Node.js v4.8.3 Documentation


Timers#

Stability: 3 - Locked

All of the timer functions are globals. You do not need to require() this module in order to use them.

clearImmediate(immediateObject)#

Stops an immediateObject, as created by setImmediate, from triggering.

clearInterval(intervalObject)#

Stops an intervalObject, as created by setInterval, from triggering.

clearTimeout(timeoutObject)#

Prevents a timeoutObject, as created by setTimeout, from triggering.

ref()#

If a timer was previously unref()d, then ref() can be called to explicitly request the timer hold the program open. If the timer is already refd calling ref again will have no effect.

Returns the timer.

setImmediate(callback[, arg][, ...])#

Schedules "immediate" execution of callback after I/O events' callbacks and before timers set by setTimeout and setInterval are triggered. Returns an immediateObject for possible use with clearImmediate. Additional optional arguments may be passed to the callback.

Callbacks for immediates are queued in the order in which they were created. The entire callback queue is processed every event loop iteration. If an immediate is queued from inside an executing callback, that immediate won't fire until the next event loop iteration.

setInterval(callback, delay[, arg][, ...])#

Schedules repeated execution of callback every delay milliseconds. Returns a intervalObject for possible use with clearInterval. Additional optional arguments may be passed to the callback.

To follow browser behavior, when using delays larger than 2147483647 milliseconds (approximately 25 days) or less than 1, Node.js will use 1 as the delay.

setTimeout(callback, delay[, arg][, ...])#

Schedules execution of a one-time callback after delay milliseconds. Returns a timeoutObject for possible use with clearTimeout. Additional optional arguments may be passed to the callback.

The callback will likely not be invoked in precisely delay milliseconds. Node.js makes no guarantees about the exact timing of when callbacks will fire, nor of their ordering. The callback will be called as close as possible to the time specified.

To follow browser behavior, when using delays larger than 2147483647 milliseconds (approximately 25 days) or less than 1, the timeout is executed immediately, as if the delay was set to 1.

unref()#

The opaque value returned by setTimeout and setInterval also has the method timer.unref() which allows the creation of a timer that is active but if it is the only item left in the event loop, it won't keep the program running. If the timer is already unrefd calling unref again will have no effect.

In the case of setTimeout, unref creates a separate timer that will wakeup the event loop, creating too many of these may adversely effect event loop performance -- use wisely.

Returns the timer.