I have the following code inside a class. (It's coffeescript-- and it's for a couchdb utility!-- but this is really a node.js question). I'm attempting to do things The Node Way, using Node 0.49, and that means using asynchronous calls for filesystem operations. At first, I was pulling my hair out because this.sentinel went to zero several times during the course of processing, so I know I'm doing something wrong there. But then I hit an even weirder issue: down in load_directory, see those console.log() calls? Watch when happens when I run this.
check_sentinel: ->
@sentinel--
if @sentinel == 0
@emit('designDirLoaded', @object)
load_file: (rootdir, filename, object) ->
@sentinel++
fname = path.join(rootdir, filename)
@manifest.push(fname)
fs.readFile fname, (err, data) =>
object[filename] = data
@check_sentinel()
load_directory: (dirpath, object) ->
@sentinel++
fs.readdir dirpath, (err, files) =>
for fname in files
console.log("X1: ", fname)
fs.stat path.join(dirpath, fname), (err, stats) =>
console.log("X2: ", fname)
if stats.isFile()
@load_file(dirpath, fname, object)
if stats.isDirectory()
object[fname] = {}
@load_directory(path.join(dirpath, fname), object[fname])
@check_sentinel()
Here's what I get:
X1: memberByName.js
X1: memberByClub.js
X2: memberByClub.js
X2: memberByClub.js
This is surreal, and it looks a lot like a race condition. "memberByName" gets passed to fs.stat(), which in turn passes "memberByClub" to load_file(), implying... what? That because load_file() returned immediately, it raced around and presented the next file name in the array to the function call? Or do I have some misunderstanding about the persistence of values in a given scope?