I'm a bit confused as to how setTimeout works. I'm trying to have a setTimeout in a loop, so that the loop iterations are, say, 1s apart.
Each loop iteration makes an HTTP request and it seems like the server on the other end can't handle that many requests in such a short time span.
for (var i = 1; i<=2000 && ok; i++) {
var options = {
host:'www.host.com',
path:'/path/'+i
};
setTimeout(makeRequest(options, i), 1000);
};
Why does this not work and how can I achieve this?
Thank you
You need something like this
var counter = 5;
function makeRequst(options, i) {
// do your request here
}
function myFunction() {
alert(counter);
// create options object here
//var options = {
// host:'www.host.com',
// path:'/path/'+counter
//};
//makeRequest(options, counter);
counter--;
if (counter > 0) {
setTimeout(myFunction, 1000);
}
}
See also this fiddle
At the point of the alert(count); you can do your call to the server.
Note that the counter works opposite (counting down). I updated with some
comments where to do your thing.
You're calling makeRequest() in your setTimeout call - you should be passing the function to setTimeout, not calling it, so something like
setTimeout(makeRequest, 1000);
without the ()
setTimeout is non blocking, it is asynchronous. You give it a callback and when the delay is over, your callback is called.
Here are some implementations:
You can use a recursive call in the setTimeout callback.
function waitAndDo(times) {
if(times < 1) {
return;
}
setTimeout(function() {
// Do something here
console.log('Doing a request');
waitAndDo(times-1);
}, 1000);
}
Here is how to use your function:
waitAndDo(2000); // Do it 2000 times
About stack overflow errors: setTimeout clear the call stack (see this question) so you don't have to worry about stack overflow on setTimeout recursive calls.
If you are already using io.js (the "next" Node.js that uses ES6) you can solve your problem without recursion with an elegant solution:
function* waitAndDo(times) {
for(var i=0; i<times; i++) {
// Sleep
yield function(callback) {
setTimeout(callback, 1000);
}
// Do something here
console.log('Doing a request');
}
}
Here is how to use your function (with co):
var co = require('co');
co(function* () {
yield waitAndDo(10);
});
BTW: This is really using a loop ;)
Right now you're scheduling all of your requests to happen at the same time, just a second after the script runs. You'll need to do something like the following:
var numRequests = 2000,
cur = 1;
function scheduleRequest() {
if (cur > numRequests) return;
makeRequest({
host: 'www.host.com',
path: '/path/' + cur
}, cur);
cur++;
setTimeout(scheduleRequest, 1000)
}
Note that each subsequent request is only scheduled after the current one completes.