That’s impossible, because you can only do so via return and throw. And you can’t return the result of a function from within a callback. throw has similar constraints.

Therefore, the common coding style for async functions will be:

  • Use Promises directly to build asynchronous primitives.
  • Use those primitives via async functions.

Further reading: chapter “Promises for asynchronous programming” in “Exploring ES6”.

Async functions are started synchronously, settled asynchronously  

This is how async functions are executed:

  1. The result of an async function is always a Promise p. That Promise is created when starting the execution of the async function.
  2. The body is executed. Execution may finish permanently via return or throw. Or it may finish temporarily via await; in which case execution will usually continue later on.
  3. The Promise p is returned.

While executing the body of the async function, return x resolves the Promise p with x, while throw err rejects p with err. The notification of a settlement happens asynchronously. In other words: the callbacks of then() and catch() are always executed after the current code is finished.

The following code demonstrates how that works:

async function asyncFunc() {
    console.log('asyncFunc()'); // (A)
    return 'abc';
}
asyncFunc().
then(x => console.log(`Resolved: ${x}`)); // (B)
console.log('main'); // (C)

// Output:
// asyncFunc()
// main
// Resolved: abc

You can rely on the following order:

  1. Line (A): the async function is started synchronously. The async function’s Promise is resolved via return.
  2. Line (C): execution continues.
  3. Line (B): Notification of Promise resolution happens asynchronously.

Returned Promises are not wrapped  

Resolving a Promise is a standard operation. return uses it to resolve the Promise p of an async function. That means:

  1. Returning a non-Promise value fulfills p with that value.
  2. Returning a Promise means that p now mirrors the state of that Promise.

Therefore, you can return a Promise and that Promise won’t be wrapped in a Promise:

async function asyncFunc() {
    return Promise.resolve(123);
}
asyncFunc()
.then(x => console.log(x)) // 123

Intriguingly, returning a rejected Promise leads to the result of the async function being rejected (normally, you’d use throw for that):

async function asyncFunc() {
    return Promise.reject(new Error('Problem!'));
}
asyncFunc()
.catch(err => console.error(err)); // Error: Problem!

That is in line with how Promise resolution works. It enables you to forward both fulfillments and rejections of another asynchronous computation, without an await:

async function asyncFunc() {
    return anotherAsyncFunc();
}

The previous code is roughly similar to – but more efficient than – the following code (which unwraps the Promise of anotherAsyncFunc() only to wrap it again):

async function asyncFunc() {
    return await anotherAsyncFunc();
}

Don’t forget await  

One easy mistake to make in async functions is to forget await when making an asynchronous function call:

async function asyncFunc() {
    const value = otherAsyncFunc(); // missing `await`!
    ···
}

In this example, value is set to a Promise, which is usually not what you want in async functions.

await can even make sense if an async function doesn’t return anything. Then its Promise is simply used as a signal for telling the caller that it is finished. For example:

async function foo() {
    await step1(); // (A)
    ···
}

The await in line (A) guarantees that step1() is completely finished before the remainder of foo() is executed.

You don’t need await if you “fire and forget”  

Sometimes, you only want to trigger an asynchronous computation and are not interested in when it is finished. The following code is an example:

async function asyncFunc() {
    const writer = openFile('someFile.txt');
    writer.write('hello'); // don’t wait
    writer.write('world'); // don’t wait
    await writer.close(); // wait for file to close
}

Here, we don’t care when individual writes are finished, only that they are executed in the right order (which the API would have to guarantee, but that is encouraged by the execution model of async functions – as we have seen).

The await in the last line of asyncFunc() ensures that the function is only fulfilled after the file was successfully closed.

Given that returned Promises are not wrapped, you can also return instead of await writer.close():

async function asyncFunc() {
    const writer = openFile('someFile.txt');
    writer.write('hello');
    writer.write('world');
    return writer.close();
}

Both versions have pros and cons, the await version is probably slightly easier to understand.

Parallelism  

The following code make two asynchronous function calls, asyncFunc1() and asyncFunc2().

async function foo() {
    const result1 = await asyncFunc1();
    const result2 = await asyncFunc2();
}

However, these two function calls are executed sequentially. Executing them in parallel tends to speed things up. You can use Promise.all() to do so:

async function foo() {
    const [result1, result2] = await Promise.all([
        asyncFunc1(),
        asyncFunc2(),
    ]);
}

Instead of awaiting two Promises, we are now awaiting a Promise for an Array with two elements.

No await in callbacks  

Remember that await only affects the innermost async function that surrounds it and can only be used directly inside async functions. That is a problem if you want to use one of the Array utility functions map(), forEach(), etc., which rely on callbacks.

