# p-retry > Retry a promise-returning or async function It does exponential backoff and supports custom retry strategies for failed operations. ## Install ```sh npm install p-retry ``` ## Usage ```js import pRetry, {AbortError} from 'p-retry'; const run = async () => { const response = await fetch('https://sindresorhus.com/unicorn'); // Abort retrying if the resource doesn't exist if (response.status === 404) { throw new AbortError(response.statusText); } return response.blob(); }; console.log(await pRetry(run, {retries: 5})); ``` ## API ### pRetry(input, options?) Returns a `Promise` that is fulfilled when calling `input` returns a fulfilled promise. If calling `input` returns a rejected promise, `input` is called again until the max retries are reached, it then rejects with the last rejection reason. Does not retry on most `TypeErrors`, with the exception of network errors. This is done on a best case basis as different browsers have different [messages](https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/API/Fetch_API/Using_Fetch#Checking_that_the_fetch_was_successful) to indicate this. See [whatwg/fetch#526 (comment)](https://github.com/whatwg/fetch/issues/526#issuecomment-554604080) #### input Type: `Function` Receives the number of attempts as the first argument and is expected to return a `Promise` or any value. #### options Type: `object` ##### onFailedAttempt(context) Type: `Function` Callback invoked on each failure. Receives a context object containing the error and retry state information. The function is called _before_ `shouldConsumeRetry` and `shouldRetry`, for all errors _except_ `AbortError`. If the function throws, all retries will be aborted and the original promise will reject with the thrown error. ```js import pRetry from 'p-retry'; const run = async () => { const response = await fetch('https://sindresorhus.com/unicorn'); if (!response.ok) { throw new Error(response.statusText); } return response.json(); }; const result = await pRetry(run, { onFailedAttempt: ({error, attemptNumber, retriesLeft, retriesConsumed}) => { console.log(`Attempt ${attemptNumber} failed. ${retriesLeft} retries left. ${retriesConsumed} retries consumed.`); // 1st request => Attempt 1 failed. 5 retries left. 0 retries consumed. // 2nd request => Attempt 2 failed. 4 retries left. 1 retries consumed. // … }, retries: 5 }); console.log(result); ``` The `onFailedAttempt` function can return a promise. For example, to add a [delay](https://github.com/sindresorhus/delay): ```js import pRetry from 'p-retry'; import delay from 'delay'; const run = async () => { … }; const result = await pRetry(run, { onFailedAttempt: async () => { console.log('Waiting for 1 second before retrying'); await delay(1000); } }); ``` ##### shouldRetry(context) Type: `Function` Decide if a retry should occur based on context. Returning `true` triggers a retry, `false` aborts with the error. The function is called _after_ `onFailedAttempt` and `shouldConsumeRetry`. The function is _not_ called on `AbortError`, `TypeError` (except network errors), or if `retries` or `maxRetryTime` are exhausted. If the function throws, all retries will be aborted and the original promise will reject with the thrown error. ```js import pRetry from 'p-retry'; const run = async () => { … }; const result = await pRetry(run, { shouldRetry: ({error, attemptNumber, retriesLeft}) => !(error instanceof CustomError) }); ``` In the example above, the operation will be retried unless the error is an instance of `CustomError`. ##### shouldConsumeRetry(context) Type: `Function` Decide if this failure should consume a retry from the `retries` budget. When `false` is returned, the failure will not consume a retry or increment backoff values, but is still subject to `maxRetryTime`. The function is called _after_ `onFailedAttempt`, but before `shouldRetry`. The function is _not_ called on `AbortError`. If the function throws, all retries will be aborted and the original promise will reject with the thrown error. ```js import pRetry from 'p-retry'; const run = async () => { … }; const result = await pRetry(run, { retries: 2, shouldConsumeRetry: ({error, retriesLeft}) => !(error instanceof RateLimitError), }); ``` In the example above, `RateLimitError`s will not decrement the available `retries`. ##### retries Type: `number`\ Default: `10` The maximum amount of times to retry the operation. ##### factor Type: `number`\ Default: `2` The exponential factor to use. ##### minTimeout Type: `number`\ Default: `1000` The number of milliseconds before starting the first retry. Set this to `0` to retry immediately with no delay. ##### maxTimeout Type: `number`\ Default: `Infinity` The maximum number of milliseconds between two retries. ##### randomize Type: `boolean`\ Default: `false` Randomizes the timeouts by multiplying with a factor between 1 and 2. ##### maxRetryTime Type: `number`\ Default: `Infinity` The maximum time (in milliseconds) that the retried operation is allowed to run. Measured with a monotonic clock (`performance.now()`) so system clock adjustments do not affect the limit. ##### signal Type: [`AbortSignal`](https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/API/AbortSignal) You can abort retrying using [`AbortController`](https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/API/AbortController). ```js import pRetry from 'p-retry'; const run = async () => { … }; const controller = new AbortController(); cancelButton.addEventListener('click', () => { controller.abort(new Error('User clicked cancel button')); }); try { await pRetry(run, {signal: controller.signal}); } catch (error) { console.log(error.message); //=> 'User clicked cancel button' } ``` ##### unref Type: `boolean`\ Default: `false` Prevents retry timeouts from keeping the process alive. Only affects platforms with a `.unref()` method on timeouts, such as Node.js. ### makeRetriable(function, options?) Wrap a function so that each call is automatically retried on failure. ```js import {makeRetriable} from 'p-retry'; const fetchWithRetry = makeRetriable(fetch, {retries: 5}); const response = await fetchWithRetry('https://sindresorhus.com/unicorn'); ``` ### AbortError(message) ### AbortError(error) Abort retrying and reject the promise. No callbacks functions will be called. ### message Type: `string` An error message. ### error Type: `Error` A custom error. ## Tip You can pass arguments to the function being retried by wrapping it in an inline arrow function: ```js import pRetry from 'p-retry'; const run = async emoji => { // … }; // Without arguments await pRetry(run, {retries: 5}); // With arguments await pRetry(() => run('🦄'), {retries: 5}); ``` ## FAQ ### How do I mock timers when testing with this package? The package uses `setTimeout` and `clearTimeout` from the global scope, so you can use the [Node.js test timer mocking](https://nodejs.org/api/test.html#class-mocktimers) or a package like [`sinon`](https://github.com/sinonjs/sinon). ### How do I stop retries when the process receives SIGINT (Ctrl+C)? Use an [`AbortController`](https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/API/AbortController) to signal cancellation on SIGINT, and pass its `signal` to `pRetry`: ```js import pRetry from 'p-retry'; const controller = new AbortController(); process.once('SIGINT', () => { controller.abort(new Error('SIGINT received')); }); try { await pRetry(run, {signal: controller.signal}); } catch (error) { console.log('Retry stopped due to:', error.message); } ``` The package does not handle process signals itself to avoid global side effects. ## Related - [p-timeout](https://github.com/sindresorhus/p-timeout) - Timeout a promise after a specified amount of time - [More…](https://github.com/sindresorhus/promise-fun)