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# sequelize-pool

[![npm](https://img.shields.io/npm/v/sequelize-pool.svg?style=flat-square)](https://www.npmjs.com/package/sequelize-pool)
[![Travis (.org)](https://img.shields.io/travis/sushantdhiman/sequelize-pool.svg?style=flat-square)](https://travis-ci.org/sushantdhiman/sequelize-pool)


  Resource pool. Can be used to reuse or throttle expensive resources such as
  database connections.

  This is a fork from [generic-pool@v2.5](https://github.com/coopernurse/node-pool/tree/v2.5).

## Installation

```bash
$ npm install --save sequelize-pool
$ yarn add sequelize-pool
```

## Example

### Step 1 - Create pool using a factory object

```js
// Create a MySQL connection pool
var Pool = require('sequelize-pool').Pool;
var mysql2 = require('mysql2/promise');

var pool = new Pool({
    name     : 'mysql',
    create   : function() {
      // return Promise
      return mysql2.createConnection({
        user: 'scott',
        password: 'tiger',
        database:'mydb'
      });
    },
    destroy  : function(client) { client.end(); },
    max      : 10,
    // optional. if you set this, make sure to drain() (see step 3)
    min      : 2,
    // Delay in milliseconds after which available resources in the pool will be destroyed.
    idleTimeoutMillis : 30000,
    // Delay in milliseconds after which pending acquire request in the pool will be rejected.
    acquireTimeoutMillis: 30000,
     // Function, defaults to console.log
    log : true
});
```

### Step 2 - Use pool in your code to acquire/release resources

```js
// acquire connection
pool.acquire().then(connection => {
  client.query("select * from foo", [], function() {
  // return object back to pool
    pool.release(client);
  });
});
```

### Step 3 - Drain pool during shutdown (optional)

If you are shutting down a long-lived process, you may notice
that node fails to exit for 30 seconds or so.  This is a side
effect of the idleTimeoutMillis behaviour -- the pool has a
setTimeout() call registered that is in the event loop queue, so
node won't terminate until all resources have timed out, and the pool
stops trying to manage them.

This behaviour will be more problematic when you set factory.min > 0,
as the pool will never become empty, and the setTimeout calls will
never end.

In these cases, use the pool.drain() function.  This sets the pool
into a "draining" state which will gracefully wait until all
idle resources have timed out.  For example, you can call:

```js
// Only call this once in your application -- at the point you want
// to shutdown and stop using this pool.
pool.drain().then(() => pool.destroyAllNow());
```

If you do this, your node process will exit gracefully.

## Draining

If you know would like to terminate all the resources in your pool before
their timeouts have been reached, you can use `destroyAllNow()` in conjunction
with `drain()`:

```js
pool.drain().then(() => pool.destroyAllNow());
```

One side-effect of calling `drain()` is that subsequent calls to `acquire()`
will throw an Error.

## Pool info

The following functions will let you get information about the pool:

```js
// returns factory.name for this pool
pool.name

// returns number of resources in the pool regardless of
// whether they are free or in use
pool.size

// returns number of unused resources in the pool
pool.available

// returns number of callers waiting to acquire a resource
pool.waiting

// returns number of maxixmum number of resources allowed by ppol
pool.maxSize

// returns number of minimum number of resources allowed by ppol
pool.minSize

```

## Run Tests

    $ npm install
    $ npm test