Array.prototype.map()  

Let’s start with the Array method map(). In the following code, we want to download the files pointed to by an Array of URLs and return them in an Array.

async function downloadContent(urls) {
    return urls.map(url => {
        // Wrong syntax!
        const content = await httpGet(url);
        return content;
    });
}

This does not work, because await is syntactically illegal inside normal arrow functions. How about using an async arrow function, then?

async function downloadContent(urls) {
    return urls.map(async (url) => {
        const content = await httpGet(url);
        return content;
    });
}

There are two issues with this code:

  • The result is now an Array of Promises, not an Array of strings.
  • The work performed by the callbacks isn’t finished once map() is finished, because await only pauses the surrounding arrow function and httpGet() is resolved asynchronously. That means you can’t use await to wait until downloadContent() is finished.

We can fix both issues via Promise.all(), which converts an Array of Promises to a Promise for an Array (with the values fulfilled by the Promises):

async function downloadContent(urls) {
    const promiseArray = urls.map(async (url) => {
        const content = await httpGet(url);
        return content;
    });
    return await Promise.all(promiseArray);
}

The callback for map() doesn’t do much with the result of httpGet(), it only forwards it. Therefore, we don’t need an async arrow function here, a normal arrow function will do:

async function downloadContent(urls) {
    const promiseArray = urls.map(
        url => httpGet(url));
    return await Promise.all(promiseArray);
}

There is one small improvement that we still can make: This async function is slightly inefficient – it first unwraps the result of Promise.all() via await, before wrapping it again via return. Given that return doesn’t wrap Promises, we can return the result of Promise.all() directly:

async function downloadContent(urls) {
    const promiseArray = urls.map(
        url => httpGet(url));
    return Promise.all(promiseArray);
}

Array.prototype.forEach()  

Let’s use the Array method forEach() to log the contents of several files pointed to via URLs:

async function logContent(urls) {
    urls.forEach(url => {
        // Wrong syntax
        const content = await httpGet(url);
        console.log(content);
    });
}

Again, this code will produce a syntax error, because you can’t use await inside normal arrow functions.

Let’s use an async arrow function:

async function logContent(urls) {
    urls.forEach(async url => {
        const content = await httpGet(url);
        console.log(content);
    });
    // Not finished here
}

This does work, but there is one caveat: the Promise returned by httpGet() is resolved asynchronously, which means that the callbacks are not finished when forEach() returns. As a consequence, you can’t await the end of logContent().

If that’s not what you want, you can convert forEach() into a for-of loop:

async function logContent(urls) {
    for (const url of urls) {
        const content = await httpGet(url);
        console.log(content);
    }
}

Now everything is finished after the for-of loop. However, the processing steps happen sequentially: httpGet() is only called a second time after the first call is finished. If you want the processing steps to happen in parallel, you must use Promise.all():

async function logContent(urls) {
    await Promise.all(urls.map(
        async url => {
            const content = await httpGet(url);
            console.log(content);            
        }));
}

map() is used to create an Array of Promises. We are not interested in the results they fulfill, we only await until all of them are fulfilled. That means that we are completely done at the end of this async function. We could just as well return Promise.all(), but then the result of the function would be an Array whose elements are all undefined.

Immediately Invoked Async Function Expressions  

Sometimes, it’d be nice if you could use await at the top level of a module or script. Alas, it’s only available inside async functions. You therefore have several options. You can either create an async function main() and call it immediately afterwards:

async function main() {
    console.log(await asyncFunction());
}
main();

Or you can use an Immediately Invoked Async Function Expression:

(async function () {
    console.log(await asyncFunction());
})();

Another option is an Immediately Invoked Async Arrow Function:

(async () => {
    console.log(await asyncFunction());
})();

Unit testing with async functions  

The following code uses the test-framework mocha to unit-test the asynchronous functions asyncFunc1() and asyncFunc2():

import assert from 'assert';

// Bug: the following test always succeeds
test('Testing async code', function () {
    asyncFunc1() // (A)
    .then(result1 => {
        assert.strictEqual(result1, 'a'); // (B)
        return asyncFunc2();
    })
    .then(result2 => {
        assert.strictEqual(result2, 'b'); // (C)
    });
});

However, this test always succeeds, because mocha doesn’t wait until the assertions in line (B) and line (C) are executed.

You can fix this by returning the result of the Promise chain, because mocha recognizes if a test returns a Promise and then waits until that Promise is settled (unless there is a timeout).

return asyncFunc1() // (A)

Conveniently, async functions always return Promises, which makes them perfect for this kind of unit test:

import assert from 'assert';
test('Testing async code', async function () {
    const result1 = await asyncFunc1();
    assert.strictEqual(result1, 'a');
    const result2 = await asyncFunc2();
    assert.strictEqual(result2, 'b');
});

There are thus two advantages to using async functions for asynchronous unit tests in mocha: the code is more concise and returning Promises is taken care of, too.

Don’t worry about unhandled rejections  

JavaScript engines are becoming increasingly good at warning about rejections that are not handled. For example, the following code would often fail silently in the past, but most modern JavaScript engines now report an unhandled rejection:

async function foo() {
    throw new Error('Problem!');
}
foo();