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glob-cache
Advanced tools
Caching layer (using `cacache`) for any file globbing solution (`glob`, `fast-glob`, `tiny-glob` and `globby`). Makes you Instant Fast™ and allows you to hook into very specific & important part of the process
Caching layer (using
cacache
) for any file globbing solution (glob
,fast-glob
,tiny-glob
andglobby
). Makes you Instant Fast™ and allows you to hook into very specific & important part of the process
Please consider following this project's author, Charlike Mike Reagent, and :star: the project to show your :heart: and support.
If you have any how-to kind of questions, please read the Contributing Guide and Code of Conduct documents. For bugs reports and feature requests, please create an issue or ping @tunnckoCore at Twitter.
Project is semantically versioned & automatically released from GitHub Actions with Lerna.
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(TOC generated by verb using markdown-toc)
This project requires Node.js >=10.18 (see Support & Release Policy). Install it using
yarn or npm.
We highly recommend to use Yarn when you think to contribute to this project.
$ yarn add glob-cache
Generated using jest-runner-docs.
Match files and folders using glob patterns. Returns a resolved Promise containing
a { results, cacache }
object - where results
is an array of Context objects
and cacache
is the cacache package.
Signature
function(options)
Params
options.include
{Array<string>} - string or array of string glob patternsoptions.exclude
{string} - ignore patternsoptions.always
{boolean} - a boolean that makes options.hook
to always be calledoptions.hook
{Function} - a hook function passed with Contextoptions.glob
{Function} - a globbing library like glob, globby, fast-glob, tiny-glob, defaults to fast-glob
options.globOptions
{object} - options passed to the options.glob
libraryoptions.cacheLocation
{string} - a filepath location of the cache, defaults to ./.cache/glob-cache
returns
{Promise}Example
const tinyGlob = require('tiny-glob');
const glob = require('glob-cache');
glob({ include: 'src/*.js', glob: tinyGlob }).then(({ results }) => {
console.log(results);
});
Each context contains a { file, cacheFile, cacheLocation, cacache }
and more properties.
The file
one represents the fresh file loaded from the system, the cacheFile
represents the
file from the cache. Both has path
, size
and integrity
properties, plus more.
The cacheFile
can be null
if it's the first hit (not found in cache),
in such case the ctx.missing
will be true
and on next runs this will be false
.
Important to note is that cacheFile
don't have a contents
property, but has path
which points to the place of the cache file on the disk.
The interesting one is the ctx.valid
. This one is the reason for the whole existance
of this module. If both the "source" file and cache file are the same,
e.g. same size and integrity (which means the contents/shasum are equal),
then ctx.valid: true
, otherwise this will be false
. Simply said, when you change your file(s)
matched by a the given glob pattern(s), then it will be valid: false
and the options.hook
will
be called.
There is also one more key point, and it's in the options
. We have options.hook
and
options.always
. By default we only call the options.hook
when valid: false
which is
important and intentional, because most of the time you only want to do or run something
when there are actual changes in the files, right? But there are also a cases when you want
more control, that's why we have options.always
option which bypass the previous validation
and so the options.hook
will always be called and so you can decide what to do or
make more additional checks - for example, listen the mtime
- or track the dependencies
of the file. Tracking dependencies is something that some test runner may benefit.
Because all that, we also expose cacache
to that options.hook
,
so you can update or clean the cache - it's up to you.
Example results
array with context (which is also passed to options.hook
):
[
{
file: {
path: '/home/charlike/github/tunnckoCore/opensource/packages/glob-cache/test/index.js',
contents: <Buffer 27 75 73 65 20 73 74 72 69 63 74 27 3b 0a 0a 63 6f 6e 73 74 20 70 61 74 68 20 3d 20 72 65 71 75 69 72 65 28 27 70 61 74 68 27 29 3b 0a 63 6f 6e 73 74 ... 350 more bytes>,
size: 400,
integrity: 'sha512-p5daDYwu9vhNNjT9vfRrWHXIwwlPxeqeub4gs3qMZ88J//ONUH7Je2Muu9o+MxjA1Fv3xwbgkBdjcHgdj7ar4A=='
},
cacheFile: null,
cacheLocation: '/home/charlike/github/tunnckoCore/opensource/packages/glob-cache/test/fixture-cache',
cacache: { /* cacache instance */ },
valid: true,
missing: true
},
{
file: {
path: '/home/charlike/github/tunnckoCore/opensource/packages/glob-cache/src/index.js',
contents: <Buffer 2f 2a 20 65 73 6c 69 6e 74 2d 64 69 73 61 62 6c 65 20 6e 6f 2d 70 61 72 61 6d 2d 72 65 61 73 73 69 67 6e 20 2a 2f 0a 0a 27 75 73 65 20 73 74 72 69 63 ... 5268 more bytes>,
size: 5318,
integrity: 'sha512-946V9t8jWq6oGdAVnrl206b077+Ejl0VFn/MK1axZdsFyvzGrT+MfzH2aVQOUPMcp8jm5tZvES7A1XXEsRvZ9w=='
},
cacheFile: null,
cacheLocation: '/home/charlike/github/tunnckoCore/opensource/packages/glob-cache/test/fixture-cache',
cacache: { /* cacache instance */ },
valid: true,
missing: true
}
]
And when you run it for the second time, the cacheFile
won't be null
anymore, like so
{
file: {
path: '/home/charlike/github/tunnckoCore/opensource/packages/glob-cache/src/index.js',
contents: <Buffer 2f 2a 20 65 73 6c 69 6e 74 2d 64 69 73 61 62 6c 65 20 6e 6f 2d 70 61 72 61 6d 2d 72 65 61 73 73 69 67 6e 20 2a 2f 0a 0a 27 75 73 65 20 73 74 72 69 63 ... 5268 more bytes>,
size: 5318,
integrity: 'sha512-946V9t8jWq6oGdAVnrl206b077+Ejl0VFn/MK1axZdsFyvzGrT+MfzH2aVQOUPMcp8jm5tZvES7A1XXEsRvZ9w=='
},
cacheFile: {
key: '/home/charlike/github/tunnckoCore/opensource/packages/glob-cache/src/index.js',
integrity: 'sha512-946V9t8jWq6oGdAVnrl206b077+Ejl0VFn/MK1axZdsFyvzGrT+MfzH2aVQOUPMcp8jm5tZvES7A1XXEsRvZ9w==',
path: '/home/charlike/github/tunnckoCore/opensource/packages/glob-cache/test/fixture-cache/content-v2/sha512/78/84/a154130fdefee002a708cee1ae570db54b1a278fed9b7a3847c73b2545bd48947c2cd192d365f9d87653f098f80d98b4ee37923ba467dbc314acf0f42e39',
size: 5318,
time: 1579561781331,
metadata: undefined
},
cacheLocation: '/home/charlike/github/tunnckoCore/opensource/packages/glob-cache/test/fixture-cache',
cacache: { /* cacache instance */ },
valid: true,
missing: false
}
As you can see above, both the file.integrity
and cacheFile.integrity
are the same, also the size
,
so the both files are equal (and so valid: true
), and if you didn't put always: true
, in this case the hook
won't be called.
