What is readdirp?
The readdirp npm package is a Node.js module that allows for reading the contents of directories recursively with a stream API. It provides a flexible and powerful way to filter, map, and reduce directory contents in an efficient manner. This package is particularly useful for tasks that involve file system operations, such as building file trees, searching for files with specific patterns, or processing files in batches.
What are readdirp's main functionalities?
Streaming directory contents
This feature allows you to stream the contents of a directory, filtering for specific file types (in this case, JavaScript files). It's useful for processing files as they are found.
const readdirp = require('readdirp');
readdirp('.', { fileFilter: '*.js' })
.on('data', (entry) => {
console.log(entry.path);
})
.on('end', () => console.log('Done'));
Promise API for directory reading
This feature provides a Promise-based API for reading directories, allowing for asynchronous file processing with better error handling and integration with async/await syntax.
const readdirp = require('readdirp');
readdirp('.', { depth: 1, fileFilter: '*.js' })
.then(files => {
files.forEach(file => console.log(file.path));
})
.catch(error => console.error('Error:', error));
Custom filter and entry formatting
This feature demonstrates how to use custom filters for file selection and how to format the entries returned by readdirp. It's useful for more complex file selection criteria and custom output formatting.
const readdirp = require('readdirp');
const options = {
fileFilter: (entry) => entry.basename.startsWith('test'),
entryType: 'files',
alwaysStat: true,
depth: 2
};
readdirp('.', options)
.on('data', (entry) => {
console.log(`${entry.path} - ${entry.stats.size} bytes`);
});
Other packages similar to readdirp
glob
The 'glob' package provides pattern matching functionality to select files in directories. It's similar to readdirp in that it can be used to search for files, but it uses glob patterns instead of providing a stream API or Promise-based interface.
fs-extra
The 'fs-extra' package extends the built-in Node.js 'fs' module with additional file system methods, including recursive directory reading. While it offers similar functionality to readdirp, fs-extra provides a broader set of file system operations, making it more of a general-purpose library.
walk
The 'walk' package is another Node.js module for recursively reading directory contents. It is similar to readdirp but focuses more on event-based directory walking. Compared to readdirp, 'walk' might offer a simpler API for some use cases but lacks the advanced filtering and mapping capabilities.
readdirp
Recursive version of fs.readdir. Exposes a stream API and a promise API.
npm install readdirp
const readdirp = require('readdirp');
for await (const entry of readdirp('.')) {
const {path} = entry;
console.log(`${JSON.stringify({path})}`);
}
readdirp('.', {fileFilter: '*.js', alwaysStat: true})
.on('data', (entry) => {
const {path, stats: {size}} = entry;
console.log(`${JSON.stringify({path, size})}`);
})
.on('warn', error => console.error('non-fatal error', error))
.on('error', error => console.error('fatal error', error))
.on('end', () => console.log('done'));
const files = await readdirp.promise('.');
console.log(files.map(file => file.path));
readdirp('test', {
fileFilter: '*.js',
directoryFilter: ['!.git', '!*modules']
type: 'files_directories',
depth: 1
});
For more examples, check out examples
directory.
API
const stream = readdirp(root[, options])
— Stream API
- Reads given root recursively and returns a
stream
of entry infos - Optionally can be used like
for await (const entry of stream)
with node.js 10+ (asyncIterator
). on('data', (entry) => {})
entry info for every file / dir.on('warn', (error) => {})
non-fatal Error
that prevents a file / dir from being processed. Example: inaccessible to the user.on('error', (error) => {})
fatal Error
which also ends the stream. Example: illegal options where passed.on('end')
— we are done. Called when all entries were found and no more will be emitted.on('close')
— stream is destroyed via stream.destroy()
.
Could be useful if you want to manually abort even on a non fatal error.
At that point the stream is no longer readable
and no more entries, warning or errors are emitted- To learn more about streams, consult the very detailed nodejs streams documentation
or the stream-handbook
const entries = await readdirp.promise(root[, options])
— Promise API. Returns a list of entry infos.
First argument is awalys root
, path in which to start reading and recursing into subdirectories.
options
fileFilter: ["*.js"]
: filter to include or exclude files. A Function
, Glob string or Array of glob strings.
- Function: a function that takes an entry info as a parameter and returns true to include or false to exclude the entry
- Glob string: a string (e.g.,
*.js
) which is matched using picomatch, so go there for more
information. Globstars (**
) are not supported since specifying a recursive pattern for an already recursive function doesn't make sense. Negated globs (as explained in the minimatch documentation) are allowed, e.g., !*.txt
matches everything but text files. - Array of glob strings: either need to be all inclusive or all exclusive (negated) patterns otherwise an error is thrown.
['*.json', '*.js']
includes all JavaScript and Json files.
['!.git', '!node_modules']
includes all directories except the '.git' and 'node_modules'. - Directories that do not pass a filter will not be recursed into.
directoryFilter: ['!.git']
: filter to include/exclude directories found and to recurse into. Directories that do not pass a filter will not be recursed into.depth: 5
: depth at which to stop recursing even if more subdirectories are foundtype: 'files'
: determines if data events on the stream should be emitted for 'files'
(default), 'directories'
, 'files_directories'
, or 'all'
. Setting to 'all'
will also include entries for other types of file descriptors like character devices, unix sockets and named pipes.alwaysStat: false
: always return stats
property for every file. Setting it to true
can double readdir execution time - use it only when you need file size
, mtime
etc. Cannot be enabled on node <10.10.0.lstat: false
: include symlink entries in the stream along with files. When true
, fs.lstat
would be used instead of fs.stat
EntryInfo
Has the following properties:
path: 'assets/javascripts/react.js'
: path to the file/directory (relative to given root)fullPath: '/Users/dev/projects/app/assets/javascripts/react.js'
: full path to the file/directory foundbasename: 'react.js'
: name of the file/directorydirent: fs.Dirent
: built-in dir entry object - only with alwaysStat: false
stats: fs.Stats
: built in stat object - only with alwaysStat: true
Changelog
- 3.3 (Dec 6, 2019) stabilizes RAM consumption and enables perf management with
highWaterMark
option. Fixes race conditions related to for-await
looping. - 3.2 (Oct 14, 2019) improves performance by 250% and makes streams implementation more idiomatic.
- 3.1 (Jul 7, 2019) brings
bigint
support to stat
output on Windows. This is backwards-incompatible for some cases. Be careful. It you use it incorrectly, you'll see "TypeError: Cannot mix BigInt and other types, use explicit conversions". - 3.0 brings huge performance improvements and stream backpressure support.
- Upgrading 2.x to 3.x:
- Signature changed from
readdirp(options)
to readdirp(root, options)
- Replaced callback API with promise API.
- Renamed
entryType
option to type
- Renamed
entryType: 'both'
to 'files_directories'
EntryInfo
- Renamed
stat
to stats
- Emitted only when
alwaysStat: true
dirent
is emitted instead of stats
by default with alwaysStat: false
- Renamed
name
to basename
- Removed
parentDir
and fullParentDir
properties
- Supported node.js versions:
- 3.x: node 8+
- 2.x: node 0.6+
License
Copyright (c) 2012-2019 Thorsten Lorenz, Paul Miller (https://paulmillr.com)
MIT License, see LICENSE file.