findit
v2.0.0
Published
walk a directory tree recursively with events
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findit
Recursively walk directory trees. Think /usr/bin/find
.
example
var finder = require('findit')(process.argv[2] || '.');
var path = require('path');
finder.on('directory', function (dir, stat, stop) {
var base = path.basename(dir);
if (base === '.git' || base === 'node_modules') stop()
else console.log(dir + '/')
});
finder.on('file', function (file, stat) {
console.log(file);
});
finder.on('link', function (link, stat) {
console.log(link);
});
methods
var find = require('findit')
var finder = find(basedir, opts)
Return an event emitter finder
that performs a recursive walk starting at
basedir
.
If you set opts.followSymlinks
, symlinks will be followed. Otherwise, a
'link'
event will fire but symlinked directories will not be walked.
If basedir
is actually a non-directory regular file, findit emits a single
"file" event for it then emits "end".
You can optionally specify a custom
fs
implementation with opts.fs
. opts.fs
should implement:
opts.fs.readdir(dir, cb)
opts.fs.lstat(dir, cb)
opts.fs.readlink(dir, cb)
- optional if your stat objects fromopts.fs.lstat
never return true forstat.isSymbolicLink()
finder.stop()
Stop the traversal. A "stop"
event will fire and then no more events will
fire.
events
finder.on('path', function (file, stat) {})
For each file, directory, and symlink file
, this event fires.
finder.on('file', function (file, stat) {})
For each file, this event fires.
finder.on('directory', function (dir, stat, stop) {})
For each directory, this event fires with the path dir
.
Your callback may call stop()
on the first tick to tell findit to stop walking
the current directory.
finder.on('link', function (file, stat) {})
For each symlink, this event fires.
finder.on('readlink', function (src, dst) {})
Every time a symlink is read when opts.followSymlinks
is on, this event fires.
finder.on('end', function () {})
When the recursive walk is complete unless finder.stop()
was called, this
event fires.
finder.on('stop', function () {})
When finder.stop()
is called, this event fires.
finder.on('error', function (err) {})
Whenever there is an error, this event fires. You can choose to ignore errors or
stop the traversal using finder.stop()
.
You can always get the source of the error by checking err.path
.
install
With npm do:
npm install findit
license
MIT