Unvault is a minimal layer for node that allows results of time-consuming tasks to be stored. Improved performance is achieved by adding trackers that periodically update the layer, so that stored responses can be served instantly once requested. Also available as middleware.
- Insert key based trackers
- Automatic and manual update
- Support for
async
andawait
- Fast (without dependencies)
- Small wrapper extending
Map
- Support for multiple stores
$ npm install --save unvault
Note:
Node 7.6.0
is required for async and await!
const unvault = require("unvault");
const store = unvault();
store.insert("random", 1000, () => Math.random());
const { value } = store.get("random");
import * as unvault from "unvault";
const store: Unvault = unvault();
Periodic updates might not suit your application's needs. Unvault supports a manual mode that provides more control over which trackers receive an update and when. Trackers with an interval of 0
will only run once. Both automatic and manual trackers allow for an update trigger.
store.insert("random", 0, () => Math.random());
store.trigger("random");
Unvault can be combined with a node servers like Polka or Express to quickly deliver stored content to users. Trackers also work with async
and await
for asynchronous updates. Store your external fetch responses, database results and other in the vault for faster response times.
const polka = require("polka");
const unvault = require("unvault");
const fetch = require("node-fetch");
const server = polka();
server.listen(3000);
const route = "/api/fetch";
const routes = unvault();
routes.insert(route, 2000, async () => {
const response = await fetch(
"https://api.github.com/repos/vaneenige/unvault"
);
return response.json();
});
server.get(route, (req, res) => {
const { value } = routes.get(route);
server.send(res, 200, value, "application/json");
});
Inserts a tracker into the vault.
Returns: Result of update function (use await for async updates).
Manually runs a tracker.
Returns: Result of update function (use await for async updates).
As unvault
extends Map
, all of its functions are available: clear()
, delete(key)
, entries()
and more!
Note: The update callback will receive the
key
as a parameter. Providing alifetime
variable (in ms) to theoptions
object will delete the tracker and stop its automatic updates once it runs out.
For this benchmark an example route is setup that searches a mongodb collection that contains 100 nodes. The node server is started with node v9.0.0
and results are documented after a single warm-up run.
The benchmarking tool for results is the following:
$ wrk -t8 -c100 -d10s http://localhost:3000/:type/mongo
Thread Stats Avg Stdev Max +/- Stdev
Latency 44.23ms 8.44ms 80.36ms 65.70%
Req/Sec 271.83 26.52 353.00 64.25%
21755 requests in 10.07s, 209.77MB read
Requests/sec: 2160.05
Transfer/sec: 20.83MB
Thread Stats Avg Stdev Max +/- Stdev
Latency 4.89ms 391.21us 9.38ms 92.94%
Req/Sec 2.47k 341.17 9.22k 99.75%
196758 requests in 10.10s, 1.85GB read
Requests/sec: 19481.54
Transfer/sec: 187.85MB
Note: Unvault aims to reduce the time spend creating a response. If the process normally takes a second to finish this solution will eliminate most of that second.
MIT © Colin van Eenige