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folder-hash

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    folder-hash

Create a hash checksum over a folder and its content - its children and their content


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Create a hash checksum over a folder or a file.
The hashes are propagated upwards, the hash that is returned for a folder is generated over all the hashes of its children.
The hashes are generated with the sha1 algorithm and returned in base64 encoding by default.

Each file returns a name and a hash, and each folder returns additionally an array of children (file or folder elements).

Usage

First, install folder-hash with npm install --save folder-hash or yarn add folder-hash.

Simple example

To see differences to the last version of this package, I would create hashes over all .js and .json files. But ignore everything inside folders starting wiht a dot, and also from the folders node_modules, test_coverage. The structure of the options object is documented on this page.
This example is also stored in ./examples/readme-example1.js.

const { hashElement } = require('folder-hash');

const options = {
    folders: { exclude: ['.*', 'node_modules', 'test_coverage'] },
    files: { include: ['*.js', '*.json'] }
};

console.log('Creating a hash over the current folder:');
hashElement('.', options)
    .then(hash => {
        console.log(hash.toString());
    })
    .catch(error => {
        return console.error('hashing failed:', error);
    });

The returned information looks for example like this:

Creating a hash over the current folder:
{ name: '.', hash: 'YZOrKDx9LCLd8X39PoFTflXGpRU=,'
  children: [
    { name: 'examples', hash: 'aG8wg8np5SGddTnw1ex74PC9EnM=,'
      children: [
        { name: 'readme-example1.js', hash: 'Xlw8S2iomJWbxOJmmDBnKcauyQ8=' }
        { name: 'readme-with-callbacks.js', hash: 'ybvTHLCQBvWHeKZtGYZK7+6VPUw=' }
        { name: 'readme-with-promises.js', hash: '43i9tE0kSFyJYd9J2O0nkKC+tmI=' }
        { name: 'sample.js', hash: 'PRTD9nsZw3l73O/w5B2FH2qniFk=' }
      ]}
    { name: 'index.js', hash: 'kQQWXdgKuGfBf7ND3rxjThTLVNA=' }
    { name: 'package.json', hash: 'w7F0S11l6VefDknvmIy8jmKx+Ng=' }
    { name: 'test', hash: 'H5x0JDoV7dEGxI65e8IsencDZ1A=,'
      children: [
        { name: 'parameters.js', hash: '3gCEobqzHGzQiHmCDe5yX8weq7M=' }
        { name: 'test.js', hash: 'kg7p8lbaVf1CPtWLAIvkHkdu1oo=' }
      ]}
  ]}

And the structure may be traversed to e.g. create incremental backups.

It is also possible to only match the full path and not the basename. The same configuration could look like this:
You should be aware that *nix and Windows behave differently, so please use caution.

const options = {
    folders: {
        exclude: ['.*', '**.*', '**node_modules', '**test_coverage'],
        matchBasename: false, matchPath: true
    },
    files: {
        //include: ['**.js', '**.json' ], // Windows
        include: ['*.js', '**/*.js', '*.json', '**/*.json'], // *nix
        matchBasename: false, matchPath: true
    }
};

Parameters for the hashElement function

NameTypeAttributesDescription
name string element name or an element's path
dir string <optional>
directory that contains the element (generated from name if omitted)
options Object <optional>
Options object (see below)
callback fn <optional>
Error-first callback function

Options

Default values

{
    algo: 'sha1',       // see crypto.getHashes() for options
    encoding: 'base64', // 'base64', 'hex' or 'binary'
    files: {
        exclude: [],
        include: [],
        matchBasename: true,
        matchPath: false,
        ignoreBasename: false,
        ignoreRootName: false
    },
    folders: {
        exclude: [],
        include: [],
        matchBasename: true,
        matchPath: false,
        ignoreRootName: false
    }
}
NameTypeAttributesDefaultDescription
algo string <optional>
'sha1' checksum algorithm, see options in crypto.getHashes()
encoding string <optional>
'base64' encoding of the resulting hash. One of 'base64', 'hex' or 'binary'
files Object <optional>
Rules object (see below)
folders Object <optional>
Rules object (see below)
Rules object properties
NameTypeAttributesDefaultDescription
exclude Array.<string> || Function <optional>
[] Array of optional exclude glob patterns, see minimatch doc. Can also be a function which returns true if the passed file is excluded.
include Array.<string> || Function <optional>
[] Array of optional include glob patterns, see minimatch doc. Can also be a function which returns true if the passed file is included.
matchBasename bool <optional>
true Match the glob patterns to the file/folder name
matchPath bool <optional>
false Match the glob patterns to the file/folder path
ignoreBasename bool <optional>
false Set to true to calculate the hash without the basename element
ignoreRootName bool <optional>
false Set to true to calculate the hash without the basename of the root (first) element

Command line usage

After installing it globally via

$ npm install -g folder-hash

You can use it like this:

# local folder
$ folder-hash -c config.json .
# local folder
$ folder-hash
# global folder
$ folder-hash /user/bin

It also allows to pass an optional JSON configuration file with the -c or --config flag, which should contain the same configuration as when using the JavaScript API.

You can also use a local version of folder-hash like this:

$ npx folder-hash --help
Use folder-hash on cli like this:
  folder-hash [--config <json-file>] <file-or-folder>

Examples

Other examples using promises

See file ./examples/readme-with-promises.js

const path = require('path');
const { hashElement } = require('folder-hash');

// pass element name and folder path separately
hashElement('test', path.join(__dirname, '..'))
  .then(hash => {
    console.log('Result for folder "../test":', hash.toString(), '\n');
  })
  .catch(error => {
    return console.error('hashing failed:', error);
  });

// pass element path directly
hashElement(__dirname)
  .then(hash => {
    console.log(`Result for folder "${__dirname}":`);
    console.log(hash.toString(), '\n');
  })
  .catch(error => {
    return console.error('hashing failed:', error);
  });

// pass options (example: exclude dotFolders)
const options = { encoding: 'hex', folders: { exclude: ['.*'] } };
hashElement(__dirname, options)
  .then(hash => {
    console.log('Result for folder "' + __dirname + '" (with options):');
    console.log(hash.toString(), '\n');
  })
  .catch(error => {
    return console.error('hashing failed:', error);
  });

Other examples using error-first callbacks

See ./examples/readme-with-callbacks.js

const path = require('path');
const { hashElement } = require('folder-hash');

// pass element name and folder path separately
hashElement('test', path.join(__dirname, '..'), (error, hash) => {
    if (error) {
        return console.error('hashing failed:', error);
    } else {
        console.log('Result for folder "../test":', hash.toString(), '\n');
    }
});

// pass element path directly
hashElement(__dirname, (error, hash) => {
    if (error) {
        return console.error('hashing failed:', error);
    } else {
        console.log('Result for folder "' + __dirname + '":');
        console.log(hash.toString(), '\n');
    }
});

// pass options (example: exclude dotFiles)
const options = { algo: 'md5', files: { exclude: ['.*'], matchBasename: true } };
hashElement(__dirname, options, (error, hash) => {
    if (error) {
        return console.error('hashing failed:', error);
    } else {
        console.log('Result for folder "' + __dirname + '":');
        console.log(hash.toString());
    }
});

Behavior

The behavior is documented and verified in the unit tests. Execute npm test or mocha test, and have a look at the test subfolder.
You can also have a look at the CircleCI report. CircleCI

Creating hashes over files (with default options)

The hashes are the same if:

  • A file is checked again
  • Two files have the same name and content (but exist in different folders)

The hashes are different if:

  • A file was renamed or its content was changed
  • Two files have the same name but different content
  • Two files have the same content but different names

Creating hashes over folders (with default options)

Content means in this case a folder's children - both the files and the subfolders with their children.

The hashes are the same if:

  • A folder is checked again
  • Two folders have the same name and content (but have different parent folders)

The hashes are different if:

  • A file somewhere in the directory structure was renamed or its content was changed
  • Two folders have the same name but different content
  • Two folders have the same content but different names

License

MIT, see LICENSE.txt

FAQs

Last updated on 02 Sep 2020

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