Allows you to easily limit outgoing API requests (and more). Dependency free!
npm i tiny-rate-limiter
const rateLimiter = require('tiny-rate-limiter');
async function someFunction(){
const key = 'this can be anything'; //things that use the same key share the same bucket
const max_token_count = 100; //how many tokens the bucket can fit
const window_in_milliseconds = 1000; //how many milliseconds between each bucket refill
await rateLimiter(key, max_token_count, window_in_milliseconds);
//from here on code is guaranteed to only execute at most 100 times per second
}
Real world:
async function someFunction(){
await rateLimiter('anything', 100, 1000);
//from here on code is guaranteed to only execute at most 100 times per second
}
- Put simply: imagine you have a bucket.
- Let's say that bucket can fit at most 10 tokens.
- It also only gets refilled with them, let's say, once every second.
- As soon as you call
await rateLimiter(...)
the function execution is temporarily paused and it's put in a queue. - One by one, as long as there are tokens in that bucket, tokens are consumed for each function that is removed from that queue and resumes execution.
- If the bucket is empty, no function will resume execution until the bucket is refilled again.
- Imagine your code is calling an API that has a rate limiter in place (let's say 100 requests per second).
- Let's say that if you exceed that quota bad things happen.
- You can use this module to easily prevent you from ever exceeding that quota by preventing the API requests from being made in the first place (that is, only allowing 100 req/s to be made).
- This is known as outbound (or outgoing) rate limiting (which is used on the caller side), as opposed to an inbound (or incoming) rate limiter (that would instead be used on the receiver side)
Although throughout this documentation its usage's been always demonstrated with this scenario in mind, this module has nothing to do with APIs or network requests, and its usage is in no way limited to only that. Feel free to use it in anything Node.js where it could help.
At its present state, though, it does not support being used in a browser environment, due to its reliance on the presence of the process
object.
This is a minimal implementation that doesn't rely on anything other than Node.js itself. Its code is composed of only 57 lines (including comments, JSDoc annotations and a bunch of empty lines). It's a bit opinionated and exposes an interface that's aimed at making its usage as minimal as its code footprint.
Although it's not been benchmarked extensively, due to the way its implemented, it should not degrade performance even with a few thousand requests per second. Your mileage may vary, though. I'm open to ideas on how to push it even further.
MIT License
Copyright (c) 2022 Patrick Pissurno
Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to any person obtaining a copy of this software and associated documentation files (the "Software"), to deal in the Software without restriction, including without limitation the rights to use, copy, modify, merge, publish, distribute, sublicense, and/or sell copies of the Software, and to permit persons to whom the Software is furnished to do so, subject to the following conditions:
The above copyright notice and this permission notice shall be included in all copies or substantial portions of the Software.
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