The timer
module exposes a global API for scheduling functions to be called at some future period of time. Because the timer functions are globals, there is no need to call require('timers')
to use the API.
The timer functions within Node.js implement a similar API as the timers API provided by Web Browsers but use a different internal implementation that is built around the Node.js Event Loop.
This object is created internally and is returned from setImmediate()
. It can be passed to clearImmediate()
in order to cancel the scheduled actions.
This object is created internally and is returned from setTimeout()
and setInterval()
. It can be passed to clearTimeout()
or clearInterval()
(respectively) in order to cancel the scheduled actions.
By default, when a timer is scheduled using either setTimeout()
or setInterval()
, the Node.js event loop will continue running as long as the timer is active. Each of the Timeout
objects returned by these functions export both timeout.ref()
and timeout.unref()
functions that can be used to control this default behavior.
When called, requests that the Node.js event loop not exit so long as the Timeout
is active. Calling timeout.ref()
multiple times will have no effect.
Note: By default, all Timeout
objects are "ref'd", making it normally unnecessary to call timeout.ref()
unless timeout.unref()
had been called previously.
Returns a reference to the Timeout
.
When called, the active Timeout
object will not require the Node.js event loop to remain active. If there is no other activity keeping the event loop running, the process may exit before the Timeout
object's callback is invoked. Calling timeout.unref()
multiple times will have no effect.
Note: Calling timeout.unref()
creates an internal timer that will wake the Node.js event loop. Creating too many of these can adversely impact performance of the Node.js application.
Returns a reference to the Timeout
.
A timer in Node.js is an internal construct that calls a given function after a certain period of time. When a timer's function is called varies depending on which method was used to create the timer and what other work the Node.js event loop is doing.
callback
<Function> The function to call at the end of this turn of the Node.js Event Loop
...args
<any> Optional arguments to pass when the callback
is called.Schedules the "immediate" execution of the callback
after I/O events' callbacks and before timers created using setTimeout()
and setInterval()
are triggered. Returns an Immediate
for use with clearImmediate()
.
When multiple calls to setImmediate()
are made, the callback
functions are queued for execution in the order in which they are created. The entire callback queue is processed every event loop iteration. If an immediate timer is queued from inside an executing callback, that timer will not be triggered until the next event loop iteration.
If callback
is not a function, a TypeError
will be thrown.
callback
<Function> The function to call when the timer elapses.delay
<number> The number of milliseconds to wait before calling the callback
....args
<any> Optional arguments to pass when the callback
is called.Schedules repeated execution of callback
every delay
milliseconds. Returns a Timeout
for use with clearInterval()
.
When delay
is larger than 2147483647
or less than 1
, the delay
will be set to 1
.
If callback
is not a function, a TypeError
will be thrown.
callback
<Function> The function to call when the timer elapses.delay
<number> The number of milliseconds to wait before calling the callback
....args
<any> Optional arguments to pass when the callback
is called.Schedules execution of a one-time callback
after delay
milliseconds. Returns a Timeout
for use with clearTimeout()
.
The callback
will likely not be invoked in precisely delay
milliseconds. Node.js makes no guarantees about the exact timing of when callbacks will fire, nor of their ordering. The callback will be called as close as possible to the time specified.
Note: When delay
is larger than 2147483647
or less than 1
, the delay
will be set to 1
.
If callback
is not a function, a TypeError
will be thrown.
The setImmediate()
, setInterval()
, and setTimeout()
methods each return objects that represent the scheduled timers. These can be used to cancel the timer and prevent it from triggering.
immediate
<Immediate> An Immediate
object as returned by setImmediate()
.Cancels an Immediate
object created by setImmediate()
.
timeout
<Timeout> A Timeout
object as returned by setInterval()
.Cancels a Timeout
object created by setInterval()
.
timeout
<Timeout> A Timeout
object as returned by setTimeout()
.Cancels a Timeout
object created by setTimeout()
.
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Licensed under the MIT License.
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We are not endorsed by or affiliated with Joyent.
https://nodejs.org/dist/latest-v6.x/docs/api/timers.html