Important: This documentation covers Yarn 1 (Classic).
For Yarn 2+ docs and migration guide, see yarnpkg.com.

Package detail

lru-cache

isaacs553.6mISC11.0.2TypeScript support: included

A cache object that deletes the least-recently-used items.

mru, lru, cache

readme

lru-cache

A cache object that deletes the least-recently-used items.

Specify a max number of the most recently used items that you want to keep, and this cache will keep that many of the most recently accessed items.

This is not primarily a TTL cache, and does not make strong TTL guarantees. There is no preemptive pruning of expired items by default, but you may set a TTL on the cache or on a single set. If you do so, it will treat expired items as missing, and delete them when fetched. If you are more interested in TTL caching than LRU caching, check out @isaacs/ttlcache.

As of version 7, this is one of the most performant LRU implementations available in JavaScript, and supports a wide diversity of use cases. However, note that using some of the features will necessarily impact performance, by causing the cache to have to do more work. See the "Performance" section below.

Installation

npm install lru-cache --save

Usage

// hybrid module, either works
import { LRUCache } from 'lru-cache'
// or:
const { LRUCache } = require('lru-cache')
// or in minified form for web browsers:
import { LRUCache } from 'http://unpkg.com/lru-cache@9/dist/mjs/index.min.mjs'

// At least one of 'max', 'ttl', or 'maxSize' is required, to prevent
// unsafe unbounded storage.
//
// In most cases, it's best to specify a max for performance, so all
// the required memory allocation is done up-front.
//
// All the other options are optional, see the sections below for
// documentation on what each one does.  Most of them can be
// overridden for specific items in get()/set()
const options = {
  max: 500,

  // for use with tracking overall storage size
  maxSize: 5000,
  sizeCalculation: (value, key) => {
    return 1
  },

  // for use when you need to clean up something when objects
  // are evicted from the cache
  dispose: (value, key) => {
    freeFromMemoryOrWhatever(value)
  },

  // how long to live in ms
  ttl: 1000 * 60 * 5,

  // return stale items before removing from cache?
  allowStale: false,

  updateAgeOnGet: false,
  updateAgeOnHas: false,

  // async method to use for cache.fetch(), for
  // stale-while-revalidate type of behavior
  fetchMethod: async (
    key,
    staleValue,
    { options, signal, context }
  ) => {},
}

const cache = new LRUCache(options)

cache.set('key', 'value')
cache.get('key') // "value"

// non-string keys ARE fully supported
// but note that it must be THE SAME object, not
// just a JSON-equivalent object.
var someObject = { a: 1 }
cache.set(someObject, 'a value')
// Object keys are not toString()-ed
cache.set('[object Object]', 'a different value')
assert.equal(cache.get(someObject), 'a value')
// A similar object with same keys/values won't work,
// because it's a different object identity
assert.equal(cache.get({ a: 1 }), undefined)

cache.clear() // empty the cache

If you put more stuff in the cache, then less recently used items will fall out. That's what an LRU cache is.

For full description of the API and all options, please see the LRUCache typedocs

Storage Bounds Safety

This implementation aims to be as flexible as possible, within the limits of safe memory consumption and optimal performance.

At initial object creation, storage is allocated for max items. If max is set to zero, then some performance is lost, and item count is unbounded. Either maxSize or ttl must be set if max is not specified.

If maxSize is set, then this creates a safe limit on the maximum storage consumed, but without the performance benefits of pre-allocation. When maxSize is set, every item must provide a size, either via the sizeCalculation method provided to the constructor, or via a size or sizeCalculation option provided to cache.set(). The size of every item must be a positive integer.

If neither max nor maxSize are set, then ttl tracking must be enabled. Note that, even when tracking item ttl, items are not preemptively deleted when they become stale, unless ttlAutopurge is enabled. Instead, they are only purged the next time the key is requested. Thus, if ttlAutopurge, max, and maxSize are all not set, then the cache will potentially grow unbounded.

In this case, a warning is printed to standard error. Future versions may require the use of ttlAutopurge if max and maxSize are not specified.

If you truly wish to use a cache that is bound only by TTL expiration, consider using a Map object, and calling setTimeout to delete entries when they expire. It will perform much better than an LRU cache.

Here is an implementation you may use, under the same license as this package:

// a storage-unbounded ttl cache that is not an lru-cache
const cache = {
  data: new Map(),
  timers: new Map(),
  set: (k, v, ttl) => {
    if (cache.timers.has(k)) {
      clearTimeout(cache.timers.get(k))
    }
    cache.timers.set(
      k,
      setTimeout(() => cache.delete(k), ttl)
    )
    cache.data.set(k, v)
  },
  get: k => cache.data.get(k),
  has: k => cache.data.has(k),
  delete: k => {
    if (cache.timers.has(k)) {
      clearTimeout(cache.timers.get(k))
    }
    cache.timers.delete(k)
    return cache.data.delete(k)
  },
  clear: () => {
    cache.data.clear()
    for (const v of cache.timers.values()) {
      clearTimeout(v)
    }
    cache.timers.clear()
  },
}

If that isn't to your liking, check out @isaacs/ttlcache.

