Implements Zones for JavaScript.
A Zone is an execution context that persists across async tasks. You can think of it as thread-local storage for JavaScript VMs.
You can run code within a zone with zone.run.
Tasks scheduled (with setTimeout, setInterval, or event listeners) stay within that zone.
zone.run(function () {
zone.inTheZone = true;
setTimeout(function () {
console.log('in the zone: ' + !!zone.inTheZone);
}, 0);
});
console.log('in the zone: ' + !!zone.inTheZone);The above will log:
'in the zone: false'
'in the zone: true'
Note that the function delayed by setTimeout stays inside the zone.
Zones have a set of hooks that allow you to change the behavior of code running within that zone. To change a zone, you fork it to get a new one.
zone.fork({
onZoneEnter: function () {
console.log('hi');
}
}).run(function () {
// do stuff
});Hooks that you don't override when forking a zone are inherited from the existing one.
See the API docs below for more.
There are two kinds of examples:
- The kind you have to run
- Illustrative code snippets in this README
For fully working examples:
- Spawn a webserver in the root of the directory in which this repo lives.
(I like to use
python -m SimpleHTTPServer 3000). - Open
http://localhost:3000/examplein your browser
Below are the aforementioned snippets.
Run some function at the end of each VM turn:
zone.fork({
onZoneLeave: function () {
// do some cleanup
}
}).run(function () {
// do stuff
});var someZone = zone.fork({
onZoneLeave: function () {
console.log('goodbye');
}
});
someZone.fork({
onZoneLeave: function () {
console.log('cya l8r');
}
}).run(function () {
// do stuff
});
// logs: cya l8rvar someZone = zone.fork({
onZoneLeave: function () {
console.log('goodbye');
}
});
someZone.fork({
onZoneLeave: function () {
this.parent.onZoneLeave();
console.log('cya l8r');
}
}).run(function () {
// do stuff
});
// logs: goodbye
// cya l8rZone.js exports a single object: window.zone.
Runs a given function within the zone. Explained above.
Transforms a function to run within the given zone.
zone.fork({
onZoneEnter: function () {},
onZoneLeave: function () {},
onError: function () {},
setTimeout: function () {},
setInterval: function () {},
alert: function () {},
prompt: function () {},
addEventListener: function () {}
});
myZone.run(function () {
// woo!
});Below describes the behavior of each of these hooks.
Before a function invoked with zone.run, this hook runs.
If zone.onZoneEnter throws, the function passed to run will not be invoked.
After a function in a zone runs, the onZoneLeave hook runs.
This hook will run even if the function passed to run throws.
This hook is called when the function passed to run or the onZoneEnter hook throws.
These hooks allow you to change the behavior of window.setTimeout, window.setInterval, etc.
While in this zone, calls to window.setTimeout will redirect to zone.setTimeout.
This hook allows you to intercept calls to EventTarget.addEventListener.
setTimeout,setInterval, andaddEventListenerwork in FF23, IE10, and Chrome.- stack trace rewrite is kinda ugly and may contain extraneous calls.
elt.oneventworks in FF23, IE10, but not Chrome. There's a fix in the works though!
Apache 2.0
