sqlite/ext/wasm/api/sqlite3-worker1-promiser.c-pp.js
stephan 79dac84b31 JS error message and doc typos reported in the forum. No code changes.
FossilOrigin-Name: 1a073f9acfb691eebf4a8cc78a72ff47ebbb6aba4acede6755fa3faefae48f2b
2024-05-18 15:21:45 +00:00

347 lines
13 KiB
JavaScript

//#ifnot omit-oo1
/*
2022-08-24
The author disclaims copyright to this source code. In place of a
legal notice, here is a blessing:
* May you do good and not evil.
* May you find forgiveness for yourself and forgive others.
* May you share freely, never taking more than you give.
***********************************************************************
This file implements a Promise-based proxy for the sqlite3 Worker
API #1. It is intended to be included either from the main thread or
a Worker, but only if (A) the environment supports nested Workers
and (B) it's _not_ a Worker which loads the sqlite3 WASM/JS
module. This file's features will load that module and provide a
slightly simpler client-side interface than the slightly-lower-level
Worker API does.
This script necessarily exposes one global symbol, but clients may
freely `delete` that symbol after calling it.
*/
'use strict';
/**
Configures an sqlite3 Worker API #1 Worker such that it can be
manipulated via a Promise-based interface and returns a factory
function which returns Promises for communicating with the worker.
This proxy has an _almost_ identical interface to the normal
worker API, with any exceptions documented below.
It requires a configuration object with the following properties:
- `worker` (required): a Worker instance which loads
`sqlite3-worker1.js` or a functional equivalent. Note that the
promiser factory replaces the worker.onmessage property. This
config option may alternately be a function, in which case this
function re-assigns this property with the result of calling that
function, enabling delayed instantiation of a Worker.
- `onready` (optional, but...): this callback is called with no
arguments when the worker fires its initial
'sqlite3-api'/'worker1-ready' message, which it does when
sqlite3.initWorker1API() completes its initialization. This is the
simplest way to tell the worker to kick off work at the earliest
opportunity, and the only way to know when the worker module has
completed loading. The irony of using a callback for this, instead
of returning a promise from sqlite3Worker1Promiser() is not lost on
the developers: see sqlite3Worker1Promiser.v2() which uses a
Promise instead.
- `onunhandled` (optional): a callback which gets passed the
message event object for any worker.onmessage() events which
are not handled by this proxy. Ideally that "should" never
happen, as this proxy aims to handle all known message types.
- `generateMessageId` (optional): a function which, when passed an
about-to-be-posted message object, generates a _unique_ message ID
for the message, which this API then assigns as the messageId
property of the message. It _must_ generate unique IDs on each call
so that dispatching can work. If not defined, a default generator
is used (which should be sufficient for most or all cases).
- `debug` (optional): a console.debug()-style function for logging
information about messages.
This function returns a stateful factory function with the
following interfaces:
- Promise function(messageType, messageArgs)
- Promise function({message object})
The first form expects the "type" and "args" values for a Worker
message. The second expects an object in the form {type:...,
args:...} plus any other properties the client cares to set. This
function will always set the `messageId` property on the object,
even if it's already set, and will set the `dbId` property to the
current database ID if it is _not_ set in the message object.
The function throws on error.
The function installs a temporary message listener, posts a
message to the configured Worker, and handles the message's
response via the temporary message listener. The then() callback
of the returned Promise is passed the `message.data` property from
the resulting message, i.e. the payload from the worker, stripped
of the lower-level event state which the onmessage() handler
receives.
Example usage:
```
const config = {...};
const sq3Promiser = sqlite3Worker1Promiser(config);
sq3Promiser('open', {filename:"/foo.db"}).then(function(msg){
console.log("open response",msg); // => {type:'open', result: {filename:'/foo.db'}, ...}
});
sq3Promiser({type:'close'}).then((msg)=>{
console.log("close response",msg); // => {type:'close', result: {filename:'/foo.db'}, ...}
});
```
Differences from Worker API #1:
- exec's {callback: STRING} option does not work via this
interface (it triggers an exception), but {callback: function}
does and works exactly like the STRING form does in the Worker:
the callback is called one time for each row of the result set,
passed the same worker message format as the worker API emits:
{type:typeString,
row:VALUE,
rowNumber:1-based-#,
columnNames: array}
Where `typeString` is an internally-synthesized message type string
used temporarily for worker message dispatching. It can be ignored
by all client code except that which tests this API. The `row`
property contains the row result in the form implied by the
`rowMode` option (defaulting to `'array'`). The `rowNumber` is a
1-based integer value incremented by 1 on each call into the
callback.
