A Vue.js plugin to use webworkers in a simply way.
- Fix README examples
See full changelog here.
Create and use Web Workers can be cumbersome sometimes. This plugin aims to facilitate the use of Web Workers within Vue components. It is a wrapper for simple-web-worker.
yarn add vue-worker
// or
npm install vue-worker --save
Then add in main.js:
import Vue from 'vue'
import VueWorker from 'vue-worker'
Vue.use(VueWorker)
That will inject a property into Vue (and pass it to every child component), with a default name of $worker
, which can be accessed using this.$worker
inside any Vue component.
You can change that name when registering the plugin:
import VueWorker from 'vue-worker'
Vue.use(VueWorker, '$desired-name')
It is not possible to pass as an arg this
from a Vue Component. You can pass this.$data
or any variable within data
or computed
, though.
Where:
- func is the function to be runned in worker
- [args] is an optional array of arguments that will be used by func
This method creates a disposable web worker, runs and returns the result of given function and closes the worker.
This method works like Promise.resolve(), but in another thread.
E.g.:
this.$worker.run(() => 'this.$worker run 1: Function in other thread')
.then(console.log) // logs 'this.$worker run 1: Function in other thread'
.catch(console.error) // logs any possible error
this.$worker.run((arg1, arg2) => `this.$worker run 2: ${arg1} ${arg2}`, ['Another', 'function in other thread'])
.then(console.log) // logs 'this.$worker run 2: Another function in other thread'
.catch(console.error) // logs any possible error
Where:
- [actions] is an optional array of objects with two fields,
message
andfunc
. Essentially, it is a messages-actions map.
If [actions] is omitted or
undefined
, the created <worker> will have no registered actions, so you'll have to use the methodregister
before you can use the <worker>.
If you plan to reuse a ****, you should use this method. It creates a reusable **** (not a real Web Worker, more on this ahead) with determined actions to be runned through its `postMessage()` or `postAll()` methods.
E.g.:
const actions = [
{ message: 'func1', func: () => `Worker 1: Working on func1` },
{ message: 'func2', func: arg => `Worker 2: ${arg}` },
{ message: 'func3', func: arg => `Worker 3: ${arg}` },
{ message: 'func4', func: (arg = 'Working on func4') => `Worker 4: ${arg}` }
]
let worker = this.$worker.create(actions)
Where:
- <worker> is a worker created with
this.$worker.create([actions])
- message is one of the messages in [actions]
- [args] is an optional array of arguments that will be used by the function registered with message
When the function does not expect any arguments or the expected arguments have default values, [args] can be omitted safely.
When the expected arguments do not have default values, _[args]_ should be provided.
This method works like Promise.resolve(), but in another thread.
E.g.:
const actions = [
{ message: 'func1', func: () => `Worker 1: Working on func1` },
{ message: 'func2', func: arg => `Worker 2: ${arg}` },
{ message: 'func3', func: arg => `Worker 3: ${arg}` },
{ message: 'func4', func: (arg = 'Working on func4') => `Worker 4: ${arg}` }
]
let worker = this.$worker.create(actions)
worker.postMessage('func1')
.then(console.log) // logs 'Worker 1: Working on func1'
.catch(console.error) // logs any possible error
worker.postMessage('func1', ['Ignored', 'arguments'])
.then(console.log) // logs 'Worker 1: Working on func1'
.catch(console.error) // logs any possible error
worker.postMessage('func2')
.then(console.log) // logs 'Worker 2: undefined'
.catch(console.error) // logs any possible error
worker.postMessage('func3', ['Working on func3'])
.then(console.log) // logs 'Worker 3: Working on func3'
.catch(console.error) // logs any possible error
worker.postMessage('func4')
.then(console.log) // logs 'Worker 4: Working on func4'
.catch(console.error) // logs any possible error
worker.postMessage('func4', ['Overwrited argument'])
.then(console.log) // logs 'Worker 4: Overwrited argument'
.catch(console.error) // logs any possible error
Where:
- <worker> is a worker created with
this.$worker.create([actions])
- The argument is an optional array which accepts one of the following:
- message1,... - strings containing one or more of the messages in [actions]
- {message: message1, args: [args1]},... - objects containing two fields,
message
(a message from actions) andargs
(the arguments to be used by the correspondent function)- [args1],... - arrays of arguments to be used by the registered actions.
If [message1,...] is
undefined
or no argument is given, <worker> will run all registered actions without arguments.
If _[{message: message1, args: [args1]},...]_ or _[[args1],...]_ is used, you should use `[]` (an empty array) as _[args]_ for the functions that does not expect arguments, or if the respective argument of your function has a default value and you want it to be used. If you use `[null]` this will be the value assumed by function argument.
