File Forge
File Forge is a powerful command‑line tool for deep analysis of codebases. It scans your project (or GitHub repository) and generates comprehensive markdown reports that include a summary, a visual directory structure, file contents, and even dependency graphs. These reports are designed to feed AI reasoning models and support a variety of advanced use cases.
Note: File Forge works both with GitHub URLs (by cloning/updating a cached repository) and local directories. It also supports filtering files by patterns, searching for specific content, and advanced output options like piping, clipboard copy, and XML wrapping.
Features
- Comprehensive Analysis: Automatically generate detailed reports with a summary, directory structure, and full file content.
- Smart Filtering: Use glob patterns with
--include
and --exclude
to select exactly which files to analyze.
- Content Search: Find files by name using
--find
(OR behavior) or require specific strings in file content using --require
(AND behavior).
- Git Integration: Analyze specific branches (
--branch
) or commits (--commit
) for GitHub-hosted repositories.
- Dependency Graphs: Generate visual dependency graphs using the
--graph
flag.
- Flexible Output Options:
- Pipe output to stdout with
--pipe
- Open results in your default editor with
--open
- Copy output to clipboard using
--clipboard
- Generate Markdown output with
--markdown
(default output is XML)
- Control whitespace/indentation with
--whitespace
- Preview output in terminal without saving using
--dry-run
/ -D
- Advanced Modes:
- Bulk Mode: Append AI processing instructions with
--bulk
- Debug/Verbose: Enable additional logging with
--debug
or --verbose
- AI Templates: Apply prompt templates for AI processing with
--template
- Token Limit: Prevents processing excessively large projects (over ~200k tokens) by default. Use
--allow-large
to override this check for very large codebases.
- Configuration File: Define default options and reusable named command sets in
ffg.config.jsonc
.
Installation
Install File Forge globally with your favorite package manager:
pnpm add -g @johnlindquist/file-forge
npm install -g @johnlindquist/file-forge
Usage Examples
Analyze Current Directory
ffg
ffg src
ffg "src/**/*.ts"
Analyze a GitHub Repository
ffg https://github.com/owner/repo --branch develop
Analyze a Local Directory
ffg /path/to/local/project
Filter Files by Pattern
Use glob patterns to precisely control which files are included or excluded.
ffg --include "*.ts"
ffg --include "**/*.ts"
ffg --exclude "**/*test.*,node_modules/**"
ffg src --include "**/*.ts" --exclude "**/*.spec.ts,**/__tests__/**"
Note:
- A pattern like
*.ts
matches files only in the immediate directory being scanned.
- Use
**/*
to match files recursively through all subdirectories (e.g., **/*.ts
).
- You can provide multiple patterns separated by commas (e.g.,
"*.ts,*.js"
) or by using multiple --include
/ --exclude
flags (e.g., --include "*.ts" --include "*.js"
).
- You can also include specific files using their absolute paths alongside glob patterns (e.g.,
ffg --include "**/*.ts,/Users/me/Documents/important_config.json"
).
Search for Specific Content
- Find files containing ANY of the terms:
ffg src --find "console,debug"
- Require files to have ALL of the terms:
ffg src --require "console,log"
Generate a Dependency Graph
ffg --graph src/index.js
Advanced Options
- Pipe output:
ffg src --pipe
- Copy to clipboard:
ffg src --clipboard
- Generate Markdown output (default is XML):
ffg src --markdown
- Enable whitespace/indentation in output:
ffg src --whitespace
- Preview output without saving (Dry Run):
ffg src --dry-run
ffg src -D
- Allow large projects (override token limit):
ffg /path/to/very/large/project --allow-large
- Bulk Analysis Mode:
ffg src --bulk
- Enable Debug/Verbose Output:
ffg src --debug
ffg src --verbose
- Command Traceability:
The original command used to generate the output is now included in the XML output for better traceability.
<project>
<source>/path/to/source</source>
<timestamp>20240324-123456</timestamp>
<command>ffg src --verbose</command>
</project>
- Using AI Prompt Templates:
ffg --list-templates
ffg src --template refactor
ffg src --template test --include "*.js" --exclude "*.test.js"
Configuration File (ffg.config.jsonc
)
File Forge supports a configuration file named ffg.config.jsonc
(or ffg.config.json
) in the root of your project (the directory where you run ffg
). This allows you to define default options and create reusable, named command configurations.
Features:
- Default Command: Specify a
defaultCommand
object whose flags will be applied automatically whenever ffg
is run without the --use
flag.
- Named Commands: Define multiple named command configurations under the
commands
object. Invoke a specific named command using the --use <command-name>
flag.
- JSONC Support: Use comments in your
ffg.config.jsonc
file for better documentation.
- Precedence: Command-line flags always take precedence over configuration file settings. If using
--use <name>
, the named command's settings override defaultCommand
settings.
- Array Merging: For array flags like
--include
, --exclude
, --find
, --require
, and --extension
, values provided on the command line are merged with (added to) the values defined in the applied configuration (either defaultCommand
or the named command used with --use
).
- Saving Commands (
--save
/ --save-as
): You can easily save the current set of command-line flags to your ffg.config.jsonc
file:
--save
: Saves the current flags (excluding transient flags like --pipe
, --debug
, etc.) as the new defaultCommand
, overwriting any existing default.
