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watch -- Utilities for watching file trees in node.js

Install

<pre> npm install watch </pre>

Purpose

The intention of this module is provide tools that make managing the watching of file & directory trees easier.

watch.watchTree(root, [options,] callback)

The first argument is the directory root you want to watch.

The options object is passed to fs.watchFile but can also be used to provide two additional watchTree specific options:

The callback takes 3 arguments. The first is the file that was modified. The second is the current stat object for that file and the third is the previous stat object.

When a file is new the previous stat object is null.

When watchTree is finished walking the tree and adding all the listeners it passes the file hash (keys are the file/directory names and the values are the current stat objects) as the first argument and null as both the previous and current stat object arguments.

<pre> watch.watchTree('/home/mikeal', function (f, curr, prev) { if (typeof f == "object" && prev === null && curr === null) { // Finished walking the tree } else if (prev === null) { // f is a new file } else if (curr.nlink === 0) { // f was removed } else { // f was changed } }) </pre>

watch.unwatchTree(root)

Unwatch a previously watched directory root using watch.watchTree.

watch.createMonitor(root, [options,] callback)

This function creates an EventEmitter that gives notifications for different changes that happen to the file and directory tree under the given root argument.

The options object is passed to watch.watchTree.

The callback receives the monitor object.

The monitor object contains a property, files, which is a hash of files and directories as keys with the current stat object as the value.

The monitor has the following events.

The monitor can be stopped using .stop (calls unwatchTree).

<pre> var watch = require('watch') watch.createMonitor('/home/mikeal', function (monitor) { monitor.files['/home/mikeal/.zshrc'] // Stat object for my zshrc. monitor.on("created", function (f, stat) { // Handle new files }) monitor.on("changed", function (f, curr, prev) { // Handle file changes }) monitor.on("removed", function (f, stat) { // Handle removed files }) monitor.stop(); // Stop watching }) </pre>

CLI

This module includes a simple command line interface, which you can install with npm install watch -g.

Usage: watch <command> [...directory] [OPTIONS]

OPTIONS:
    --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.

    --filter=<file>
        Path to a require-able .js file that exports a filter
        function to be passed to watchTreeOptions.filter.
        Path is resolved relative to process.cwd().

    --interval=<seconds>
        Specifies the interval duration in seconds, the time period between polling for file changes.

    --ignoreDotFiles, -d
        Ignores dot or hidden files in the watch [directory].

     --ignoreUnreadable, -u
        Silently ignores files that cannot be read within the
        watch [directory].

     --ignoreDirectoryPattern=<regexp>, -p
        Silently skips directories that match the regular
        expression.

It will watch the given directories (defaults to the current working directory) with watchTree and run the given command every time a file changes.

Examples

As stated above the pattern is:

watch <command> [...directory] [OPTIONS]

To run the watch command in the terminal you have to write the following:

watch 'npm run test -s' directory

As the command has to be written in quotation marks Windows users may need to use double quotes rather than single quotes

watch "npm run test -s" directory

Note: Because Windows users may need to use double quotes rather than single quotes they need to escape the them in npm scripts

"scripts": {
    "watch:osx": "watch 'npm run test -s' source"
    "watch:windows": "watch \"npm run test -s\" source",
}

Contributing

Releasing

On the latest clean master:

npm run release:major
npm run release:minor
npm run release:patch