1221 lines
46 KiB
Markdown
1221 lines
46 KiB
Markdown
# Glob
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Match files using the patterns the shell uses.
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The most correct and second fastest glob implementation in
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JavaScript. (See **Comparison to Other JavaScript Glob
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Implementations** at the bottom of this readme.)
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![a fun cartoon logo made of glob characters](https://github.com/isaacs/node-glob/raw/main/logo/glob.png)
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## Usage
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Install with npm
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```
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npm i glob
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```
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**Note** the npm package name is _not_ `node-glob` that's a
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different thing that was abandoned years ago. Just `glob`.
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```js
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// load using import
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import { glob, globSync, globStream, globStreamSync, Glob } from 'glob'
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// or using commonjs, that's fine, too
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const {
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glob,
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globSync,
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globStream,
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globStreamSync,
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Glob,
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} = require('glob')
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// the main glob() and globSync() resolve/return array of filenames
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// all js files, but don't look in node_modules
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const jsfiles = await glob('**/*.js', { ignore: 'node_modules/**' })
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// pass in a signal to cancel the glob walk
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const stopAfter100ms = await glob('**/*.css', {
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signal: AbortSignal.timeout(100),
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})
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// multiple patterns supported as well
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const images = await glob(['css/*.{png,jpeg}', 'public/*.{png,jpeg}'])
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// but of course you can do that with the glob pattern also
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// the sync function is the same, just returns a string[] instead
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// of Promise<string[]>
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const imagesAlt = globSync('{css,public}/*.{png,jpeg}')
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// you can also stream them, this is a Minipass stream
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const filesStream = globStream(['**/*.dat', 'logs/**/*.log'])
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// construct a Glob object if you wanna do it that way, which
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// allows for much faster walks if you have to look in the same
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// folder multiple times.
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const g = new Glob('**/foo', {})
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// glob objects are async iterators, can also do globIterate() or
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// g.iterate(), same deal
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for await (const file of g) {
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console.log('found a foo file:', file)
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}
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// pass a glob as the glob options to reuse its settings and caches
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const g2 = new Glob('**/bar', g)
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// sync iteration works as well
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for (const file of g2) {
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console.log('found a bar file:', file)
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}
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// you can also pass withFileTypes: true to get Path objects
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// these are like a Dirent, but with some more added powers
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// check out http://npm.im/path-scurry for more info on their API
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const g3 = new Glob('**/baz/**', { withFileTypes: true })
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g3.stream().on('data', path => {
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console.log(
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'got a path object',
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path.fullpath(),
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path.isDirectory(),
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path.readdirSync().map(e => e.name)
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)
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})
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// if you use stat:true and withFileTypes, you can sort results
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// by things like modified time, filter by permission mode, etc.
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// All Stats fields will be available in that case. Slightly
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// slower, though.
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// For example:
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const results = await glob('**', { stat: true, withFileTypes: true })
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const timeSortedFiles = results
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.sort((a, b) => a.mtimeMs - b.mtimeMs)
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.map(path => path.fullpath())
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const groupReadableFiles = results
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.filter(path => path.mode & 0o040)
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.map(path => path.fullpath())
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// custom ignores can be done like this, for example by saying
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// you'll ignore all markdown files, and all folders named 'docs'
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const customIgnoreResults = await glob('**', {
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ignore: {
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ignored: p => /\.md$/.test(p.name),
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childrenIgnored: p => p.isNamed('docs'),
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},
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})
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// another fun use case, only return files with the same name as
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// their parent folder, plus either `.ts` or `.js`
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const folderNamedModules = await glob('**/*.{ts,js}', {
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ignore: {
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ignored: p => {
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const pp = p.parent
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return !(p.isNamed(pp.name + '.ts') || p.isNamed(pp.name + '.js'))
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},
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},
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})
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// find all files edited in the last hour, to do this, we ignore
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// all of them that are more than an hour old
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const newFiles = await glob('**', {
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// need stat so we have mtime
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stat: true,
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// only want the files, not the dirs
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nodir: true,
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ignore: {
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ignored: p => {
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return new Date() - p.mtime > 60 * 60 * 1000
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},
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// could add similar childrenIgnored here as well, but
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// directory mtime is inconsistent across platforms, so
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// probably better not to, unless you know the system
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// tracks this reliably.
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},
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})
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```
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**Note** Glob patterns should always use `/` as a path separator,
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even on Windows systems, as `\` is used to escape glob
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characters. If you wish to use `\` as a path separator _instead
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of_ using it as an escape character on Windows platforms, you may
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set `windowsPathsNoEscape:true` in the options. In this mode,
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special glob characters cannot be escaped, making it impossible
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to match a literal `*` `?` and so on in filenames.
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## Command Line Interface
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```
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$ glob -h
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Usage:
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glob [options] [<pattern> [<pattern> ...]]
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Expand the positional glob expression arguments into any matching file system
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paths found.
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-c<command> --cmd=<command>
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Run the command provided, passing the glob expression
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matches as arguments.
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-A --all By default, the glob cli command will not expand any
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arguments that are an exact match to a file on disk.
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This prevents double-expanding, in case the shell
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expands an argument whose filename is a glob
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expression.
