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path-is-inside

v1.0.2

Published

Tests whether one path is inside another path

Downloads

42,215,424

Readme

Is This Path Inside This Other Path?

It turns out this question isn't trivial to answer using Node's built-in path APIs. A naive indexOf-based solution will fail sometimes on Windows, which is case-insensitive (see e.g. isaacs/npm#4214). You might then think to be clever with path.resolve, but you have to be careful to account for situations whether the paths have different drive letters, or else you'll cause bugs like isaacs/npm#4313. And let's not even get started on trailing slashes.

The path-is-inside package will give you a robust, cross-platform way of detecting whether a given path is inside another path.

Usage

Pretty simple. First the path being tested; then the potential parent. Like so:

var pathIsInside = require("path-is-inside");

pathIsInside("/x/y/z", "/x/y") // true
pathIsInside("/x/y", "/x/y/z") // false

Paths are considered to be inside themselves:

pathIsInside("/x/y", "/x/y"); // true

OS-Specific Behavior

Like Node's built-in path module, path-is-inside treats all file paths on Windows as case-insensitive, whereas it treats all file paths on *-nix operating systems as case-sensitive. Keep this in mind especially when working on a Mac, where, despite Node's defaults, the OS usually treats paths case-insensitively.

In practice, this means:

// On Windows

pathIsInside("C:\\X\\Y\\Z", "C:\\x\\y") // true

// On *-nix, including Mac OS X

pathIsInside("/X/Y/Z", "/x/y") // false