When using _[[args1],...]_, you MUST input the same number of arguments as registered actions, even if some action doesn't accept any arguments! In that case use a `[]`, as stated above. See examples below.
If _[{message: message1, args: [args1]},...]_ is used, every object must contain the fields `message` and `args`.
This method works like Promise.all(), but in another thread.
E.g.:
const actions = [
{ message: 'func1', func: () => `Worker 1: Working on func1` },
{ message: 'func2', func: arg => `Worker 2: ${arg}` },
{ message: 'func3', func: arg => `Worker 3: ${arg}` },
{ message: 'func4', func: (arg = 'Working on func4') => `Worker 4: ${arg}` }
]
let worker = this.$worker.create(actions)
worker.postAll()
.then(console.log) // logs ['Worker 1: Working on func1', 'Worker 2: undefined', 'Worker 3: undefined', 'Worker 4: Working on func4']
.catch(console.error) // logs any possible error
worker.postAll(['func1', 'func3'])
.then(console.log) // logs ['Worker 1: Working on func1', 'Worker 3: undefined']
.catch(console.error) // logs any possible error
worker.postAll([{ message: 'func1', args: [] }, { message: 'func3', args: ['Working on func3'] })
.then(console.log) // logs ['Worker 1: Working on func1', 'Worker 3: Working on func3']
.catch(console.error) // logs any possible error
worker.postAll([[], ['Working on func2'], ['Working on func3'], []])
.then(console.log) // logs ['Worker 1: Working on func1', 'Worker 2: Working on func2', 'Worker 3: Working on func3', 'Worker 4: Working on func4']
.catch(console.error) // logs any possible error
worker.postAll([[], ['func2'], ['func3'], ['Overwriting default value of arg on func4']])
.then(console.log) // logs ['Worker 1: Working on func1', 'Worker 2: func2', 'Worker 3: func3', 'Worker 4: Overwriting default value of arg on func4']
.catch(console.error) // logs any possible error
Where:
- <worker> is a worker created with
this.$worker.create([actions])
- action is an object with two fields,
message
andfunc
- [actions] is an array of objects, and each object is an action, as defined above
You can use action or [actions], but not both at the same time.
E.g.:
const initialActions = [
{ message: 'func1', func: () => 'Working on func1' }
]
let worker = this.$worker.create(initialActions)
worker.postAll()
.then(console.log) // logs ['Working on func1']
.catch(console.error) // logs any possible error
// registering just one action
worker.register({ message: 'func2', func: () => 'Working on func2' })
worker.postAll()
.then(console.log) // logs ['Working on func1', 'Working on func2']
.catch(console.error) // logs any possible error
// registering multiple actions
worker.register([
{ message: 'func3', func: () => 'Working on func3' },
{ message: 'func4', func: () => 'Working on func4' }
])
worker.postAll()
.then(console.log) // logs ['Working on func1', 'Working on func2', 'Working on func3', 'Working on func4']
.catch(console.error) // logs any possible error
Where:
- <worker> is a worker created with
this.$worker.create([actions])
- message is one of the messages in [actions]
- [messages] is an array containing one or more messages, and each message is a message, as defined above
You can use message or [messages], but not both at the same time.
E.g.:
const initialActions = [
{ message: 'func1', func: () => 'Working on func1'},
{ message: 'func2', func: () => 'Working on func2'},
{ message: 'func3', func: () => 'Working on func3'},
{ message: 'func4', func: () => 'Working on func4'}
]
let worker = this.$worker.create(initialActions)
worker.postAll()
.then(console.log) // logs ['Working on func1', 'Working on func2', 'Working on func3', 'Working on func4']
.catch(console.error) // logs any possible error
// unregistering just one action
worker.unregister('func2')
worker.postAll()
.then(console.log) // logs ['Working on func1', 'Working on func3', 'Working on func4']
.catch(console.error) // logs any possible error
// unregistering multiple actions
worker.unregister(['func3', 'func1'])
worker.postAll()
.then(console.log) // logs ['Working on func4']
.catch(console.error) // logs any possible error
You may be thinking: "How do I terminate those reusable workers if there's no close()
or terminate()
methods?"
Well, when you create a reusable worker, you don't receive a real Web Worker.
Instead, you get an object which holds the given messages-actions map, and when you call postMessage()
or postAll()
it will, under the hood, call run()
with the correspondent functions.
So, to "terminate" a "worker" when it is not needed anymore, you can just do:
let worker = this.$worker.create(actions)
// use the worker
worker = null