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For example, if 'app/*.ts' would match 'app/[id].ts',
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then on Windows powershell or cmd.exe, 'glob app/*.ts'
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will expand to 'app/[id].ts', as expected. However, in
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posix shells such as bash or zsh, the shell will first
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expand 'app/*.ts' to a list of filenames. Then glob
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will look for a file matching 'app/[id].ts' (ie,
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'app/i.ts' or 'app/d.ts'), which is unexpected.
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Setting '--all' prevents this behavior, causing glob to
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treat ALL patterns as glob expressions to be expanded,
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even if they are an exact match to a file on disk.
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When setting this option, be sure to enquote arguments
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so that the shell will not expand them prior to passing
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them to the glob command process.
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-a --absolute Expand to absolute paths
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-d --dot-relative Prepend './' on relative matches
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-m --mark Append a / on any directories matched
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-x --posix Always resolve to posix style paths, using '/' as the
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directory separator, even on Windows. Drive letter
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absolute matches on Windows will be expanded to their
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full resolved UNC maths, eg instead of 'C:\foo\bar', it
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will expand to '//?/C:/foo/bar'.
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-f --follow Follow symlinked directories when expanding '**'
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-R --realpath Call 'fs.realpath' on all of the results. In the case
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of an entry that cannot be resolved, the entry is
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omitted. This incurs a slight performance penalty, of
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course, because of the added system calls.
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-s --stat Call 'fs.lstat' on all entries, whether required or not
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to determine if it's a valid match.
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-b --match-base Perform a basename-only match if the pattern does not
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contain any slash characters. That is, '*.js' would be
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treated as equivalent to '**/*.js', matching js files
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in all directories.
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--dot Allow patterns to match files/directories that start
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with '.', even if the pattern does not start with '.'
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--nobrace Do not expand {...} patterns
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--nocase Perform a case-insensitive match. This defaults to
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'true' on macOS and Windows platforms, and false on all
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others.
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Note: 'nocase' should only be explicitly set when it is
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known that the filesystem's case sensitivity differs
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from the platform default. If set 'true' on
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case-insensitive file systems, then the walk may return
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more or less results than expected.
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--nodir Do not match directories, only files.
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Note: to *only* match directories, append a '/' at the
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end of the pattern.
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--noext Do not expand extglob patterns, such as '+(a|b)'
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--noglobstar Do not expand '**' against multiple path portions. Ie,
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treat it as a normal '*' instead.
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--windows-path-no-escape
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Use '\' as a path separator *only*, and *never* as an
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escape character. If set, all '\' characters are
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replaced with '/' in the pattern.
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-D<n> --max-depth=<n> Maximum depth to traverse from the current working
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directory
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-C<cwd> --cwd=<cwd> Current working directory to execute/match in
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-r<root> --root=<root> A string path resolved against the 'cwd', which is used
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as the starting point for absolute patterns that start
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with '/' (but not drive letters or UNC paths on
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Windows).
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Note that this *doesn't* necessarily limit the walk to
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the 'root' directory, and doesn't affect the cwd
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starting point for non-absolute patterns. A pattern
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containing '..' will still be able to traverse out of
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the root directory, if it is not an actual root
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directory on the filesystem, and any non-absolute
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patterns will still be matched in the 'cwd'.
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To start absolute and non-absolute patterns in the same
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path, you can use '--root=' to set it to the empty
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string. However, be aware that on Windows systems, a
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pattern like 'x:/*' or '//host/share/*' will *always*
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start in the 'x:/' or '//host/share/' directory,
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regardless of the --root setting.
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--platform=<platform> Defaults to the value of 'process.platform' if
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available, or 'linux' if not. Setting --platform=win32
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on non-Windows systems may cause strange behavior!
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-i<ignore> --ignore=<ignore>
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Glob patterns to ignore Can be set multiple times
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-v --debug Output a huge amount of noisy debug information about
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patterns as they are parsed and used to match files.
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-h --help Show this usage information
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```
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## `glob(pattern: string | string[], options?: GlobOptions) => Promise<string[] | Path[]>`
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Perform an asynchronous glob search for the pattern(s) specified.
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Returns
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[Path](https://isaacs.github.io/path-scurry/classes/PathBase)
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objects if the `withFileTypes` option is set to `true`. See below
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for full options field desciptions.
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## `globSync(pattern: string | string[], options?: GlobOptions) => string[] | Path[]`
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Synchronous form of `glob()`.
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Alias: `glob.sync()`
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## `globIterate(pattern: string | string[], options?: GlobOptions) => AsyncGenerator<string>`
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Return an async iterator for walking glob pattern matches.
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Alias: `glob.iterate()`
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## `globIterateSync(pattern: string | string[], options?: GlobOptions) => Generator<string>`
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Return a sync iterator for walking glob pattern matches.
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Alias: `glob.iterate.sync()`, `glob.sync.iterate()`
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## `globStream(pattern: string | string[], options?: GlobOptions) => Minipass<string | Path>`
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Return a stream that emits all the strings or `Path` objects and
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then emits `end` when completed.
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Alias: `glob.stream()`
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## `globStreamSync(pattern: string | string[], options?: GlobOptions) => Minipass<string | Path>`
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Syncronous form of `globStream()`. Will read all the matches as
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fast as you consume them, even all in a single tick if you
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consume them immediately, but will still respond to backpressure
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if they're not consumed immediately.
