The @azure/abort-controller
package provides AbortController
and AbortSignal
classes. These classes are compatible
with the AbortController built into modern browsers
and the AbortSignal
used by fetch.
Use the AbortController
class to create an instance of the AbortSignal
class that can be used to cancel an operation
in an Azure SDK that accept a parameter of type AbortSignalLike
.
Install this libray using npm as follows
npm install @azure/abort-controller
Use the AbortController
to create an AbortSignal
which can then be passed to Azure SDK operations to cancel
pending work. The AbortSignal
can be accessed via the signal
property on an instantiated AbortController
.
An AbortSignal
can also be returned directly from a static method, e.g. AbortController.timeout(100)
.
that is cancelled after 100 milliseconds.
Calling abort()
on the instantiated AbortController
invokes the registered abort
event listeners on the associated AbortSignal
.
Any subsequent calls to abort()
on the same controller will have no effect.
The AbortSignal.none
static property returns an AbortSignal
that can not be aborted.
Multiple instances of an AbortSignal
can be linked so that calling abort()
on the parent signal,
aborts all linked signals.
This linkage is one-way, meaning that a parent signal can affect a linked signal, but not the other way around.
To link AbortSignals
together, pass in the parent signals to the AbortController
constructor.
The below examples assume that doAsyncWork
is a function that takes a bag of properties, one of which is
of the abort signal.
import { AbortController } from "@azure/abort-controller";
const controller = new AbortController();
doAsyncWork({ abortSignal: controller.signal });
// at some point later
controller.abort();
import { AbortController } from "@azure/abort-controller";
const signal = AbortController.timeout(1000);
doAsyncWork({ abortSignal: signal });
import { AbortController } from "@azure/abort-controller";
const allTasksController = new AbortController();
const subTask1 = new AbortController(allTasksController.signal);
const subtask2 = new AbortController(allTasksController.signal);
allTasksController.abort(); // aborts allTasksSignal, subTask1, subTask2
subTask1.abort(); // aborts only subTask1
import { AbortController } from "@azure/abort-controller";
const allTasksController = new AbortController();
// create a subtask controller that can be aborted manually,
// or when either the parent task aborts or the timeout is reached.
const subTask = new AbortController(allTasksController.signal, AbortController.timeout(100));
allTasksController.abort(); // aborts allTasksSignal, subTask
subTask.abort(); // aborts only subTask
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