In addition to the other useful answers here, if you don't
need the extras that those solutions provide, then an
asynchronous semaphore is straightforward to implement.
It's a lower-level concept than the other options presented
here though, so you may find those to be more convenient for
your needs. Still, I think asynchronous semaphores are worth
knowing about, even if you use higher-level abstractions in
practice.
It looks something like this:
var sem = function(f){
var busy = 0;
return function(amount){
busy += amount;
if(busy === 0){
f();
}
};
};
And you invoke it like this:
var busy = sem(run_me_asap);
busy
is a function that maintains an internal counter of
asynchronous actions that it is waiting on. When that
internal counter reaches zero, it fires the function
run_me_asap
, which you supply.
You can increment the internal counter prior to running an
asynchronous action with busy(1)
and, then the
asynchronous actions is responsible for decrementing the
counter with busy(-1)
once it is complete. This is how we
can avoid the need for timers. (If you prefer, you could
write sem
so that it returns an object with inc
and
dec
methods instead, like in the Wikipedia article; this
is just how I do it.)
And that's all you have to do to create an asynchronous
semaphore.
Here's an example of it in use. You might define the function
run_me_asap
as follows.
var funcs = [func1, func2, func3 /*, ...*/];
var run_me_asap = function(){
funcs.forEach(function(func){
func();
});
});
funcs
might be the list of functions that you wanted to
run in your question. (Maybe this isn't quite what you want,
but see my 'N.B.' below.)
Then elsewhere:
var wait_until_ive_finished = function(){
busy(1);
do_something_asynchronously_then_run_callback(function(){
/* ... */
busy(-1);
});
busy(1);
do_something_else_asynchronously(function(){
/* ... */
busy(-1);
});
};
When both asynchronous operations have completed, busy
's
counter will be set to zero, and run_me_asap
will be
invoked.
N.B. How you might use asynchronous semaphores depends
on the architecture of your code and your own requirements;
what I've set out may not be exactly what you want. I'm just
trying to show you how they work; the rest is up to you!
And, one word of advice: if you were to use asynchronous
semaphores then I'd recommend that you hide their creation
and the calls to busy
behind higher-level abstractions so
that you're not littering your application code with
low-level details.