Menu
×
   ❮     
HTML CSS JAVASCRIPT SQL PYTHON JAVA PHP HOW TO W3.CSS C C++ C# BOOTSTRAP REACT MYSQL JQUERY EXCEL XML DJANGO NUMPY PANDAS NODEJS DSA TYPESCRIPT ANGULAR GIT POSTGRESQL MONGODB ASP AI R GO KOTLIN SASS VUE GEN AI SCIPY CYBERSECURITY DATA SCIENCE INTRO TO PROGRAMMING BASH RUST

Node.js Tutorial

Node HOME Node Intro Node Get Started Node JS Requirements Node.js vs Browser Node Cmd Line Node V8 Engine Node Architecture Node Event Loop

Asynchronous

Node Async Node Promises Node Async/Await Node Errors Handling

Module Basics

Node Modules Node ES Modules Node NPM Node package.json Node NPM Scripts Node Manage Dep Node Publish Packages

Core Modules

HTTP Module HTTPS Module File System (fs) Path Module OS Module URL Module Events Module Stream Module Buffer Module Crypto Module Timers Module DNS Module Assert Module Util Module Readline Module

JS & TS Features

Node ES6+ Node Process Node TypeScript Node Adv. TypeScript Node Lint & Formatting

Building Applications

Node Frameworks Express.js Middleware Concept REST API Design API Authentication Node.js with Frontend

Database Integration

MySQL Get Started MySQL Create Database MySQL Create Table MySQL Insert Into MySQL Select From MySQL Where MySQL Order By MySQL Delete MySQL Drop Table MySQL Update MySQL Limit MySQL Join
MongoDB Get Started MongoDB Create DB MongoDB Collection MongoDB Insert MongoDB Find MongoDB Query MongoDB Sort MongoDB Delete MongoDB Drop Collection MongoDB Update MongoDB Limit MongoDB Join

Advanced Communication

GraphQL Socket.IO WebSockets

Testing & Debugging

Node Adv. Debugging Node Testing Apps Node Test Frameworks Node Test Runner

Node.js Deployment

Node Env Variables Node Dev vs Prod Node CI/CD Node Security Node Deployment

Perfomance & Scaling

Node Logging Node Monitoring Node Performance Child Process Module Cluster Module Worker Threads

Node.js Advanced

Microservices Node WebAssembly HTTP2 Module Perf_hooks Module VM Module TLS/SSL Module Net Module Zlib Module Real-World Examples

Hardware & IoT

RasPi Get Started RasPi GPIO Introduction RasPi Blinking LED RasPi LED & Pushbutton RasPi Flowing LEDs RasPi WebSocket RasPi RGB LED WebSocket RasPi Components

Node.js Reference

Built-in Modules EventEmitter (events) Worker (cluster) Cipher (crypto) Decipher (crypto) DiffieHellman (crypto) ECDH (crypto) Hash (crypto) Hmac (crypto) Sign (crypto) Verify (crypto) Socket (dgram, net, tls) ReadStream (fs, stream) WriteStream (fs, stream) Server (http, https, net, tls) Agent (http, https) Request (http) Response (http) Message (http) Interface (readline)

Resources & Tools

Node.js Compiler Node.js Server Node.js Quiz Node.js Exercises Node.js Syllabus Node.js Study Plan Node.js Certificate

Node.js Event Loop


What is the Event Loop?

The event loop is what makes Node.js non-blocking and efficient.

It handles asynchronous operations by delegating tasks to the system and processing their results through callbacks, allowing Node.js to manage thousands of concurrent connections with a single thread.


How the Event Loop Works

Node.js follows these steps to handle operations:

  1. Execute the main script (synchronous code)
  2. Process any microtasks (Promises, process.nextTick)
  3. Execute timers (setTimeout, setInterval)
  4. Run I/O callbacks (file system, network operations)
  5. Process setImmediate callbacks
  6. Handle close events (like socket.on('close'))

Example: Event Loop Order

console.log('First');
setTimeout(() => console.log('Third'), 0);
Promise.resolve().then(() => console.log('Second'));
console.log('Fourth');
Try it Yourself »

This demonstrates the execution order:

  1. Sync code runs first ('First', 'Fourth')
  2. Microtasks (Promises) run before the next phase ('Second')
  3. Timers execute last ('Third')


Event Loop Phases

The event loop processes different types of callbacks in this order:

  1. Timers: setTimeout, setInterval
  2. I/O Callbacks: Completed I/O operations
  3. Poll: Retrieve new I/O events
  4. Check: setImmediate callbacks
  5. Close: Cleanup callbacks (like socket.on('close'))

Note: Between each phase, Node.js runs microtasks (Promises) and process.nextTick callbacks.

Example: Event Loop Phases

console.log('1. Start');

// Next tick queue
process.nextTick(() => console.log('2. Next tick'));

// Microtask queue (Promise)
Promise.resolve().then(() => console.log('3. Promise'));

// Timer phase
setTimeout(() => console.log('4. Timeout'), 0);

// Check phase
setImmediate(() => console.log('5. Immediate'));

console.log('6. End');
Try it Yourself »

The output will be:

1. Start
6. End
2. Next tick
3. Promise
4. Timeout
5. Immediate

This shows the priority order: sync code > nextTick > Promises > Timers > Check phase.


Why is the Event Loop Important?

The event loop enables Node.js to handle thousands of concurrent connections with a single thread, making it perfect for:

  • Real-time applications
  • APIs and microservices
  • Data streaming
  • Chat applications

Summary

  • Node.js uses an event loop to handle async operations
  • Different types of callbacks have different priorities
  • Microtasks (Promises) run before the next event loop phase
  • This non-blocking model enables high concurrency



×

Contact Sales

If you want to use W3Schools services as an educational institution, team or enterprise, send us an e-mail:
sales@w3schools.com

Report Error

If you want to report an error, or if you want to make a suggestion, send us an e-mail:
help@w3schools.com

W3Schools is optimized for learning and training. Examples might be simplified to improve reading and learning. Tutorials, references, and examples are constantly reviewed to avoid errors, but we cannot warrant full correctness of all content. While using W3Schools, you agree to have read and accepted our terms of use, cookie and privacy policy.

Copyright 1999-2025 by Refsnes Data. All Rights Reserved. W3Schools is Powered by W3.CSS.