Storing Undefined Values

This cache never stores undefined values, as undefined is used internally in a few places to indicate that a key is not in the cache.

You may call cache.set(key, undefined), but this is just an alias for cache.delete(key). Note that this has the effect that cache.has(key) will return false after setting it to undefined.

cache.set(myKey, undefined)
cache.has(myKey) // false!

If you need to track undefined values, and still note that the key is in the cache, an easy workaround is to use a sigil object of your own.

import { LRUCache } from 'lru-cache'
const undefinedValue = Symbol('undefined')
const cache = new LRUCache(...)
const mySet = (key, value) =>
  cache.set(key, value === undefined ? undefinedValue : value)
const myGet = (key, value) => {
  const v = cache.get(key)
  return v === undefinedValue ? undefined : v
}

Performance

As of January 2022, version 7 of this library is one of the most performant LRU cache implementations in JavaScript.

Benchmarks can be extremely difficult to get right. In particular, the performance of set/get/delete operations on objects will vary wildly depending on the type of key used. V8 is highly optimized for objects with keys that are short strings, especially integer numeric strings. Thus any benchmark which tests solely using numbers as keys will tend to find that an object-based approach performs the best.

Note that coercing anything to strings to use as object keys is unsafe, unless you can be 100% certain that no other type of value will be used. For example:

const myCache = {}
const set = (k, v) => (myCache[k] = v)
const get = k => myCache[k]

set({}, 'please hang onto this for me')
set('[object Object]', 'oopsie')

Also beware of "Just So" stories regarding performance. Garbage collection of large (especially: deep) object graphs can be incredibly costly, with several "tipping points" where it increases exponentially. As a result, putting that off until later can make it much worse, and less predictable. If a library performs well, but only in a scenario where the object graph is kept shallow, then that won't help you if you are using large objects as keys.

In general, when attempting to use a library to improve performance (such as a cache like this one), it's best to choose an option that will perform well in the sorts of scenarios where you'll actually use it.

This library is optimized for repeated gets and minimizing eviction time, since that is the expected need of a LRU. Set operations are somewhat slower on average than a few other options, in part because of that optimization. It is assumed that you'll be caching some costly operation, ideally as rarely as possible, so optimizing set over get would be unwise.

If performance matters to you:

  1. If it's at all possible to use small integer values as keys, and you can guarantee that no other types of values will be used as keys, then do that, and use a cache such as lru-fast, or mnemonist's LRUCache which uses an Object as its data store.

  2. Failing that, if at all possible, use short non-numeric strings (ie, less than 256 characters) as your keys, and use mnemonist's LRUCache.

  3. If the types of your keys will be anything else, especially long strings, strings that look like floats, objects, or some mix of types, or if you aren't sure, then this library will work well for you.

    If you do not need the features that this library provides (like asynchronous fetching, a variety of TTL staleness options, and so on), then mnemonist's LRUMap is a very good option, and just slightly faster than this module (since it does considerably less).

  4. Do not use a dispose function, size tracking, or especially ttl behavior, unless absolutely needed. These features are convenient, and necessary in some use cases, and every attempt has been made to make the performance impact minimal, but it isn't nothing.

Breaking Changes in Version 7

This library changed to a different algorithm and internal data structure in version 7, yielding significantly better performance, albeit with some subtle changes as a result.

If you were relying on the internals of LRUCache in version 6 or before, it probably will not work in version 7 and above.

Breaking Changes in Version 8

  • The fetchContext option was renamed to context, and may no longer be set on the cache instance itself.
  • Rewritten in TypeScript, so pretty much all the types moved around a lot.
  • The AbortController/AbortSignal polyfill was removed. For this reason, Node version 16.14.0 or higher is now required.
  • Internal properties were moved to actual private class properties.
  • Keys and values must not be null or undefined.
  • Minified export available at 'lru-cache/min', for both CJS and MJS builds.

Breaking Changes in Version 9

  • Named export only, no default export.
  • AbortController polyfill returned, albeit with a warning when used.

Breaking Changes in Version 10

  • cache.fetch() return type is now Promise<V | undefined> instead of Promise<V | void>. This is an irrelevant change practically speaking, but can require changes for TypeScript users.

For more info, see the change log.

changelog

cringe lorg

11.0

  • Drop support for node less than v20

10.4

  • Accidental minor update, should've been patch.

10.3

  • add forceFetch() method
  • set disposeReason to 'expire' when it's the result of a TTL expiration, or 'fetch' when it's the result of an aborted or undefined-returning fetch()
  • add memo() method

10.2

  • types: implement the Map<K, V> interface

10.1

  • add cache.info(key) to get value as well as ttl and size information.

10.0

  • cache.fetch() return type is now Promise<V | undefined> instead of Promise<V | void>. This is an irrelevant change practically speaking, but can require changes for TypeScript users.