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Alias: `glob.stream.sync()`, `glob.sync.stream()`
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## `hasMagic(pattern: string | string[], options?: GlobOptions) => boolean`
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Returns `true` if the provided pattern contains any "magic" glob
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characters, given the options provided.
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Brace expansion is not considered "magic" unless the
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`magicalBraces` option is set, as brace expansion just turns one
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string into an array of strings. So a pattern like `'x{a,b}y'`
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would return `false`, because `'xay'` and `'xby'` both do not
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contain any magic glob characters, and it's treated the same as
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if you had called it on `['xay', 'xby']`. When
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`magicalBraces:true` is in the options, brace expansion _is_
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treated as a pattern having magic.
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## `escape(pattern: string, options?: GlobOptions) => string`
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Escape all magic characters in a glob pattern, so that it will
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only ever match literal strings
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If the `windowsPathsNoEscape` option is used, then characters are
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escaped by wrapping in `[]`, because a magic character wrapped in
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a character class can only be satisfied by that exact character.
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Slashes (and backslashes in `windowsPathsNoEscape` mode) cannot
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be escaped or unescaped.
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## `unescape(pattern: string, options?: GlobOptions) => string`
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Un-escape a glob string that may contain some escaped characters.
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If the `windowsPathsNoEscape` option is used, then square-brace
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escapes are removed, but not backslash escapes. For example, it
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will turn the string `'[*]'` into `*`, but it will not turn
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`'\\*'` into `'*'`, because `\` is a path separator in
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`windowsPathsNoEscape` mode.
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When `windowsPathsNoEscape` is not set, then both brace escapes
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and backslash escapes are removed.
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Slashes (and backslashes in `windowsPathsNoEscape` mode) cannot
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be escaped or unescaped.
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## Class `Glob`
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An object that can perform glob pattern traversals.
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### `const g = new Glob(pattern: string | string[], options: GlobOptions)`
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Options object is required.
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See full options descriptions below.
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Note that a previous `Glob` object can be passed as the
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`GlobOptions` to another `Glob` instantiation to re-use settings
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and caches with a new pattern.
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Traversal functions can be called multiple times to run the walk
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again.
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### `g.stream()`
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Stream results asynchronously,
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### `g.streamSync()`
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Stream results synchronously.
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### `g.iterate()`
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Default async iteration function. Returns an AsyncGenerator that
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iterates over the results.
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### `g.iterateSync()`
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Default sync iteration function. Returns a Generator that
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iterates over the results.
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### `g.walk()`
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Returns a Promise that resolves to the results array.
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### `g.walkSync()`
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Returns a results array.
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### Properties
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All options are stored as properties on the `Glob` object.
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- `opts` The options provided to the constructor.
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- `patterns` An array of parsed immutable `Pattern` objects.
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## Options
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Exported as `GlobOptions` TypeScript interface. A `GlobOptions`
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object may be provided to any of the exported methods, and must
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be provided to the `Glob` constructor.
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All options are optional, boolean, and false by default, unless
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otherwise noted.
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All resolved options are added to the Glob object as properties.
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If you are running many `glob` operations, you can pass a Glob
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object as the `options` argument to a subsequent operation to
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share the previously loaded cache.
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- `cwd` String path or `file://` string or URL object. The
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current working directory in which to search. Defaults to
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`process.cwd()`. See also: "Windows, CWDs, Drive Letters, and
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UNC Paths", below.
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This option may be either a string path or a `file://` URL
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object or string.
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- `root` A string path resolved against the `cwd` option, which
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is used as the starting point for absolute patterns that start
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with `/`, (but not drive letters or UNC paths on Windows).
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Note that this _doesn't_ necessarily limit the walk to the
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`root` directory, and doesn't affect the cwd starting point for
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non-absolute patterns. A pattern containing `..` will still be
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able to traverse out of the root directory, if it is not an
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actual root directory on the filesystem, and any non-absolute
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patterns will be matched in the `cwd`. For example, the
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pattern `/../*` with `{root:'/some/path'}` will return all
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files in `/some`, not all files in `/some/path`. The pattern
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`*` with `{root:'/some/path'}` will return all the entries in
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the cwd, not the entries in `/some/path`.
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To start absolute and non-absolute patterns in the same
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path, you can use `{root:''}`. However, be aware that on
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Windows systems, a pattern like `x:/*` or `//host/share/*` will
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_always_ start in the `x:/` or `//host/share` directory,
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regardless of the `root` setting.
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- `windowsPathsNoEscape` Use `\\` as a path separator _only_, and
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_never_ as an escape character. If set, all `\\` characters are
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replaced with `/` in the pattern.
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Note that this makes it **impossible** to match against paths
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containing literal glob pattern characters, but allows matching
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with patterns constructed using `path.join()` and
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`path.resolve()` on Windows platforms, mimicking the (buggy!)
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behavior of Glob v7 and before on Windows. Please use with
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caution, and be mindful of [the caveat below about Windows
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paths](#windows). (For legacy reasons, this is also set if
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`allowWindowsEscape` is set to the exact value `false`.)
