Files
hive/frontend/node_modules/inflight/README.md
anthonyrawlins 85bf1341f3 Add comprehensive frontend UI and distributed infrastructure
Frontend Enhancements:
- Complete React TypeScript frontend with modern UI components
- Distributed workflows management interface with real-time updates
- Socket.IO integration for live agent status monitoring
- Agent management dashboard with cluster visualization
- Project management interface with metrics and task tracking
- Responsive design with proper error handling and loading states

Backend Infrastructure:
- Distributed coordinator for multi-agent workflow orchestration
- Cluster management API with comprehensive agent operations
- Enhanced database models for agents and projects
- Project service for filesystem-based project discovery
- Performance monitoring and metrics collection
- Comprehensive API documentation and error handling

Documentation:
- Complete distributed development guide (README_DISTRIBUTED.md)
- Comprehensive development report with architecture insights
- System configuration templates and deployment guides

The platform now provides a complete web interface for managing the distributed AI cluster
with real-time monitoring, workflow orchestration, and agent coordination capabilities.

🤖 Generated with [Claude Code](https://claude.ai/code)

Co-Authored-By: Claude <noreply@anthropic.com>
2025-07-10 08:41:59 +10:00

991 B

inflight

Add callbacks to requests in flight to avoid async duplication

USAGE

var inflight = require('inflight')

// some request that does some stuff
function req(key, callback) {
  // key is any random string.  like a url or filename or whatever.
  //
  // will return either a falsey value, indicating that the
  // request for this key is already in flight, or a new callback
  // which when called will call all callbacks passed to inflightk
  // with the same key
  callback = inflight(key, callback)

  // If we got a falsey value back, then there's already a req going
  if (!callback) return

  // this is where you'd fetch the url or whatever
  // callback is also once()-ified, so it can safely be assigned
  // to multiple events etc.  First call wins.
  setTimeout(function() {
    callback(null, key)
  }, 100)
}

// only assigns a single setTimeout
// when it dings, all cbs get called
req('foo', cb1)
req('foo', cb2)
req('foo', cb3)
req('foo', cb4)