I've been driven to insanity by node filesystem watcher wrappers. Sane aims to be fast, small, and reliable file system watcher. It does that by:
- By default stays away from fs polling because it's very slow and cpu intensive
- Uses
fs.watch
by default and sensibly works around the various issues - Maintains a consistent API across different platforms
- Where
fs.watch
is not reliable you have the choice of using the following alternatives:- the facebook watchman library
- polling
$ npm install sane
Don't worry too much about choosing the correct mode upfront because sane maintains the same API across all modes and will be easy to switch.
- If you're only supporting Linux and OS X,
watchman
would be the most reliable mode - If you're using node > v0.10.0 use the default mode
- If you're running OS X and you're watching a lot of directories and you're running into nodejs/node-v0.x-archive#5463, use
watchman
- If you're in an environment where native file system events aren't available (like Vagrant), you should use polling
- Otherwise, the default mode should work well for you
Watches a directory and all it's descendant directories for changes, deletions, and additions on files and directories.
var watcher = sane('path/to/dir', {glob: ['**/*.js', '**/*.css']});
watcher.on('ready', function () { console.log('ready') });
watcher.on('change', function (filepath, root, stat) { console.log('file changed', filepath); });
watcher.on('add', function (filepath, root, stat) { console.log('file added', filepath); });
watcher.on('delete', function (filepath, root) { console.log('file deleted', filepath); });
// close
watcher.close();
options:
glob
: a single string glob pattern or an array of them.poll
: puts the watcher in polling mode. Under the hood that meansfs.watchFile
.watchman
: makes the watcher use watchman.dot
: enables watching files/directories that start with a dot.
For the glob pattern documentation, see minimatch.
If you choose to use watchman
you'll have to install watchman yourself).
The default watcher class. Uses fs.watch
under the hood, and takes the same options as sane(options, dir)
.
The watchman watcher class. Takes the same options as sane(options, dir)
.
The polling watcher class. Takes the same options as sane(options, dir)
with the addition of:
- interval: indicates how often the files should be polled. (passed to fs.watchFile)
Stops watching.
Emits the following events:
All events are passed the file/dir path relative to the root directory
ready
when the program is ready to detect events in the directorychange
when a file changesadd
when a file or directory has been addeddelete
when a file or directory has been deleted
This module includes a simple command line interface, which you can install with npm install sane -g
.
Usage: sane <command> [...directory] [--glob=<filePattern>] [--poll] [--watchman] [--dot] [--wait=<seconds>]
OPTIONS:
--glob=<filePattern>
A single string glob pattern or an array of them.
--poll, -p
Use polling mode.
--watchman, -w
Use watchman (if available).
--dot, -d
Enables watching files/directories that start with a dot.
--wait=<seconds>
Duration, in seconds, that watching will be disabled
after running <command>. Setting this option will
throttle calls to <command> for the specified duration.
It will watch the given directory
and run the given every time a file changes.
sane 'echo "A command ran"'
sane 'echo "A command ran"' --glob='**/*.css'
sane 'echo "A command ran"' site/assets/css --glob='**/*.css'
sane 'echo "A command ran"' --wait=3
sane 'echo "A command ran"' -p
MIT
The CLI was originally based on the watch CLI. Watch is licensed under the Apache License Version 2.0.