I was trying to see if there was a way to cache a json response from a fetch async call, possibly using LRU.
I’ve tried using several packages, such as node-cache and lru-cache, but I don’t think they worked because my function is asynchronous.
This is what my fetch function basically looks like:
const jsonFetch = async (url) => {
try {
const response = await fetch (url)
const json = await response.json();
return json
}
catch (error) {
console.log(error)
}
}
For example, if I get someone to hit my route 20 times in a minute, I’d like to easily fetch the data and return the response within 0.03 ms instead of 0.3 ms. Currently, it is always using the a URL to fetch the data.
2
Answers
There’s nothing about async functions that will prevent caching results. It’s possible the libraries you’re looking at can’t handle the promises, but here’s a basic proof of concept that might help to get things started:
You will only get cache hits on requests made after the first request returns a value to cache
This has been here for a while, but I agree with the comment from @sleepy012. If I wanted to avoid parallel calls, the trick should be to cache the promise, not only the value. So something like this should work: