Awesome
as-tree
Print a list of paths as a tree of paths.
For example, given:
dir1/foo.txt
dir1/bar.txt
dir2/qux.txt
it will print:
.
├── dir1
│ ├── foo.txt
│ └── bar.txt
└── dir2
└── qux.txt
This tool is particularly useful when used with find
or fd
to produce such
a list of files. It's similar in spirit to tree
, but find
and fd
tend to
be more powerful when it comes to controlling which files to list.
Inspired by this feature request.
Install
There are pre-built binary releases in the Releases tab.
This project is written in Rust and builds under both Bazel and Cargo.
To install from source using Cargo:
cargo install -f --git https://github.com/jez/as-tree
To install from source using Bazel:
git clone https://github.com/jez/as-tree
cd as-tree
make install
Usage
❯ as-tree --help
Print a list of paths as a tree of paths.
Usage:
as-tree [options] [<filename>]
Arguments:
<filename> The file to read from. When omitted, reads from stdin.
Options:
--color (always|auto|never)
Whether to colorize the output [default: auto]
-f Prints the full path prefix for each file.
-h, --help Print this help message
Example:
find . -name '*.txt' | as-tree
Example
This tool is particularly useful with tools like fd
which can prune the list
of files to print better than tree
can alone.
❯ fd --exclude test | as-tree
.
├── LICENSE.md
├── Makefile
├── README.md
├── WORKSPACE
├── bazel
├── main
│ ├── BUILD
│ └── main.cc
├── third_party
│ ├── BUILD
│ ├── externals.bzl
│ └── spdlog.BUILD
└── tools
├── BUILD
├── clang.bzl
└── scripts
├── build_compilation_db.sh
└── generate_compdb_targets.sh
Developing
Running the tests requires Bazel. The ./bazel
shell script in this repo will
download and cache a specific version of Bazel for you. From there, Bazel knows
how to install all the dependencies it needs to build this project (including a
Rust toolchain).
# Run the tests:
./bazel test --test_output=errors //test
# To add a test, create two files:
#
# - test/fixtures/foo.txt
# - test/fixtures/foo.txt.exp
#
# The first file is the input to feed to `as-tree`, and the second is the
# expected output of `as-tree` on that input
# Update all the tests:
./bazel test //test:update
# When you add a new dependency, you'll need to add it with Bazel too:
cargo install cargo-raze # (one time setup)
cd third_party/cargo
cargo raze
TODO(jez)
- rustfmt / buildifier / shellcheck in CI
- Only use box drawing characters if the locale supports it
- See
man locale
,LC_CTYPE=C tree
- See
- Add a
-0
flag to support files with newlines in their name- Seriously why is this allowed?