9.1

  • cache.set(key, undefined) is now an alias for cache.delete(key)

9.0

  • Use named export only, no default export.
  • Bring back minimal polyfill. If this polyfill ends up being used, then a warning is printed, as it is not safe for use outside of LRUCache.

8.0

  • The fetchContext option was renamed to context, and may no longer be set on the cache instance itself.
  • Rewritten in TypeScript, so pretty much all the types moved around a lot.
  • The AbortController/AbortSignal polyfill is removed. For this reason, Node version 16.14.0 or higher is now required.
  • Internal properties were moved to actual private class properties.
  • Keys and values must not be null or undefined.
  • Minified export available at 'lru-cache/min', for both CJS and MJS builds.

7.18

  • Add support for internal state investigation through the use of a status option to has(), set(), get(), and fetch().

7.17

  • Add signal option for fetch to pass a user-supplied AbortSignal
  • Add ignoreFetchAbort and allowStaleOnFetchAbort options

7.16.2

  • Fail fetch() promises when they are aborted

7.16

  • Add allowStaleOnFetchRejection option

7.15

  • Provide both ESM and CommonJS exports

7.14

  • Add maxEntrySize option to prevent caching items above a given calculated size.

7.13

  • Add forceRefresh option to trigger a call to the fetchMethod even if the item is found in cache, and not older than its ttl.

7.12

  • Add fetchContext option to provide additional information to the fetchMethod
  • 7.12.1: Fix bug where adding an item with size greater than maxSize would cause bizarre behavior.

7.11

  • Add 'noDeleteOnStaleGet' option, to suppress behavior where a get() of a stale item would remove it from the cache.

7.10

  • Add noDeleteOnFetchRejection option, to suppress behavior where a failed fetch will delete a previous stale value.
  • Ship types along with the package, rather than relying on out of date types coming from DefinitelyTyped.

7.9

  • Better AbortController polyfill, supporting signal.addEventListener('abort') and signal.onabort.
  • (7.9.1) Drop item from cache instead of crashing with an unhandledRejection when the fetchMethod throws an error or returns a rejected Promise.

7.8

  • add updateAgeOnHas option
  • warnings sent to console.error if process.emitWarning unavailable

7.7

  • fetch: provide options and abort signal

7.6

  • add cache.getRemainingTTL(key)
  • Add async cache.fetch() method, fetchMethod option
  • Allow unbounded storage if maxSize or ttl set

7.5

  • defend against mutation while iterating
  • Add rentries, rkeys, rvalues
  • remove bundler and unnecessary package.json fields

7.4

  • Add browser optimized webpack bundle, exposed as 'lru-cache/browser'
  • Track size of compiled bundle in CI (@SuperOleg39)
  • Add noUpdateTTL option for set()

7.3

  • Add disposeAfter()
  • set() returns the cache object
  • delete() returns boolean indicating whether anything was deleted

7.2

  • Add reason to dispose() calls.

7.1

  • Add ttlResolution option
  • Add ttlAutopurge option

7.0 - 2022-02

This library changed to a different algorithm and internal data structure in version 7, yielding significantly better performance, albeit with some subtle changes as a result.

If you were relying on the internals of LRUCache in version 6 or before, it probably will not work in version 7 and above.

Specific API Changes

For the most part, the feature set has been maintained as much as possible.

However, some other cleanup and refactoring changes were made in v7 as well.

  • The set(), get(), and has() functions take options objects instead of positional booleans/integers for optional parameters.
  • size can be set explicitly on set().
  • cache.length was renamed to the more fitting cache.size.
  • Deprecations:
    • stale option -> allowStale
    • maxAge option -> ttl
    • length option -> sizeCalculation
    • length property -> size
    • del() method -> delete()
    • prune() method -> purgeStale()
    • reset() method -> clear()
  • The objects used by cache.load() and cache.dump() are incompatible with previous versions.
  • max and maxSize are now two separate options. (Previously, they were a single max option, which would be based on either count or computed size.)
  • The function assigned to the dispose option is now expected to have signature (value, key, reason) rather than (key, value), reversing the order of value and key.

v6 - 2020-07

  • Drop support for node v8 and earlier

v5 - 2018-11

  • Add updateAgeOnGet option
  • Guards around setting max/maxAge to non-numbers
  • Use classes, drop support for old nodes

v4 - 2015-12

  • Improve performance
  • add noDisposeOnSet option
  • feat(prune): allow users to proactively prune old entries
  • Use Symbols for private members
  • Add maxAge setter/getter

v3 - 2015-11

  • Add cache.rforEach
  • Allow non-string keys

v2 - 2012-08

  • add cache.pop()
  • add cache.peek()
  • add cache.keys()
  • add cache.values()
  • fix memory leak
  • add stale option to return stale values before deleting
  • use null-prototype object to avoid hazards
  • make options argument an object

v1 - 2010-05

  • initial implementation