ZenFS
ZenFS is a file system that emulates the NodeJS filesystem API.
It works using a system of backends, which are used by ZenFS to store and retrieve data. ZenFS can also integrate with other tools.
ZenFS is a fork of BrowserFS.
Backends
ZenFS is modular and extensible. The core includes two built-in backends:
InMemory
: Stores files in-memory. This is cleared when the runtime ends (e.g. a user navigating away from a web page or a Node process exiting)Overlay
: Use read-only file system as read-write by overlaying a writable file system on top of it. (copy-on-write)
ZenFS supports a number of other backends. Many are provided as separate packages under @zenfs
. More backends can be defined by separate libraries by extending the FileSystem
class and/or providing a Backend
object.
For more information, see the docs.
Installing
npm install @zenfs/core
Usage
[!NOTE]
The examples are written in ESM.
If you are using CJS, you can require
the package.
If using a browser environment without support for type=module
in script
tags, you can add a script
tag to your HTML pointing to the browser.min.js
and use ZenFS with the global ZenFS
object.
import fs from '@zenfs/core';
fs.writeFileSync('/test.txt', 'Cool, I can do this in any JS environment (including browsers)!');
const contents = fs.readFileSync('/test.txt', 'utf-8');
console.log(contents);
Using different and/or multiple backends
A single InMemory
backend is created by default, mounted on /
.
You can configure ZenFS to use a different backend and mount multiple backends. It is strongly recommended to do so using the configure
function.
You can use multiple backends by passing an object to configure
which maps paths to file systems.
The following example mounts a zip file to /zip
, in-memory storage to /tmp
, and IndexedDB to /home
. Note that /
has the default in-memory backend.
import { configure, InMemory } from '@zenfs/core';
import { IndexedDB } from '@zenfs/dom';
import { Zip } from '@zenfs/zip';
const zipData = await (await fetch('mydata.zip')).arrayBuffer();
await configure({
'/mnt/zip': { backend: Zip, zipData },
'/tmp': InMemory,
'/home': IndexedDB,
};
[!TIP]
When configuring a mount point, you can pass in
- A
Backend
object, if the backend has no required options - An object that has the options accepted by the backend and a
backend
property which is a Backend
object - A
FileSystem
instance (not recommended)
Here is an example that mounts the WebStorage
backend from @zenfs/dom
on /
:
import { configure, fs } from '@zenfs/core';
import { WebStorage } from '@zenfs/dom';
await configure({ backend: WebStorage });
if (!fs.existsSync('/test.txt')) {
fs.writeFileSync('/test.txt', 'This will persist across reloads!');
}
const contents = fs.readFileSync('/test.txt', 'utf-8');
console.log(contents);
FS Promises
The FS promises API is exposed as promises
.
import { configure } from '@zenfs/core';
import { exists, writeFile } from '@zenfs/core/promises';
import { IndexedDB } from '@zenfs/dom';
await configure({ '/': IndexedDB });
const exists = await exists('/myfile.txt');
if (!exists) {
await writeFile('/myfile.txt', 'Lots of persistant data');
}
[!NOTE]
You can import the promises API using:
- Exports from
@zenfs/core/promises
- The
promises
export from @zenfs/core
fs.promises
on the exported fs
from @zenfs/core
.
Mounting and unmounting, creating backends
If you would like to create backends without configure (e.g. to do something dynamic at runtime), you may do so by importing the backend and calling resolveMountConfig
with it.
You can then mount and unmount the backend instance by using mount
and umount
.
import { configure, resolveMountConfig, InMemory } from '@zenfs/core';
import { IndexedDB } from '@zenfs/dom';
import { Zip } from '@zenfs/zip';
await configure({
'/tmp': InMemory,
'/home': IndexedDB,
};
fs.mkdirSync('/mnt');
const res = await fetch('mydata.zip');
const zipfs = await resolveMountConfig({ backend: Zip, zipData: await res.arrayBuffer() });
fs.mount('/mnt/zip', zipfs);
fs.umount('/mnt/zip');
[!WARNING]
Instances of backends follow the internal ZenFS API. You should never use a backend's methods unless you are extending a backend.
Using with bundlers
ZenFS exports a drop-in for Node's fs
module (up to the version of @types/node
in package.json), so you can use it for your bundler of preference using the default export.
Building
- Make sure you have Node and NPM installed. You must have Node v18 or newer.
- Install dependencies with
npm install
- Build using
npm run build
- You can find the built code in
dist
.
Testing
Run unit tests with npm test
.