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- `dot` Include `.dot` files in normal matches and `globstar`
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matches. Note that an explicit dot in a portion of the pattern
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will always match dot files.
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- `magicalBraces` Treat brace expansion like `{a,b}` as a "magic"
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pattern. Has no effect if {@link nobrace} is set.
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Only has effect on the {@link hasMagic} function, no effect on
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glob pattern matching itself.
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- `dotRelative` Prepend all relative path strings with `./` (or
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`.\` on Windows).
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Without this option, returned relative paths are "bare", so
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instead of returning `'./foo/bar'`, they are returned as
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`'foo/bar'`.
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Relative patterns starting with `'../'` are not prepended with
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`./`, even if this option is set.
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- `mark` Add a `/` character to directory matches. Note that this
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requires additional stat calls.
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- `nobrace` Do not expand `{a,b}` and `{1..3}` brace sets.
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- `noglobstar` Do not match `**` against multiple filenames. (Ie,
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treat it as a normal `*` instead.)
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- `noext` Do not match "extglob" patterns such as `+(a|b)`.
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- `nocase` Perform a case-insensitive match. This defaults to
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`true` on macOS and Windows systems, and `false` on all others.
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**Note** `nocase` should only be explicitly set when it is
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known that the filesystem's case sensitivity differs from the
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platform default. If set `true` on case-sensitive file
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systems, or `false` on case-insensitive file systems, then the
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walk may return more or less results than expected.
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- `maxDepth` Specify a number to limit the depth of the directory
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traversal to this many levels below the `cwd`.
|
|
|
|
- `matchBase` Perform a basename-only match if the pattern does
|
|
not contain any slash characters. That is, `*.js` would be
|
|
treated as equivalent to `**/*.js`, matching all js files in
|
|
all directories.
|
|
|
|
- `nodir` Do not match directories, only files. (Note: to match
|
|
_only_ directories, put a `/` at the end of the pattern.)
|
|
|
|
Note: when `follow` and `nodir` are both set, then symbolic
|
|
links to directories are also omitted.
|
|
|
|
- `stat` Call `lstat()` on all entries, whether required or not
|
|
to determine whether it's a valid match. When used with
|
|
`withFileTypes`, this means that matches will include data such
|
|
as modified time, permissions, and so on. Note that this will
|
|
incur a performance cost due to the added system calls.
|
|
|
|
- `ignore` string or string[], or an object with `ignore` and
|
|
`ignoreChildren` methods.
|
|
|
|
If a string or string[] is provided, then this is treated as a
|
|
glob pattern or array of glob patterns to exclude from matches.
|
|
To ignore all children within a directory, as well as the entry
|
|
itself, append `'/**'` to the ignore pattern.
|
|
|
|
**Note** `ignore` patterns are _always_ in `dot:true` mode,
|
|
regardless of any other settings.
|
|
|
|
If an object is provided that has `ignored(path)` and/or
|
|
`childrenIgnored(path)` methods, then these methods will be
|
|
called to determine whether any Path is a match or if its
|
|
children should be traversed, respectively.
|
|
|
|
- `follow` Follow symlinked directories when expanding `**`
|
|
patterns. This can result in a lot of duplicate references in
|
|
the presence of cyclic links, and make performance quite bad.
|
|
|
|
By default, a `**` in a pattern will follow 1 symbolic link if
|
|
it is not the first item in the pattern, or none if it is the
|
|
first item in the pattern, following the same behavior as Bash.
|
|
|
|
Note: when `follow` and `nodir` are both set, then symbolic
|
|
links to directories are also omitted.
|
|
|
|
- `realpath` Set to true to call `fs.realpath` on all of the
|
|
results. In the case of an entry that cannot be resolved, the
|
|
entry is omitted. This incurs a slight performance penalty, of
|
|
course, because of the added system calls.
|
|
|
|
- `absolute` Set to true to always receive absolute paths for
|
|
matched files. Set to `false` to always receive relative paths
|
|
for matched files.
|
|
|
|
By default, when this option is not set, absolute paths are
|
|
returned for patterns that are absolute, and otherwise paths
|
|
are returned that are relative to the `cwd` setting.
|
|
|
|
This does _not_ make an extra system call to get the realpath,
|
|
it only does string path resolution.
|
|
|
|
`absolute` may not be used along with `withFileTypes`.
|
|
|
|
- `posix` Set to true to use `/` as the path separator in
|
|
returned results. On posix systems, this has no effect. On
|
|
Windows systems, this will return `/` delimited path results,
|
|
and absolute paths will be returned in their full resolved UNC
|
|
path form, eg insted of `'C:\\foo\\bar'`, it will return
|
|
`//?/C:/foo/bar`.
|
|
|
|
- `platform` Defaults to value of `process.platform` if
|
|
available, or `'linux'` if not. Setting `platform:'win32'` on
|
|
non-Windows systems may cause strange behavior.
|
|
|
|
- `withFileTypes` Return [PathScurry](http://npm.im/path-scurry)
|
|
`Path` objects instead of strings. These are similar to a
|
|
NodeJS `Dirent` object, but with additional methods and
|
|
properties.
|
|
|
|
`withFileTypes` may not be used along with `absolute`.