At the end of the result set, the same event is fired with
(row=undefined, rowNumber=null) to indicate that
the end of the result set has been reached. Note that the rows
arrive via worker-posted messages, with all the implications
of that.
Notable shortcomings:
- This API was not designed with ES6 modules in mind. Neither Firefox
nor Safari support, as of March 2023, the {type:"module"} flag to the
Worker constructor, so that particular usage is not something we're going
to target for the time being:
https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/API/Worker/Worker
*/
globalThis.sqlite3Worker1Promiser = function callee(config = callee.defaultConfig){
// Inspired by: https://stackoverflow.com/a/52439530
if(1===arguments.length && 'function'===typeof arguments[0]){
const f = config;
config = Object.assign(Object.create(null), callee.defaultConfig);
config.onready = f;
}else{
config = Object.assign(Object.create(null), callee.defaultConfig, config);
}
const handlerMap = Object.create(null);
const noop = function(){};
const err = config.onerror
|| noop /* config.onerror is intentionally undocumented
pending finding a less ambiguous name */;
const debug = config.debug || noop;
const idTypeMap = config.generateMessageId ? undefined : Object.create(null);
const genMsgId = config.generateMessageId || function(msg){
return msg.type+'#'+(idTypeMap[msg.type] = (idTypeMap[msg.type]||0) + 1);
};
const toss = (...args)=>{throw new Error(args.join(' '))};
if(!config.worker) config.worker = callee.defaultConfig.worker;
if('function'===typeof config.worker) config.worker = config.worker();
let dbId;
let promiserFunc;
config.worker.onmessage = function(ev){
ev = ev.data;
debug('worker1.onmessage',ev);
let msgHandler = handlerMap[ev.messageId];
if(!msgHandler){
if(ev && 'sqlite3-api'===ev.type && 'worker1-ready'===ev.result) {
/*fired one time when the Worker1 API initializes*/
if(config.onready) config.onready(promiserFunc);
return;
}
msgHandler = handlerMap[ev.type] /* check for exec per-row callback */;
if(msgHandler && msgHandler.onrow){
msgHandler.onrow(ev);
return;
}
if(config.onunhandled) config.onunhandled(arguments[0]);
else err("sqlite3Worker1Promiser() unhandled worker message:",ev);
return;
}
delete handlerMap[ev.messageId];
switch(ev.type){
case 'error':
msgHandler.reject(ev);
return;
case 'open':
if(!dbId) dbId = ev.dbId;
break;
case 'close':
if(ev.dbId===dbId) dbId = undefined;
break;
default:
break;
}
try {msgHandler.resolve(ev)}
catch(e){msgHandler.reject(e)}
}/*worker.onmessage()*/;
return promiserFunc = function(/*(msgType, msgArgs) || (msgEnvelope)*/){
let msg;
if(1===arguments.length){
msg = arguments[0];
}else if(2===arguments.length){
msg = Object.create(null);
msg.type = arguments[0];
msg.args = arguments[1];
msg.dbId = msg.args.dbId;
}else{
toss("Invalid arguments for sqlite3Worker1Promiser()-created factory.");
}
if(!msg.dbId && msg.type!=='open') msg.dbId = dbId;
msg.messageId = genMsgId(msg);
msg.departureTime = performance.now();
const proxy = Object.create(null);
proxy.message = msg;
let rowCallbackId /* message handler ID for exec on-row callback proxy */;
if('exec'===msg.type && msg.args){
if('function'===typeof msg.args.callback){
rowCallbackId = msg.messageId+':row';
proxy.onrow = msg.args.callback;
msg.args.callback = rowCallbackId;
handlerMap[rowCallbackId] = proxy;
}else if('string' === typeof msg.args.callback){
toss("exec callback may not be a string when using the Promise interface.");
/**
Design note: the reason for this limitation is that this
API takes over worker.onmessage() and the client has no way
of adding their own message-type handlers to it. Per-row
callbacks are implemented as short-lived message.type
mappings for worker.onmessage().
