Scheduler: yield() method
Limited availability
This feature is not Baseline because it does not work in some of the most widely-used browsers.
Note: This feature is available in Web Workers.
Experimental: This is an experimental technology
Check the Browser compatibility table carefully before using this in production.
The yield()
method of the Scheduler
interface is used for yielding to the main thread during a task and continuing execution later, with the continuation scheduled as a prioritized task (see the Prioritized Task Scheduling API for more information). This allows long-running work to be broken up so the browser stays responsive.
The task can continue when the promise returned by the method is resolved. The priority for when the promise is resolved defaults to "user-visible"
, but can inherit a different priority if the yield()
call occurs within a Scheduler.postTask()
callback.
In addition, the continuation of work after the yield()
call can be canceled if it occurs within a postTask()
callback and the task is aborted.
Syntax
yield()
Parameters
None.
Return Value
Returns a Promise
that is fulfilled with undefined
, or rejected with an AbortSignal.reason
.
Examples
Feature checking
Check whether prioritized task scheduling is supported by testing for scheduler.yield
on globalThis
, either in a window or worker scope.
For example, the code below logs "scheduler.yield: Supported"
if the API is supported in the current browser.
// Check for support before using.
if (globalThis.scheduler?.yield) {
console.log("scheduler.yield: Supported");
} else {
console.error("scheduler.yield: NOT Supported");
}
Basic usage
Long tasks can be broken up by awaiting scheduler.yield()
. The function returns a promise, yielding to the main thread to allow the browser to execute other pending work—like responding to user input—if needed. The browser schedules a follow-up task that resolves the promise, at which point execution of the code can continue where it left off.
For instance, if a click
event listener on a button results in significant work to load and display new page content, there will be no visual feedback to the user that their button click was even registered by the page until that work is complete. A scheduler.yield()
can be inserted into the event listener so that quick feedback can be shown (like a spinner), and then the remainder of the work can be done when execution continues after the yield.
button.addEventListener("click", async () => {
// Provide immediate feedback so the user knows their click was received.
showSpinner();
await scheduler.yield();
// Do longer processing
doSlowContentSwap();
});
It may also be sufficient to provide quick interaction feedback with the default UI. For instance, if a change
event listener on a checkbox triggers slow filtering of page content, a scheduler.yield()
call can be inserted to show the check state change immediately before continuing to the remainder of the event response.
checkbox.addEventListener("change", async () => {
await scheduler.yield();
doSlowContentFiltering();
});
In situations where there is lengthy work that needs to be done on the main thread that can be chunked into a series of tasks, scheduler.yield()
can be called repeatedly to keep the page responsive throughout.
function doWork(value) {
console.log(`work chunk ${value}`);
}
const workList = [0, 1, 2, 3, 4];
for (const work of workList) {
doWork(work);
await scheduler.yield();
}
Yield priority
The order in which the promise returned by scheduler.yield()
is resolved relative to other tasks is based on an implicit task priority.
By default, scheduler.yield()
is run with a "user-visible"
priority. However, continuation after a scheduler.yield()
call has a slightly different behavior than scheduler.postTask()
tasks of the same priority
.
scheduler.yield()
enqueues its task in a boosted task queue compared to a scheduler.postTask()
of the same priority level. So, for instance, a scheduler.yield()
continuation with "user-visible"
priority will be prioritized after scheduler.postTask()
tasks of the higher "user-blocking"
priority level, but before scheduler.postTask()
tasks of the same "user-visible"
priority (in the spec, this is defined by a task queue's effective priority).
This is sometimes described as scheduler.yield()
enqueuing its task at the front of a priority level's queue, while scheduler.postTask()
tasks go at the end. This can be a useful mental model. In situations with just a few tasks, this means that with the same priority, the scheduler.yield()
continuation will come first, allowing additional flexibility in how tasks can be scheduled. For example:
scheduler.postTask(() => console.log("user-visible postTask"));
scheduler.postTask(() => console.log("user-blocking postTask"), {
priority: "user-blocking",
});
await scheduler.yield();
console.log("user-visible yield");
will log the following:
user-blocking postTask user-visible yield user-visible postTask
However, in cases where there are multiple scheduler.yield()
calls, the distinction that the scheduler.yield()
continuation tasks go into a boosted-priority queue becomes important because a second scheduler.yield()
task won't be run before one that's already in the queue.
If one function yields its work before a second function does, the first function to yield will continue first. For example:
async function first() {
console.log("starting first function");
await scheduler.yield();
console.log("ending first function");
}
async function second() {
console.log("starting second function");
await scheduler.yield();
console.log("ending second function");
}
first();
second();
will log the following:
starting first function starting second function ending first function ending second function
Inheriting task priorities
A scheduler.yield()
call within a scheduler.postTask()
task will inherit the task's priority. For example, work after a scheduler.yield()
within a low-priority "background"
task will also be scheduled as "background"
by default (but, again, inserted in the boosted "background"
priority queue so running before any "background"
postTask()
tasks).
For example:
async function backgroundWork() {
scheduler.postTask(() => console.log("background postTask"), {
priority: "background",
});
scheduler.postTask(() => console.log("user-visible postTask"), {
priority: "user-visible",
});
// yield() inherits "background" priority from surrounding task.
await scheduler.yield();
console.log("default-background yield");
}
await scheduler.postTask(backgroundWork, { priority: "background" });
will log the following:
user-visible postTask default-background yield background postTask
scheduler.yield()
continuations will inherit whatever priority the containing scheduler.postTask()
task has, including whether the task's priority was changed dynamically.
Aborting a yield
Similar to setting priority, a scheduler.yield()
call can't be aborted directly, but it will inherit the abort signal from a surrounding scheduler.postTask()
task. Aborting the task will also abort any pending yields within it.
This example uses a TaskController
to abort a task with a scheduler.yield()
within it.
const taskController = new TaskController();
function firstHalfOfWork() {
console.log("first half of work");
taskController.abort("cancel work");
}
function secondHalfOfWork() {
// Never runs.
console.log("second half of work");
}
scheduler.postTask(
async () => {
firstHalfOfWork();
await scheduler.yield();
secondHalfOfWork();
},
{ signal: taskController.signal },
);
The example is somewhat contrived in that it always triggers the taskController.abort()
call within the task itself, but the abort()
call could come from anywhere. For example, it could be triggered by the user pressing a 'Cancel' button.
In this case, the abort()
occurs after the scheduler.postTask()
task has already started ("first half of work"
is logged), but the yield call inherits the abort signal therefore the await scheduler.yield()
call will throw with an abort reason of "cancel work"
.
Using yield()
within requestIdleCallback()
scheduler.yield()
calls also inherit their priority from Window.requestIdleCallback()
, when called from inside the callback function. In this case, the "background"
priority value is inherited. Note however that scheduler.yield()
calls inside requestIdleCallback()
callbacks are not abortable.
Specifications
Specification |
---|
Prioritized Task Scheduling # dom-scheduler-yield |
Browser compatibility
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