|
|
|
|
- `signal` An AbortSignal which will cancel the Glob walk when
|
|
triggered.
|
|
|
|
- `fs` An override object to pass in custom filesystem methods.
|
|
See [PathScurry docs](http://npm.im/path-scurry) for what can
|
|
be overridden.
|
|
|
|
- `scurry` A [PathScurry](http://npm.im/path-scurry) object used
|
|
to traverse the file system. If the `nocase` option is set
|
|
explicitly, then any provided `scurry` object must match this
|
|
setting.
|
|
|
|
## Glob Primer
|
|
|
|
Much more information about glob pattern expansion can be found
|
|
by running `man bash` and searching for `Pattern Matching`.
|
|
|
|
"Globs" are the patterns you type when you do stuff like `ls
|
|
*.js` on the command line, or put `build/*` in a `.gitignore`
|
|
file.
|
|
|
|
Before parsing the path part patterns, braced sections are
|
|
expanded into a set. Braced sections start with `{` and end with
|
|
`}`, with 2 or more comma-delimited sections within. Braced
|
|
sections may contain slash characters, so `a{/b/c,bcd}` would
|
|
expand into `a/b/c` and `abcd`.
|
|
|
|
The following characters have special magic meaning when used in
|
|
a path portion. With the exception of `**`, none of these match
|
|
path separators (ie, `/` on all platforms, and `\` on Windows).
|
|
|
|
- `*` Matches 0 or more characters in a single path portion.
|
|
When alone in a path portion, it must match at least 1
|
|
character. If `dot:true` is not specified, then `*` will not
|
|
match against a `.` character at the start of a path portion.
|
|
- `?` Matches 1 character. If `dot:true` is not specified, then
|
|
`?` will not match against a `.` character at the start of a
|
|
path portion.
|
|
- `[...]` Matches a range of characters, similar to a RegExp
|
|
range. If the first character of the range is `!` or `^` then
|
|
it matches any character not in the range. If the first
|
|
character is `]`, then it will be considered the same as `\]`,
|
|
rather than the end of the character class.
|
|
- `!(pattern|pattern|pattern)` Matches anything that does not
|
|
match any of the patterns provided. May _not_ contain `/`
|
|
characters. Similar to `*`, if alone in a path portion, then
|
|
the path portion must have at least one character.
|
|
- `?(pattern|pattern|pattern)` Matches zero or one occurrence of
|
|
the patterns provided. May _not_ contain `/` characters.
|
|
- `+(pattern|pattern|pattern)` Matches one or more occurrences of
|
|
the patterns provided. May _not_ contain `/` characters.
|
|
- `*(a|b|c)` Matches zero or more occurrences of the patterns
|
|
provided. May _not_ contain `/` characters.
|
|
- `@(pattern|pat*|pat?erN)` Matches exactly one of the patterns
|
|
provided. May _not_ contain `/` characters.
|
|
- `**` If a "globstar" is alone in a path portion, then it
|
|
matches zero or more directories and subdirectories searching
|
|
for matches. It does not crawl symlinked directories, unless
|
|
`{follow:true}` is passed in the options object. A pattern
|
|
like `a/b/**` will only match `a/b` if it is a directory.
|
|
Follows 1 symbolic link if not the first item in the pattern,
|
|
or 0 if it is the first item, unless `follow:true` is set, in
|
|
which case it follows all symbolic links.
|
|
|
|
`[:class:]` patterns are supported by this implementation, but
|
|
`[=c=]` and `[.symbol.]` style class patterns are not.
|
|
|
|
### Dots
|
|
|
|
If a file or directory path portion has a `.` as the first
|
|
character, then it will not match any glob pattern unless that
|
|
pattern's corresponding path part also has a `.` as its first
|
|
character.
|
|
|
|
For example, the pattern `a/.*/c` would match the file at
|
|
`a/.b/c`. However the pattern `a/*/c` would not, because `*` does
|
|
not start with a dot character.
|
|
|
|
You can make glob treat dots as normal characters by setting
|
|
`dot:true` in the options.
|
|
|
|
### Basename Matching
|
|
|
|
If you set `matchBase:true` in the options, and the pattern has
|
|
no slashes in it, then it will seek for any file anywhere in the
|
|
tree with a matching basename. For example, `*.js` would match
|
|
`test/simple/basic.js`.
|
|
|
|
### Empty Sets
|
|
|
|
If no matching files are found, then an empty array is returned.
|
|
This differs from the shell, where the pattern itself is
|
|
returned. For example:
|
|
|
|
```sh
|
|
$ echo a*s*d*f
|
|
a*s*d*f
|
|
```
|
|
|
|
## Comparisons to other fnmatch/glob implementations
|
|
|
|
While strict compliance with the existing standards is a
|
|
worthwhile goal, some discrepancies exist between node-glob and
|
|
other implementations, and are intentional.
|
|
|
|
The double-star character `**` is supported by default, unless
|
|
the `noglobstar` flag is set. This is supported in the manner of
|
|
bsdglob and bash 5, where `**` only has special significance if
|
|
it is the only thing in a path part. That is, `a/**/b` will match
|
|
`a/x/y/b`, but `a/**b` will not.
