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Object.defineProperty(exports, '__esModule', { value: true });

const error = require('./error.js');
const syncpromise = require('./syncpromise.js');

/**
 * Creates an new PromiseBuffer object with the specified limit
 * @param limit max number of promises that can be stored in the buffer
 */
function makePromiseBuffer(limit) {
  const buffer = [];

  function isReady() {
    return limit === undefined || buffer.length < limit;
  }

  /**
   * Remove a promise from the queue.
   *
   * @param task Can be any PromiseLike
   * @returns Removed promise.
   */
  function remove(task) {
    return buffer.splice(buffer.indexOf(task), 1)[0] || Promise.resolve(undefined);
  }

  /**
   * Add a promise (representing an in-flight action) to the queue, and set it to remove itself on fulfillment.
   *
   * @param taskProducer A function producing any PromiseLike; In previous versions this used to be `task:
   *        PromiseLike`, but under that model, Promises were instantly created on the call-site and their executor
   *        functions therefore ran immediately. Thus, even if the buffer was full, the action still happened. By
   *        requiring the promise to be wrapped in a function, we can defer promise creation until after the buffer
   *        limit check.
   * @returns The original promise.
   */
  function add(taskProducer) {
    if (!isReady()) {
      return syncpromise.rejectedSyncPromise(new error.SentryError('Not adding Promise because buffer limit was reached.'));
    }

    // start the task and add its promise to the queue
    const task = taskProducer();
    if (buffer.indexOf(task) === -1) {
      buffer.push(task);
    }
    void task
      .then(() => remove(task))
      // Use `then(null, rejectionHandler)` rather than `catch(rejectionHandler)` so that we can use `PromiseLike`
      // rather than `Promise`. `PromiseLike` doesn't have a `.catch` method, making its polyfill smaller. (ES5 didn't
      // have promises, so TS has to polyfill when down-compiling.)
      .then(null, () =>
        remove(task).then(null, () => {
          // We have to add another catch here because `remove()` starts a new promise chain.
        }),
      );
    return task;
  }

  /**
   * Wait for all promises in the queue to resolve or for timeout to expire, whichever comes first.
   *
   * @param timeout The time, in ms, after which to resolve to `false` if the queue is still non-empty. Passing `0` (or
   * not passing anything) will make the promise wait as long as it takes for the queue to drain before resolving to
   * `true`.
   * @returns A promise which will resolve to `true` if the queue is already empty or drains before the timeout, and
   * `false` otherwise
   */
  function drain(timeout) {
    return new syncpromise.SyncPromise((resolve, reject) => {
      let counter = buffer.length;

      if (!counter) {
        return resolve(true);
      }

      // wait for `timeout` ms and then resolve to `false` (if not cancelled first)
      const capturedSetTimeout = setTimeout(() => {
        if (timeout && timeout > 0) {
          resolve(false);
        }
      }, timeout);

      // if all promises resolve in time, cancel the timer and resolve to `true`
      buffer.forEach(item => {
        void syncpromise.resolvedSyncPromise(item).then(() => {
          if (!--counter) {
            clearTimeout(capturedSetTimeout);
            resolve(true);
          }
        }, reject);
      });
    });
  }

  return {
    $: buffer,
    add,
    drain,
  };
}

exports.makePromiseBuffer = makePromiseBuffer;
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