A Higher Order Function that provides declarative retrying.
wait-for8
is a port of arohner/wait-for
, using Java 8 instants and
durations rather than joda time.
Let's start with a simple example.
(:require [circle.wait-for8 :refer (wait-for)])
(wait-for #(unreliable-fn :foo :bar))
This calls unreliable-fn, up to 3 times, returning as soon as unreliable-fn returns truthy.
wait-for has two signatures:
(wait-for f)
and (wait-for options f)
. Options is a map. f is always a fn of no arguments.
By default, call f, and retry (by calling again), if f returns falsey.
- f - a fn of no arguments.
Terminating:
By default, wait-for terminates if f
returns truthy. It returns the
successful value, or throws if f never returned truthy.
The number of retries can be specified with the options :tries
and
:timeout
. If both are specified, the first one to trigger will cause
termination.
If you want to wait for a specific return value, use the :success-fn
option.
Options:
-
sleep: how long to sleep between retries, as a java8 duration. Defaults to 1 second.
-
tries: number of times to retry before throwing. An integer, or
:unlimited
. Defaults to 3 (or unlimited if:timeout
is given, and:tries
is not) -
timeout: a java8 duration. Stop retrying when period has elapsed, regardless of how many tries are left.
-
catch: By default, wait-for does not catch exceptions. Pass this to specify which exceptions should be caught and retried Can be one of several things:
- a collection of exception classes to catch and retry on
- a fn that takes one argument, the thrown exception. Retry if the fn returns truthy.
- if the exception throws
ex-info
, catch can be a keyword, or a vector of a key and value, destructuring slingshot-style. Retry if the value obtained by destructuring is truthy
If the exception matches the catch clause, wait-for retries. Otherwise the exception is thrown.
-
success-fn: a predicate, will be called with the return value of
f
. Stop retrying if success-fn returns truthy. If not specified, wait-for returns when(f)
returns truthy. May pass:no-throw
here, which will return truthy when f doesn't throw. -
error-hook: a fn of one argument, an exception. Called every time fn throws, before the catch clause decides what to do with the exception. This is useful for e.g. logging.
Inspired by Robert Bruce
EPL 1.0, the same as Clojure