|
|
|
|
Note that symlinked directories are not traversed as part of a
|
|
`**`, though their contents may match against subsequent portions
|
|
of the pattern. This prevents infinite loops and duplicates and
|
|
the like. You can force glob to traverse symlinks with `**` by
|
|
setting `{follow:true}` in the options.
|
|
|
|
There is no equivalent of the `nonull` option. A pattern that
|
|
does not find any matches simply resolves to nothing. (An empty
|
|
array, immediately ended stream, etc.)
|
|
|
|
If brace expansion is not disabled, then it is performed before
|
|
any other interpretation of the glob pattern. Thus, a pattern
|
|
like `+(a|{b),c)}`, which would not be valid in bash or zsh, is
|
|
expanded **first** into the set of `+(a|b)` and `+(a|c)`, and
|
|
those patterns are checked for validity. Since those two are
|
|
valid, matching proceeds.
|
|
|
|
The character class patterns `[:class:]` (posix standard named
|
|
classes) style class patterns are supported and unicode-aware,
|
|
but `[=c=]` (locale-specific character collation weight), and
|
|
`[.symbol.]` (collating symbol), are not.
|
|
|
|
### Repeated Slashes
|
|
|
|
Unlike Bash and zsh, repeated `/` are always coalesced into a
|
|
single path separator.
|
|
|
|
### Comments and Negation
|
|
|
|
Previously, this module let you mark a pattern as a "comment" if
|
|
it started with a `#` character, or a "negated" pattern if it
|
|
started with a `!` character.
|
|
|
|
These options were deprecated in version 5, and removed in
|
|
version 6.
|
|
|
|
To specify things that should not match, use the `ignore` option.
|
|
|
|
## Windows
|
|
|
|
**Please only use forward-slashes in glob expressions.**
|
|
|
|
Though windows uses either `/` or `\` as its path separator, only
|
|
`/` characters are used by this glob implementation. You must use
|
|
forward-slashes **only** in glob expressions. Back-slashes will
|
|
always be interpreted as escape characters, not path separators.
|
|
|
|
Results from absolute patterns such as `/foo/*` are mounted onto
|
|
the root setting using `path.join`. On windows, this will by
|
|
default result in `/foo/*` matching `C:\foo\bar.txt`.
|
|
|
|
To automatically coerce all `\` characters to `/` in pattern
|
|
strings, **thus making it impossible to escape literal glob
|
|
characters**, you may set the `windowsPathsNoEscape` option to
|
|
`true`.
|
|
|
|
### Windows, CWDs, Drive Letters, and UNC Paths
|
|
|
|
On posix systems, when a pattern starts with `/`, any `cwd`
|
|
option is ignored, and the traversal starts at `/`, plus any
|
|
non-magic path portions specified in the pattern.
|
|
|
|
On Windows systems, the behavior is similar, but the concept of
|
|
an "absolute path" is somewhat more involved.
|
|
|
|
#### UNC Paths
|
|
|
|
A UNC path may be used as the start of a pattern on Windows
|
|
platforms. For example, a pattern like: `//?/x:/*` will return
|
|
all file entries in the root of the `x:` drive. A pattern like
|
|
`//ComputerName/Share/*` will return all files in the associated
|
|
share.
|
|
|
|
UNC path roots are always compared case insensitively.
|
|
|
|
#### Drive Letters
|
|
|
|
A pattern starting with a drive letter, like `c:/*`, will search
|
|
in that drive, regardless of any `cwd` option provided.
|
|
|
|
If the pattern starts with `/`, and is not a UNC path, and there
|
|
is an explicit `cwd` option set with a drive letter, then the
|
|
drive letter in the `cwd` is used as the root of the directory
|
|
traversal.
|
|
|
|
For example, `glob('/tmp', { cwd: 'c:/any/thing' })` will return
|
|
`['c:/tmp']` as the result.
|
|
|
|
If an explicit `cwd` option is not provided, and the pattern
|
|
starts with `/`, then the traversal will run on the root of the
|
|
drive provided as the `cwd` option. (That is, it is the result of
|
|
`path.resolve('/')`.)
|
|
|
|
## Race Conditions
|
|
|
|
Glob searching, by its very nature, is susceptible to race
|
|
conditions, since it relies on directory walking.
|
|
|
|
As a result, it is possible that a file that exists when glob
|
|
looks for it may have been deleted or modified by the time it
|
|
returns the result.
|
|
|
|
By design, this implementation caches all readdir calls that it
|
|
makes, in order to cut down on system overhead. However, this
|
|
also makes it even more susceptible to races, especially if the
|
|
cache object is reused between glob calls.
|
|
|
|
Users are thus advised not to use a glob result as a guarantee of
|
|
filesystem state in the face of rapid changes. For the vast
|
|
majority of operations, this is never a problem.
|
|
|
|
### See Also:
|
|
|
|
- `man sh`
|
|
- `man bash` [Pattern
|
|
Matching](https://www.gnu.org/software/bash/manual/html_node/Pattern-Matching.html)
|
|
- `man 3 fnmatch`
|
|
- `man 5 gitignore`
|
|
- [minimatch documentation](https://github.com/isaacs/minimatch)
|
|
|
|
## Glob Logo
|
|
|
|
Glob's logo was created by [Tanya
|
|
Brassie](http://tanyabrassie.com/). Logo files can be found
|
|
[here](https://github.com/isaacs/node-glob/tree/master/logo).
