Easily manage a pool of Node.js Worker Threads.
npm install worker-threads-pool --save
Worker Threads in Node.js are still an experimental feature and is only
supported in Node.js v10.5.0 and above. To use Worker Threads, you need
to run node with the --experimental-worker flag:
node --experimental-worker app.js
const Pool = require('worker-threads-pool')
const pool = new Pool({max: 5})
for (let i = 0; i < 100; i++) {
pool.acquire('/my/worker.js', function (err, worker) {
if (err) throw err
console.log(`started worker ${i} (pool size: ${pool.size})`)
worker.on('exit', function () {
console.log(`worker ${i} exited (pool size: ${pool.size})`)
})
})
}
pool = new Pool([options])options is an optional object/dictionary with the any of the following properties:
max - Maximum number of workers allowed in the pool. Other workers
will be queued and started once there's room in the pool (default:
1)maxWaiting - Maximum number of workers waiting to be started when
the pool is full. The callback to pool.acquire will be called with
an error in case this limit is reachedpool.sizeNumber of active workers in the pool.
pool.acquire(filename[, options], callback)The filename and options arguments are passed directly to new Worker(filename, options).
The callback argument will be called with the an optional error object
and the worker once it's created.
pool.destroy([callback])Calls
worker.terminate()
on all workers in the pool.
Will call the optional callback once all workers have terminated.
MIT