nm-pkg-ls
v0.1.0
Published
Convert a directory tree to a JS object.
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directory-tree
Creates a JavaScript object representing a directory tree.
Install
$ npm install directory-tree
Usage
const dirTree = require("directory-tree");
const tree = dirTree("/some/path");
And you can also filter by an extensions regex: This is useful for including only certain types of files.
const dirTree = require("directory-tree");
const filteredTree = dirTree("/some/path", { extensions: /\.txt/ });
Example for filtering multiple extensions with Regex.
const dirTree = require("directory-tree");
const filteredTree = dirTree("/some/path", {
extensions: /\.(md|js|html|java|py|rb)$/
});
You can also exclude paths from the tree using a regex:
const dirTree = require("directory-tree");
const filteredTree = dirTree("/some/path", { exclude: /some_path_to_exclude/ });
You can also specify which additional attributes you would like to be included about each file/directory:
const dirTree = require('directory-tree');
const filteredTree = dirTree('/some/path', {attributes:['mode', 'mtime']});
The default attributes are [name, path]
for Files and [name, path, children]
for Directories
A callback function can be executed with each file that matches the extensions provided:
const PATH = require('path');
const dirTree = require('directory-tree');
const tree = dirTree('./test/test_data', {extensions:/\.txt$/}, (item, PATH, stats) => {
console.log(item);
});
The callback function takes the directory item (has path, name, size, and extension) and an instance of node path and an instance of node FS.stats.
You can also pass a callback function for directories:
const PATH = require('path');
const dirTree = require('directory-tree');
const tree = dirTree('./test/test_data', {extensions:/\.txt$/}, null, (item, PATH, stats) => {
console.log(item);
});
Options
exclude
: RegExp|RegExp[]
- A RegExp or an array of RegExp to test for exclusion of directories.
extensions
: RegExp
- A RegExp to test for exclusion of files with the matching extension.
attributes
: string[]
- Array of FS.stats attributes.
normalizePath
: Boolean
- If true, windows style paths will be normalized to unix style pathes (/ instead of \).
Result
Given a directory structured like this:
photos
├── summer
│ └── june
│ └── windsurf.jpg
└── winter
└── january
├── ski.png
└── snowboard.jpg
directory-tree
with attributes: ["size", "type", "extension"]
will return this JS object:
{
"path": "photos",
"name": "photos",
"size": 600,
"type": "directory",
"children": [
{
"path": "photos/summer",
"name": "summer",
"size": 400,
"type": "directory",
"children": [
{
"path": "photos/summer/june",
"name": "june",
"size": 400,
"type": "directory",
"children": [
{
"path": "photos/summer/june/windsurf.jpg",
"name": "windsurf.jpg",
"size": 400,
"type": "file",
"extension": ".jpg"
}
]
}
]
},
{
"path": "photos/winter",
"name": "winter",
"size": 200,
"type": "directory",
"children": [
{
"path": "photos/winter/january",
"name": "january",
"size": 200,
"type": "directory",
"children": [
{
"path": "photos/winter/january/ski.png",
"name": "ski.png",
"size": 100,
"type": "file",
"extension": ".png"
},
{
"path": "photos/winter/january/snowboard.jpg",
"name": "snowboard.jpg",
"size": 100,
"type": "file",
"extension": ".jpg"
}
]
}
]
}
]
}
Note
Device, FIFO and socket files are ignored.
Files to which the user does not have permissions are included in the directory tree, however, directories to which the user does not have permissions, along with all of its contained files, are completely ignored.
Dev
To run tests go the package root in your CLI and run,
$ npm test
Make sure you have the dev dependencies installed (e.g. npm install .
)
Node version
This project requires at least Node v4.2.
Check out version 0.1.1
if you need support for older versions of Node.