We "could" work around this by providing a new
config.fallbackMessageHandler (or some such) which contains
a map of event type names to callbacks. Seems like overkill
for now, seeing as the client can pass callback functions
to this interface (whereas the string-form "callback" is
needed for the over-the-Worker interface).
*/
}
}
//debug("requestWork", msg);
let p = new Promise(function(resolve, reject){
proxy.resolve = resolve;
proxy.reject = reject;
handlerMap[msg.messageId] = proxy;
debug("Posting",msg.type,"message to Worker dbId="+(dbId||'default')+':',msg);
config.worker.postMessage(msg);
});
if(rowCallbackId) p = p.finally(()=>delete handlerMap[rowCallbackId]);
return p;
};
}/*sqlite3Worker1Promiser()*/;
globalThis.sqlite3Worker1Promiser.defaultConfig = {
worker: function(){
//#if target=es6-module
return new Worker(new URL("sqlite3-worker1-bundler-friendly.mjs", import.meta.url),{
type: 'module'
});
//#else
let theJs = "sqlite3-worker1.js";
if(this.currentScript){
const src = this.currentScript.src.split('/');
src.pop();
theJs = src.join('/')+'/' + theJs;
//sqlite3.config.warn("promiser currentScript, theJs =",this.currentScript,theJs);
}else if(globalThis.location){
//sqlite3.config.warn("promiser globalThis.location =",globalThis.location);
const urlParams = new URL(globalThis.location.href).searchParams;
if(urlParams.has('sqlite3.dir')){
theJs = urlParams.get('sqlite3.dir') + '/' + theJs;
}
}
return new Worker(theJs + globalThis.location.search);
//#endif
}
//#ifnot target=es6-module
.bind({
currentScript: globalThis?.document?.currentScript
})
//#endif
,
onerror: (...args)=>console.error('worker1 promiser error',...args)
}/*defaultConfig*/;
/**
sqlite3Worker1Promiser.v2(), added in 3.46, works identically to
sqlite3Worker1Promiser() except that it returns a Promise instead
of relying an an onready callback in the config object. The Promise
resolves to the same factory function which
sqlite3Worker1Promiser() returns.
If config is-a function or is an object which contains an onready
function, that function is replaced by a proxy which will resolve
after calling the original function and will reject if that
function throws.
*/
sqlite3Worker1Promiser.v2 = function(config){
let oldFunc;
if( 'function' == typeof config ){
oldFunc = config;
config = {};
}else if('function'===typeof config?.onready){
oldFunc = config.onready;
delete config.onready;
}
const promiseProxy = Object.create(null);
config = Object.assign((config || Object.create(null)),{
onready: async function(func){
try {
if( oldFunc ) await oldFunc(func);
promiseProxy.resolve(func);
}
catch(e){promiseProxy.reject(e)}
}
});
const p = new Promise(function(resolve,reject){
promiseProxy.resolve = resolve;
promiseProxy.reject = reject;
});
try{
this.original(config);
}catch(e){
promiseProxy.reject(e);
}
return p;
}.bind({
/* We do this because clients are
recommended to delete globalThis.sqlite3Worker1Promiser. */
original: sqlite3Worker1Promiser
});
//#if target=es6-module
/**
When built as a module, we export sqlite3Worker1Promiser.v2()
instead of sqlite3Worker1Promise() because (A) its interface is more
conventional for ESM usage and (B) the ESM option export option for
this API did not exist until v2 was created, so there's no backwards
incompatibility.
*/
export default sqlite3Worker1Promiser.v2;
//#endif /* target=es6-module */
//#else
/* Built with the omit-oo1 flag. */
//#endif ifnot omit-oo1