--save-as <name>
: Saves the current flags under a new named command (or overwrites an existing one with the same name) in the commands
section.
Example ffg.config.jsonc
:
{
// Default settings applied when no --use flag is given
"defaultCommand": {
"exclude": ["node_modules/**", "dist/**", "*.log"],
"ignore": true, // Respect .gitignore by default
"skipArtifacts": true
},
// Reusable named command configurations
"commands": {
"ts-analysis": {
"include": ["src/**/*.ts"],
"exclude": ["**/*.test.ts", "**/*.spec.ts"], // Merged with defaultCommand exclude on use
"require": ["import", "export"],
"verbose": true
},
"docs-only": {
"include": ["**/*.md", "docs/**"],
"markdown": true
},
"find-todos": {
// Inherits defaults from defaultCommand if not overridden
"find": ["TODO", "FIXME"],
"include": ["src/**", "scripts/**"]
}
}
}
Usage with Config:
ffg .
ffg --use ts-analysis
ffg --use ts-analysis --verbose=false --include "tests/**/*.ts"
ffg --use find-todos
ffg . --include "**/*.ts" --exclude "node_modules/**" --verbose --save
ffg . --require "test" --exclude "dist/**" --save-as test-setup
AI Prompt Templates
File Forge includes a set of prompt templates that can be applied to your analysis results. These templates are designed to guide AI models (like GPT-4 or Claude) in performing specific tasks on your code.
Available Template Categories
Using Templates
-
List all available templates:
ffg --list-templates
-
Apply a template to your analysis:
ffg src --template refactor
-
The template will be included in the output, with your code analysis inserted in the appropriate place.
-
When you view the output in an editor or copy it to the clipboard, you can then paste it to an AI assistant to get the desired result.
Customizing Templates
You can create your own templates or override the built-in ones by creating individual template files in your File Forge configuration directory:
- macOS:
~/Library/Preferences/@johnlindquist/file-forge/templates/
- Linux:
~/.config/@johnlindquist/file-forge/templates/
- Windows:
%APPDATA%/@johnlindquist/file-forge/templates/
Each template is a Markdown (.md
) file with front-matter containing metadata and a body containing the template content. Here's an example template custom-explain.md
:
---
name: custom-explain
category: documentation
description: My custom explanation template
---
**Goal:** Explain this code in simple terms.
**Context:**
{{ code }}
<instructions>
- Explain what this code does in simple language
- Focus on the main functionality
</instructions>
<task>
Provide a clear explanation of the code for a non-technical audience.
</task>
When you run File Forge, it will automatically load and merge your custom templates with the built-in ones.
Viewing Help
For a complete list of options and examples, run:
ffg --help
Configuration & Development
Analysis results and configuration are stored in:
- macOS:
~/Library/Preferences/@johnlindquist/file-forge/config/
- Linux:
~/.config/@johnlindquist/file-forge/config/
- Windows:
%APPDATA%/@johnlindquist/file-forge/config/
To contribute or run File Forge locally:
git clone https://github.com/johnlindquist/file-forge.git
cd @johnlindquist/file-forge
pnpm install
pnpm build
License
This project is licensed under the MIT License – see the LICENSE file for details.
Test Optimization
The test suite has been optimized to run faster using several strategies:
Parallel Test Execution
Tests can now run concurrently, leveraging multiple CPU cores for faster test execution. This is enabled in vitest.config.ts
by removing the sequence: { concurrent: false }
option.
Direct Function Testing
Instead of spawning a new process for each test (which is slow), many tests now use the direct function testing approach through utils/directTestRunner.ts
. This utility allows tests to call the main application functions directly while capturing their output.
Benefits:
- Much faster test execution (typically 5-10x faster)
- Same test coverage and assertions
- No process spawning overhead
To migrate an existing test to use direct function testing:
-
Run the test analysis to see candidates for optimization:
pnpm test:optimize:analyze
-
Migrate a specific test file:
pnpm test:optimize test/your-test-file.test.ts
-
Verify the test still passes and check the performance improvement.
Batch Migration
To optimize multiple tests at once, you can use the batch processing options:
-
Analyze and run a dry-run batch (no changes applied):
pnpm test:optimize:batch:dry
-
Fast batch migration (skips performance measurement):
pnpm test:optimize:batch:fast
-
Full batch migration with performance measurements:
pnpm test:optimize:batch
Additional options:
- Use
--force
to re-optimize already migrated files
- Use
--dry-run
to see what would be changed without making actual changes
- Use
--skip-measure
to skip performance measurements (faster)
Best Practices
- Use
beforeAll
instead of beforeEach
when the setup only needs to be done once for all tests in a describe block
- For expensive file operations, consider mocking the filesystem
- Use the
waitForFile
helper with appropriate timeouts for file-based tests
- Run optimized test files with
pnpm test:direct
to verify they still work
Additional Tools
scripts/optimize-tests.js
: Helper script to analyze and optimize test files
utils/directTestRunner.ts
: Direct function execution utility
test/helpers/fileWaiter.ts
: Optimized file waiting utility with adaptive polling
Inspiration