|
|
|
|
The logo is licensed under a [Creative Commons
|
|
Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 International
|
|
License](https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/4.0/).
|
|
|
|
## Contributing
|
|
|
|
Any change to behavior (including bugfixes) must come with a
|
|
test.
|
|
|
|
Patches that fail tests or reduce performance will be rejected.
|
|
|
|
```sh
|
|
# to run tests
|
|
npm test
|
|
|
|
# to re-generate test fixtures
|
|
npm run test-regen
|
|
|
|
# run the benchmarks
|
|
npm run bench
|
|
|
|
# to profile javascript
|
|
npm run prof
|
|
```
|
|
|
|
## Comparison to Other JavaScript Glob Implementations
|
|
|
|
**tl;dr**
|
|
|
|
- If you want glob matching that is as faithful as possible to
|
|
Bash pattern expansion semantics, and as fast as possible
|
|
within that constraint, _use this module_.
|
|
- If you are reasonably sure that the patterns you will encounter
|
|
are relatively simple, and want the absolutely fastest glob
|
|
matcher out there, _use [fast-glob](http://npm.im/fast-glob)_.
|
|
- If you are reasonably sure that the patterns you will encounter
|
|
are relatively simple, and want the convenience of
|
|
automatically respecting `.gitignore` files, _use
|
|
[globby](http://npm.im/globby)_.
|
|
|
|
There are some other glob matcher libraries on npm, but these
|
|
three are (in my opinion, as of 2023) the best.
|
|
|
|
---
|
|
|
|
**full explanation**
|
|
|
|
Every library reflects a set of opinions and priorities in the
|
|
trade-offs it makes. Other than this library, I can personally
|
|
recommend both [globby](http://npm.im/globby) and
|
|
[fast-glob](http://npm.im/fast-glob), though they differ in their
|
|
benefits and drawbacks.
|
|
|
|
Both have very nice APIs and are reasonably fast.
|
|
|
|
`fast-glob` is, as far as I am aware, the fastest glob
|
|
implementation in JavaScript today. However, there are many
|
|
cases where the choices that `fast-glob` makes in pursuit of
|
|
speed mean that its results differ from the results returned by
|
|
Bash and other sh-like shells, which may be surprising.
|
|
|
|
In my testing, `fast-glob` is around 10-20% faster than this
|
|
module when walking over 200k files nested 4 directories
|
|
deep[1](#fn-webscale). However, there are some inconsistencies
|
|
with Bash matching behavior that this module does not suffer
|
|
from:
|
|
|
|
- `**` only matches files, not directories
|
|
- `..` path portions are not handled unless they appear at the
|
|
start of the pattern
|
|
- `./!(<pattern>)` will not match any files that _start_ with
|
|
`<pattern>`, even if they do not match `<pattern>`. For
|
|
example, `!(9).txt` will not match `9999.txt`.
|
|
- Some brace patterns in the middle of a pattern will result in
|
|
failing to find certain matches.
|
|
- Extglob patterns are allowed to contain `/` characters.
|
|
|
|
Globby exhibits all of the same pattern semantics as fast-glob,
|
|
(as it is a wrapper around fast-glob) and is slightly slower than
|
|
node-glob (by about 10-20% in the benchmark test set, or in other
|
|
words, anywhere from 20-50% slower than fast-glob). However, it
|
|
adds some API conveniences that may be worth the costs.
|
|
|
|
- Support for `.gitignore` and other ignore files.
|
|
- Support for negated globs (ie, patterns starting with `!`
|
|
rather than using a separate `ignore` option).
|
|
|
|
The priority of this module is "correctness" in the sense of
|
|
performing a glob pattern expansion as faithfully as possible to
|
|
the behavior of Bash and other sh-like shells, with as much speed
|
|
as possible.
|
|
|
|
Note that prior versions of `node-glob` are _not_ on this list.
|
|
Former versions of this module are far too slow for any cases
|
|
where performance matters at all, and were designed with APIs
|
|
that are extremely dated by current JavaScript standards.
|
|
|
|
---
|
|
|
|
<small id="fn-webscale">[1]: In the cases where this module
|
|
returns results and `fast-glob` doesn't, it's even faster, of
|
|
course.</small>
|
|
|
|
![lumpy space princess saying 'oh my GLOB'](https://github.com/isaacs/node-glob/raw/main/oh-my-glob.gif)
|
|
|
|
### Benchmark Results
|
|
|
|
First number is time, smaller is better.
|
|
|
|
Second number is the count of results returned.
