cspray/labrador-composite-future

This package is abandoned and no longer maintained. The author suggests using the labrador-kennel/composite-future package instead.

Compose Amp Futures and await them however you want with a type-safe CompositeFuture object.

1.3.0 2023-01-26 18:18 UTC

This package is auto-updated.

Last update: 2023-01-26 18:18:51 UTC


README

An object that represents a type-safe collection of Amp\Future objects and methods to act on that collection.

Installation

Composer is the only supported method for installing Labrador packages.

composer require labrador-kennel/composite-future

Getting Started

The object provided by this library is intended to provide a type that can be used in type-hints to provide more information when dealing with a collection of Futures. When the CompositeFuture is used a return type hint you're also able to construct your code to read in a manner similar to handling a single Future. As always, the best way to get started is to look at some code!

<?php

namespace Acme\Demo;

use Amp\Future;
use Labrador\CompositeFuture\CompositeFuture;

function futuresGeneratingMethod() : CompositeFuture {
    $futures = ['a' => Future::complete(1), 'b' => Future::complete(2), 'c' => Future::error(new \Exception('something went wrong'))];
    return new CompositeFuture($futures);
}

$futures = futuresGeneratingMethod();
// Returns an array with keys equal to the index of the Future and the value to the Future resolution
// Will throw an exception when an error is encountered
$futures->await();

// Also has access to the following methods, which follow the same documentation as their corresponding
// Amp\Future functions.
$futures->awaitAll();
$futures->awaitAny();
$futures->awaitAnyN(2);
$futures->awaitFirst();

?>

Motivation

This library is intentionally a very simple object-oriented wrapper around the utility functions for working with a collection of Futures. The motivation is to provide a semantic type-hint for dealing with this type of collection. In the above example, without the CompositeFuture, we would basically have 2 options:

  1. Await the Futures inside the function itself; this may not be ideal because each invocation may need to handle awaiting differently.
  2. Type-hint returning an array from our method; this may not be ideal because it isn't as semantic as the type-hint.

Governance

All Labrador packages adhere to the rules laid out in the Labrador Governance repo