I'm using async functions in ES7, with TypeScript, webpack and babel. The major libraries and frameworks are express
and sequelize
.
The critical configurations are:
.babelrc:
{
"stage": 0,
"optional": "runtime"
}
webpack.config.js:
{test: /\.ts$/, loader: 'babel-loader!ts-loader', exclude: /node_modules/},
tsconfig.json:
{
"compilerOptions": {
"noImplicitAny": true,
"removeComments": true,
"preserveConstEnums": true,
"target": "es6",
"sourceMap": true,
"experimentalDecorators": true,
"experimentalAsyncFunctions": true
},
"files": [
]
}
And I am using async
as:
async function getCommentsOfVideoById(videoId: string): any {
let commentData;
ServiceLogger.info(`[VideoService]: fetching comment data.`);
commentData = await VideoComment.findAll({
where: {
vid: videoId
}
});
return commentData;
}
And call it as:
asyncRouter.get('/test/async/vservice', async(req, res) => {
const videoService = new VideoService();
ServiceLogger.info(`[VideServiceTest]: fetching comment data.`);
let data111;
try{
data111 = await getCommentsOfVideoById('48');
} catch (e) {
} finally {
console.log('No error');
console.log(data111);
}
res.send(data111);
});
But what is returned and sent is simply [ [Function] ]
, which I don't quite understand. And the log inside getCommentsOfVideoById
, which is [VideoService]: fetching comment data.
, is never outputed.
What confuses me is that similar usages are actually valid. For example, I wrote a wrapper for the http
function with bluebird
:
function httpGetAsync(options) {
return new bluebird.Promise(function (resolve, reject) {
console.info(`downloading from ${options}`);
http
.get(options, (res) => {
let data = '';
res.on('data', function (chunk: string) {
console.info('==========================');
console.info(chunk);
console.info('==========================');
data += chunk;
});
res.on('end', function () {
resolve(data);
});
})
.on('error', reject);
});
}
And tested with a chained calling of async functions:
async function a(url: string) {
console.log('[a]: start');
let result;
try {
result = await httpGetAsync(url);
//result = await divide(2, 3);
//await Promise.delay(1000);
} catch (e) {
console.log('[a]: Exception', e);
} finally {
console.log('[a]: result', result);
}
console.log('[a]: end');
return result;
}
```
```
asyncRouter.get('/test/async/nesting', async(req, res) => {
console.log('[/test/async/nesting]');
const url = req.query.url ? req.query.url : 'http://google.com/';
let response;
try {
response = await a(url);
} catch (e) {
console.log('[/test/async/nesting]: Exception', e);
} finally {
console.log('[/test/async/nesting]: response', response);
}
res.send(response);
});
And it works as expected (when you access http://domain/test/async/nesting?url=somewhat
you get redirected).
The curious thing is, both sequelize
and my code uses bluebird
, which should be (and proves to be) compatible with await
. Looking at the type definitions of findAll
and Promise
, they all have the same type signature:
///sequelize.d.ts
findAll( options? : FindOptions ) : Promise<Array<TInstance>>;
///bluebird.d.ts
declare class Promise<R> implements Promise.Thenable<R>, Promise.Inspection<R> {
constructor(callback: (resolve: (thenableOrResult: R | Promise.Thenable<R>) => void, reject: (error: any) => void) => void);
}
So the problem does not seem to lie here. But what is the actual problem?