Aborting Fetch
AbortController provides a new way of cancelling
fetches that are no longer considered relevant. This can be hooked into fetch via the second RequestInit
parameter.
Resource
Easy integration is provided with the RestEndpoint via the signal member:
const abort = new AbortController();
const AbortableArticle = CoolerArticleResource.get.extend({
signal: abort.signal,
});
// ...somewhere later trigger cancellation
abort.abort();
Endpoint
Additionally similar functionality can easily be added to any endpoint using custom members.
type Params = { id: string };
const UserDetail = new Endpoint(
function ({ id }: Params) {
const init: RequestInit = {};
if (this.signal) {
init.signal = this.signal;
}
return fetch(this.url({ id }), init).then(res => res.json()) as Promise<
typeof payload
>;
},
{
url({ id }: Params) { return `/users/${id}` },
signal: undefined as AbortSignal | undefined,
},
);
const abort = new AbortController();
const AbortableUserDetail = UserDetail.extend({
signal: abort.signal,
});
// ...somewhere later trigger cancellation
abort.abort();
Cancelling on params change
Sometimes a user has the opportunity to fill out a field that is used to affect the results of a network call. If this is a text input, they could potentially type quite quickly, thus creating a lot of network requests.
Using @rest-hooks/hooks
package with useCancelling() will automatically cancel in-flight requests if the parameters
change before the request is resolved.
import { useCancelling } from '@rest-hooks/hooks';
const CancelingUserList = useCancelling(UserList, { query });
const users = useSuspense(CancelingUserList, { query });
Warning: Be careful when using this with many disjoint components fetching the same arguments (Endpoint/params pair) to useSuspense(). This solution aborts fetches per-component, which means you might end up canceling a fetch that another component still cares about.