Using mongoose promises with async/await
You are not returning a Promise from orderEmployees.
printEmployees: async(company) => {
var employees = await self.orderEmployees(company);
// SECOND CONSOLE.LOG
console.log(employees);
},
orderEmployees: (companyID) => {
return User.find({company:companyID})
.exec()
.then((employees) => {
// FIRST CONSOLE.LOG
console.log(employees);
return employees;
})
.catch((err) => {
return 'error occured';
});
},
You need to return a Promise
from orderEmployees
orderEmployees: companyId => User.find({ companyId }).exec()
If you want to do some error handling or pre-processing before you return then you can keep your code as is but just remember to return the result (promises are chainable).
You need to return
your Promise
.
- Currently, you are awaiting on a function that returns
undefined
. await
only actually "waits" for the value if it's used with aPromise
.- Always keep in mind that you can only
await
Promises orasync functions
, which implicitly return aPromise
1.
orderEmployees: (companyID) => {
return User.find({ company:companyID }).exec()
}
Also really important, you should throw
instead of return
in your .catch
handler. Returning from within a .catch
handler will cause the promise chain to trigger it's .then
instead of it's .catch
thus breaking the error handling chain.
Better yet, don't include .catch
at all and let the the actual error bubble up the promise chain, instead of overriding it with your own non-descriptive 'error occured'
message.
Error conditions should throw the error, not return it.
1 You can also await non-Promises, but only for values that are evaluated synchronously.
In order to make orderEmployees
behave like async functions, you have to return the resulting promise. There are two rules to follow when using promises without async/await
keywords:
- A function is asynchronous if it returns a
Promise
- If you have a promise (for example returned by an async function) you must either call
.then
on it or return it.
When you are using async/await
then you must await
on promises you obtain.
This said you will notice that you do not return the promise generated inside orderEmployees
. Easy to fix, but its also easy to rewrite that function to async too.
orderEmployees: (companyID) => {
return User.find({company:companyID}) // Notice the return here
.exec()
.then((employees) => {
// FIRST CONSOLE.LOG
console.log(employees);
return employees;
})
.catch((err) => {
return 'error occured';
});
},
or
orderEmployees: async(companyID) => {
try {
const employees = await User.find({company:companyID}).exec();
console.log(employees);
return employees;
} catch (err) {
return 'error occured';
}
},
PS: the error handling is somewhat flawed here. We usually do not handle errors by returning an error string from a function. It is better to have the error propagate in this case, and handle it from some top-level, UI code.