A nice way is to make use of a promise library like Q or Bluebird and then implement a promiseWhile like this.
var Promise = require('bluebird');
var promiseWhile = function(condition, action) {
var resolver = Promise.defer();
var loop = function() {
if (!condition()) return resolver.resolve();
return Promise.cast(action())
.then(loop)
.catch(resolver.reject);
};
process.nextTick(loop);
return resolver.promise;
};
Usage:
var sum = 0,
stop = 10;
promiseWhile(function() {
// Condition for stopping
return sum < stop;
}, function() {
// Action to run, should return a promise
return new Promise(function(resolve, reject) {
// Arbitrary 250ms async method to simulate async process
// In real usage it could just be a normal async event that
// returns a Promise.
setTimeout(function() {
sum++;
// Print out the sum thus far to show progress
console.log(sum);
resolve();
}, 250);
});
}).then(function() {
// Notice we can chain it because it's a Promise,
// this will run after completion of the promiseWhile Promise!
console.log("Done");
});