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Comparing Node.js Asynchronous Alternatives

The Sample Functions

The largest, countFiles, and fibonacci folders each contain a sample function implemented in six different ways:

  • async: using the async library.
  • asyncawait: using this asyncawait library.
  • bluebird: using the bluebird library.
  • callbacks: using plain callbacks.
  • co: using the co library (requires node >= 0.11.2 with the --harmony flag).
  • synchronous: using plain blocking code (just for comparison).

This gives a good indication of the trade-offs between the different coding styles. For the remainer of this document, we'll focus on the most complex sample function, the largest() function.

The largest() Function

The largest() sample function is designed to be of moderate complexity, like a real-world problem.

largest(dir, options) finds the largest file in the given directory, optionally performing a recursive search. dir is the path of the directory to search. options, if provided, is a hash with the following two keys, both optional:

  • recurse (boolean, defaults to false): if true, largest() will recursively search all subdirectories.
  • preview (boolean, defaults to false): if true, largest() will include a small preview of the largest file's content in it's results.

The requirements of largest() may be summarised as:

  1. Find the largest file in the given directory (recursively searching subdirectories if the option is selected).
  2. Keep track of how many files/directories have been processed.
  3. Get a preview of the file contents (first several characters) if the option is selected.
  4. Return the details about the largest file and the number of files/directories searched.
  5. Exploit concurrency wherever possible.
  6. Don't block Node's event loop anywhere.

The last two requirements are obviously violated by the 'synchronous' variant, but it is worth including for comparison.

Metrics for Comparison

Some interesting metrics with which to compare the six variants are:

  • Lines of code (SLOC): Shorter code that does the same thing is usually a good thing.
  • Levels of Indenting: Each indent represents a context-shift and therefore higher complexity.
  • Anachrony: Asynchronous code may execute in an order very different from its visual representation, which may make it harder to read and reason about in some cases.
  • Speed: Node.js is built for speed and throughput, so any loss of speed imposed by a variant may count against it

Comparison Summary

The following metrics are for the largest() example function:

Variant SLOC [1] Indents [2] Anachrony [3] Ops/sec [4]
async 67 7 5 ~65
asyncawait 23 2 - ~79
bluebird 44 3 8 ~89
callbacks 84 6 9 ~100
co 23 2 - ~68 [5]
synchronous 23 2 - ~63 [6]
Footnotes:

[1] Includes only lines in the function body; excludes blank lines and comment lines.

[2] Maximum indentation from the outermost statements in the function body.

[3] Count of times in the function body when visually lower statements execute before visually higher statements due to asynchronous callbacks.

[4] Scaled (callbacks = 100), higher is better. Using benchmark.js on my laptop. All benchmarks run in Node v0.10.25 except for co - see [5] below.

[5] co benchmark run in Node v0.11.12 with the --harmony flag.

[6] Not strictly comparable because it blocks Node's event loop.

Observations

The following observations are based on the above results and obviously may differ substantially with other code and/or on other machines. YMMV. Having said that, at least in this case:

  • Plain callbacks are the speed king.
  • All other asynchronous variants achieve at least 65% of the speed of plain callbacks.
  • Bluebird achieves almost 90% of plain callback speed, living up to its reputation of being extremely well optimised.
  • asyncawait is third-fastest in this benchmark, achieving almost 80% of the performance of plain callbacks.
  • The source code of co, asyncawait, and synchronous are virtually identical, with purely mechanical syntax differences.
  • co and asyncawait, each using different coroutine technology, are very similar on these metrics. In a choice between these two, the biggest deciding factor may be whether you can use ES6.
  • The synchronous approach is actually the slowest, which perhaps makes sense since it can't exploit concurrency.
  • async looks relatively unfavourable compared to the other asynchronous options on these metrics.