condition-based-waiting
1
总安装量
1
周安装量
#45818
全站排名
安装命令
npx skills add https://github.com/rileyhilliard/claude-essentials --skill condition-based-waiting
Agent 安装分布
amp
1
opencode
1
kimi-cli
1
github-copilot
1
antigravity
1
Skill 文档
Condition-Based Waiting
Use with: writing-tests skill for overall test guidance. This skill focuses on timing-based flakiness.
Related: If tests pass alone but fail concurrently, the problem may be shared state, not timing. See fixing-flaky-tests skill for diagnosis.
Overview
Flaky tests often guess at timing with arbitrary delays. This creates race conditions where tests pass on fast machines but fail under load or in CI.
Core principle: Wait for the actual condition you care about, not a guess about how long it takes.
When to use
Test has arbitrary delay (setTimeout/sleep)?
â
ââ Testing actual timing (debounce, throttle)?
â ââ Yes â Keep timeout, document WHY
â
ââ No â Replace with condition-based waiting
Use when:
- Tests have arbitrary delays (
setTimeout,sleep,time.sleep()) - Tests are flaky with timing-related errors
- Waiting for async operations to complete
Don’t use when:
- Testing actual timing behavior (debounce, throttle, intervals)
- Problem is shared state between tests (use
fixing-flaky-tests)
Core pattern
// Bad: Guessing at timing
await new Promise((r) => setTimeout(r, 50));
const result = getResult();
expect(result).toBeDefined();
// Good: Waiting for condition (returns the result)
const result = await waitFor(() => getResult(), 'result to be available');
expect(result).toBeDefined();
Implementation
Prefer framework built-ins when available:
- Testing Library:
findByqueries,waitFor - Playwright: auto-waiting,
expect(locator).toBeVisible() - pytest:
asyncio.wait_for, tenacity
Custom polling fallback when built-ins aren’t enough:
async function waitFor<T>(
condition: () => T | undefined | null | false,
description: string,
timeoutMs = 5000
): Promise<T> {
const startTime = Date.now();
while (true) {
const result = condition();
if (result) return result;
if (Date.now() - startTime > timeoutMs) {
throw new Error(`Timeout waiting for ${description} after ${timeoutMs}ms`);
}
await new Promise((r) => setTimeout(r, 50)); // Poll interval
}
}
Common use cases:
waitFor(() => events.find(e => e.type === 'DONE'), 'done event')waitFor(() => machine.state === 'ready', 'ready state')waitFor(() => items.length >= 5, '5+ items')
Language-specific patterns
| Stack | Reference |
|---|---|
| Python (pytest, asyncio, tenacity) | references/python.md |
| TypeScript (Jest, Testing Library, Playwright) | references/typescript.md |
Common mistakes
| Mistake | Problem | Fix |
|---|---|---|
| Polling too fast | setTimeout(check, 1) wastes CPU |
Poll every 50ms |
| No timeout | Loop forever if condition never met | Always include timeout |
| Stale data | Caching state before loop | Call getter inside loop |
| No description | “Timeout” with no context | Include what you waited for |
When arbitrary timeout IS correct
// Tool ticks every 100ms - need 2 ticks to verify partial output
await waitForEvent(manager, "TOOL_STARTED"); // First: wait for condition
await new Promise((r) => setTimeout(r, 200)); // Then: wait for timed behavior
// 200ms = 2 ticks at 100ms intervals - documented and justified
Requirements:
- First wait for triggering condition
- Based on known timing (not guessing)
- Comment explaining WHY