![Async Logo](https://raw.githubusercontent.com/caolan/async/master/logo/async-logo_readme.jpg)
[![Build Status via Travis CI](https://travis-ci.org/caolan/async.svg?branch=master)](https://travis-ci.org/caolan/async)
[![NPM version](https://img.shields.io/npm/v/async.svg)](https://www.npmjs.com/package/async)
[![Coverage Status](https://coveralls.io/repos/caolan/async/badge.svg?branch=master)](https://coveralls.io/r/caolan/async?branch=master)
[![Join the chat at https://gitter.im/caolan/async](https://badges.gitter.im/Join%20Chat.svg)](https://gitter.im/caolan/async?utm_source=badge&utm_medium=badge&utm_campaign=pr-badge&utm_content=badge)
*For Async v1.5.x documentation, go [HERE](https://github.com/caolan/async/blob/v1.5.2/README.md)*
Async is a utility module which provides straight-forward, powerful functions
for working with asynchronous JavaScript. Although originally designed for
use with [Node.js](https://nodejs.org/) and installable via `npm install --save async`,
it can also be used directly in the browser.
Async is also installable via:
- [bower](http://bower.io/): `bower install async`
- [component](https://github.com/componentjs/component): `component install caolan/async`
- [jam](http://jamjs.org/): `jam install async`
Async provides around 70 functions that include the usual 'functional'
suspects (`map`, `reduce`, `filter`, `each`…) as well as some common patterns
for asynchronous control flow (`parallel`, `series`, `waterfall`…). All these
functions assume you follow the Node.js convention of providing a single
callback as the last argument of your asynchronous function -- a callback which expects an Error as its first argument -- and calling the callback once.
## Quick Examples
```js
async.map(['file1','file2','file3'], fs.stat, function(err, results){
// results is now an array of stats for each file
});
async.filter(['file1','file2','file3'], function(filePath, callback) {
fs.access(filePath, function(err) {
callback(null, !err)
});
}, function(err, results){
// results now equals an array of the existing files
});
async.parallel([
function(callback){ ... },
function(callback){ ... }
], function(err, results) {
// optional callback
};
async.series([
function(callback){ ... },
function(callback){ ... }
]);
```
There are many more functions available so take a look at the docs below for a
full list. This module aims to be comprehensive, so if you feel anything is
missing please create a GitHub issue for it.
## Common Pitfalls [(StackOverflow)](http://stackoverflow.com/questions/tagged/async.js)
### Synchronous iteration functions
If you get an error like `RangeError: Maximum call stack size exceeded.` or other stack overflow issues when using async, you are likely using a synchronous iteratee. By *synchronous* we mean a function that calls its callback on the same tick in the javascript event loop, without doing any I/O or using any timers. Calling many callbacks iteratively will quickly overflow the stack. If you run into this issue, just defer your callback with `async.setImmediate` to start a new call stack on the next tick of the event loop.
This can also arise by accident if you callback early in certain cases:
```js
async.eachSeries(hugeArray, function iteratee(item, callback) {
if (inCache(item)) {
callback(null, cache[item]); // if many items are cached, you'll overflow
} else {
doSomeIO(item, callback);
}
}, function done() {
//...
});
```
Just change it to:
```js
async.eachSeries(hugeArray, function iteratee(item, callback) {
if (inCache(item)) {
async.setImmediate(function () {
callback(null, cache[item]);
});
} else {
doSomeIO(item, callback);
//...
}
});
```
Async does not guard against synchronous iteratees for performance reasons. If you are still running into stack overflows, you can defer as suggested above, or wrap functions with [`async.ensureAsync`](#ensureAsync) Functions that are asynchronous by their nature do not have this problem and don't need the extra callback deferral.
If JavaScript's event loop is still a bit nebulous, check out [this article](http://blog.carbonfive.com/2013/10/27/the-javascript-event-loop-explained/) or [this talk](http://2014.jsconf.eu/speakers/philip-roberts-what-the-heck-is-the-event-loop-anyway.html) for more detailed information about how it works.
### Multiple callbacks
Make sure to always `return` when calling a callback early, otherwise you will cause multiple callbacks and unpredictable behavior in many cases.
```js
async.waterfall([
function (callback) {
getSomething(options, function (err, result) {
if (err) {
callback(new Error("failed getting something:" + err.message));
// we should return here
}
// since we did not return, this callback still will be called and
// `processData` will be called twice
callback(null, result);
});
},
processData
], done)
```
It is always good practice to `return callback(err, result)` whenever a callback call is not the last statement of a function.
### Binding a context to an iteratee
This section is really about `bind`, not about `async`. If you are wondering how to
make `async` execute your iteratees in a given context, or are confused as to why
a method of another library isn't working as an iteratee, study this example:
```js
// Here is a simple object with an (unnecessarily roundabout) squaring method
var AsyncSquaringLibrary = {
squareExponent: 2,
square: function(number, callback){
var result = Math.pow(number, this.squareExponent);
setTimeout(function(){
callback(null, result);
}, 200);
}
};
async.map([1, 2, 3], AsyncSquaringLibrary.square, function(err, result){
// result is [NaN, NaN, NaN]
// This fails because the `this.squareExponent` expression in the square
// function is not evaluated in the context of AsyncSquaringLibrary, and is
// therefore undefined.
});
async.map([1, 2, 3], AsyncSquaringLibrary.square.bind(AsyncSquaringLibrary), function(err, result){
// result is [1, 4, 9]
// With the help of bind we can attach a context to the iteratee before
// passing it to async. Now the square function will be executed in its
// 'home' AsyncSquaringLibrary context and the value of `this.squareExponent`
// will be as expected.
});
```
## Download
The source is available for download from
[GitHub](https://raw.githubusercontent.com/caolan/async/master/dist/async.min.js).
Alternatively, you can install using npm:
```bash
$ npm install --save async
```
As well as using Bower:
```bash
$ bower install async
```
You can then `require()` async as normal:
```js
var async = require("async");
```
Or require individual methods:
```js
var waterfall = require("async/waterfall");
var map = require("async/map");
```
__Development:__ [async.js](https://raw.githubusercontent.com/caolan/async/master/dist/async.js) - 29.6kb Uncompressed
### In the Browser
Async should work in any ES5 environment (IE9 and above).
Usage:
```html
```
### ES Modules
We also provide async as a collection of ES2015 modules, in an alternative `async-es` package on npm.
```bash
$ npm install --save async-es
```
```js
import waterfall from 'async-es/waterfall';
import async from 'async-es';
```