One more thing to clarify. When there is no cache, e.g. the state is "missing",
and if you look over the code you'll see that the valid
is
hard-coded/forced to be true
. You may expect the hook to be called in the first run
but it will not. For that behavior you should use the always: true
.
In case you use the options.always: true
option, you may need to have similar check in your options.hook
:
const JestWorker = require('jest-worker');
let worker = null;
(async () => {
await globCache({
async hook(ctx) {
if (ctx.valid === false || (ctx.valid && ctx.missing)) {
// If we are here, it's either the first run, or
// only when there's a difference between the actual file and the cache file.
// So we can, for example, call our worker/runner or whatever here.
worker =
worker ||
new JestWorker(require.resolve('./my-awesome-worker-or-runner.js'), {
numWorkers: 7,
forkOptions: { stdio: 'inherit' },
});
await worker.default(ctx);
await worker.end();
}
},
});
})();
Above you're looking on a basic solution similar to what's done in Jest with the difference
that Jest can detect changes only if it's a Git project. At least the --onlyChanged
works that way (with Git requirement) - which isn't a big problem of course since mostly
every project is using Git, but anyway.
The point is, that you can do whatever you want in custom conditions based on your preferences and needs.
In above example you may wonder why we are instatiating JestWorker inside the if
statement.
That's because if you instantiate it before the call of globCache
(where is the let worker
assignment)
then you have no way to end the worker in any meaningful and easy way.
Similar implementation you can see in the hela-eslint-workers
branch
where using glob-cache
we are trying to speed up ESLint a bit,
by putting eslint.executeOnFiles
or eslint.executeOnText
inside a worker.
The thing is that it doesn't help much, because ESLint is just slow - for the same reason
even the jest-runner-eslint
doesn't help much with performance. The complexity in ESLint
is O(n) - the more configs and plugins you have in your config, the more slow it will run even on a
single file - it's inevitable and a huge problem. I'm not saying all that just to hate.
It's just because of the synchornous design of ESLint and the way it works. A big pain point is
not only that it exposes & uses only sync methods, but also the architecture of resolving huge amount
of configs and plugins. That may change if RFC#9
is accepted, for which I have big hopes. Even if it's accepted it will take few major releases.
Please read the Contributing Guide and Code of Conduct documents for advices.
For bug reports and feature requests, please join our community forum and open a thread there with prefixing the title of the thread with the name of the project if there's no separate channel for it.
Consider reading the Support and Release Policy guide if you are interested in what are the supported Node.js versions and how we proceed. In short, we support latest two even-numbered Node.js release lines.
Become a Partner or Sponsor? :dollar: Check the Partner, Sponsor or Omega-level tiers! :tada: You can get your company logo, link & name on this file. It's also rendered on package page in npmjs.com and yarnpkg.com sites too! :rocket:
Not financial support? Okey! Pull requests, stars and all kind of contributions are always welcome. :sparkles:
Thanks to the hard work of these wonderful people this project is alive! It follows the all-contributors specification. Don't hesitate to add yourself to that list if you have made any contribution! ;) See how, here.
Charlike Mike Reagent 💻 📖 💬 👀 🔍 |
---|
Consider showing your support to them. :sparkling_heart:
Copyright (c) 2020-present, Charlike Mike Reagent <opensource@tunnckocore.com>
& contributors.
Released under the (Parity-7.0.0 AND Prosperity-3.0.0) OR Patron-1.0.0 License.
FAQs
Best and fastest file globbing solution for Node.js - can use **any** glob library like `glob`, `globby` or `fast-glob`! Streaming, Promise and Hook APIs, with built in caching layer using `cacache`. Makes you Instant Fast™.
The npm package glob-cache receives a total of 17 weekly downloads. As such, glob-cache popularity was classified as not popular.
We found that glob-cache demonstrated a not healthy version release cadence and project activity because the last version was released a year ago. It has 1 open source maintainer collaborating on the project.
Did you know?
Socket for GitHub automatically highlights issues in each pull request and monitors the health of all your open source dependencies. Discover the contents of your packages and block harmful activity before you install or update your dependencies.
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