If you're going to use await
, then you would use try/catch to catch a rejection of either of the promises you were awaiting:
router.get('/restaurant/:id', async (req, res, next) => {
try {
let current_restaurant = await Restaurant.findOne({restaurantId: req.params.id}).exec();
let products = await Product.find({restaurant: req.params.id}).exec();
res.render('restaurant', {
user: req.user,
csrfToken: req.csrfToken(),
current_restaurant: current_restaurant,
products: products
});
} catch(e) {
// do whatever you want
console.log(e);
res.sendStatus(500);
}
});
You can compare that to regular promise programming using .then()
:
router.get('/restaurant/:id', async (req, res, next) => {
Promise.all([
Restaurant.findOne({restaurantId: req.params.id}).exec(),
Product.find({restaurant: req.params.id}).exec()
]).then([current_restaurant, products] => {
res.render('restaurant', {
user: req.user,
csrfToken: req.csrfToken(),
current_restaurant: current_restaurant,
products: products
});
}).catch(e => {
// add your desired error handling here
console.log(e);
res.sendStatus(500);
});
});
Since your two database requests are independent of one another, the second version allows the DB queries to be parallelized and may actually run slightly faster (depends upon your database).