|
|
|
|
```
|
|
--- pattern: '**' ---
|
|
~~ sync ~~
|
|
node fast-glob sync 0m0.598s 200364
|
|
node globby sync 0m0.765s 200364
|
|
node current globSync mjs 0m0.683s 222656
|
|
node current glob syncStream 0m0.649s 222656
|
|
~~ async ~~
|
|
node fast-glob async 0m0.350s 200364
|
|
node globby async 0m0.509s 200364
|
|
node current glob async mjs 0m0.463s 222656
|
|
node current glob stream 0m0.411s 222656
|
|
|
|
--- pattern: '**/..' ---
|
|
~~ sync ~~
|
|
node fast-glob sync 0m0.486s 0
|
|
node globby sync 0m0.769s 200364
|
|
node current globSync mjs 0m0.564s 2242
|
|
node current glob syncStream 0m0.583s 2242
|
|
~~ async ~~
|
|
node fast-glob async 0m0.283s 0
|
|
node globby async 0m0.512s 200364
|
|
node current glob async mjs 0m0.299s 2242
|
|
node current glob stream 0m0.312s 2242
|
|
|
|
--- pattern: './**/0/**/0/**/0/**/0/**/*.txt' ---
|
|
~~ sync ~~
|
|
node fast-glob sync 0m0.490s 10
|
|
node globby sync 0m0.517s 10
|
|
node current globSync mjs 0m0.540s 10
|
|
node current glob syncStream 0m0.550s 10
|
|
~~ async ~~
|
|
node fast-glob async 0m0.290s 10
|
|
node globby async 0m0.296s 10
|
|
node current glob async mjs 0m0.278s 10
|
|
node current glob stream 0m0.302s 10
|
|
|
|
--- pattern: './**/[01]/**/[12]/**/[23]/**/[45]/**/*.txt' ---
|
|
~~ sync ~~
|
|
node fast-glob sync 0m0.500s 160
|
|
node globby sync 0m0.528s 160
|
|
node current globSync mjs 0m0.556s 160
|
|
node current glob syncStream 0m0.573s 160
|
|
~~ async ~~
|
|
node fast-glob async 0m0.283s 160
|
|
node globby async 0m0.301s 160
|
|
node current glob async mjs 0m0.306s 160
|
|
node current glob stream 0m0.322s 160
|
|
|
|
--- pattern: './**/0/**/0/**/*.txt' ---
|
|
~~ sync ~~
|
|
node fast-glob sync 0m0.502s 5230
|
|
node globby sync 0m0.527s 5230
|
|
node current globSync mjs 0m0.544s 5230
|
|
node current glob syncStream 0m0.557s 5230
|
|
~~ async ~~
|
|
node fast-glob async 0m0.285s 5230
|
|
node globby async 0m0.305s 5230
|
|
node current glob async mjs 0m0.304s 5230
|
|
node current glob stream 0m0.310s 5230
|
|
|
|
--- pattern: '**/*.txt' ---
|
|
~~ sync ~~
|
|
node fast-glob sync 0m0.580s 200023
|
|
node globby sync 0m0.771s 200023
|
|
node current globSync mjs 0m0.685s 200023
|
|
node current glob syncStream 0m0.649s 200023
|
|
~~ async ~~
|
|
node fast-glob async 0m0.349s 200023
|
|
node globby async 0m0.509s 200023
|
|
node current glob async mjs 0m0.427s 200023
|
|
node current glob stream 0m0.388s 200023
|
|
|
|
--- pattern: '{**/*.txt,**/?/**/*.txt,**/?/**/?/**/*.txt,**/?/**/?/**/?/**/*.txt,**/?/**/?/**/?/**/?/**/*.txt}' ---
|
|
~~ sync ~~
|
|
node fast-glob sync 0m0.589s 200023
|
|
node globby sync 0m0.771s 200023
|
|
node current globSync mjs 0m0.716s 200023
|
|
node current glob syncStream 0m0.684s 200023
|
|
~~ async ~~
|
|
node fast-glob async 0m0.351s 200023
|
|
node globby async 0m0.518s 200023
|
|
node current glob async mjs 0m0.462s 200023
|
|
node current glob stream 0m0.468s 200023
|
|
|
|
--- pattern: '**/5555/0000/*.txt' ---
|
|
~~ sync ~~
|
|
node fast-glob sync 0m0.496s 1000
|
|
node globby sync 0m0.519s 1000
|
|
node current globSync mjs 0m0.539s 1000
|
|
node current glob syncStream 0m0.567s 1000
|
|
~~ async ~~
|
|
node fast-glob async 0m0.285s 1000
|
|
node globby async 0m0.299s 1000
|
|
node current glob async mjs 0m0.305s 1000
|
|
node current glob stream 0m0.301s 1000
|
|
|
|
--- pattern: './**/0/**/../[01]/**/0/../**/0/*.txt' ---
|
|
~~ sync ~~
|
|
node fast-glob sync 0m0.484s 0
|
|
node globby sync 0m0.507s 0
|
|
node current globSync mjs 0m0.577s 4880
|
|
node current glob syncStream 0m0.586s 4880
|
|
~~ async ~~
|
|
node fast-glob async 0m0.280s 0
|
|
node globby async 0m0.298s 0
|
|
node current glob async mjs 0m0.327s 4880
|
|
node current glob stream 0m0.324s 4880
|
|
|
|
--- pattern: '**/????/????/????/????/*.txt' ---
|
|
~~ sync ~~
|
|
node fast-glob sync 0m0.547s 100000
|
|
node globby sync 0m0.673s 100000
|
|
node current globSync mjs 0m0.626s 100000
|
|
node current glob syncStream 0m0.618s 100000
|
|
~~ async ~~
|
|
node fast-glob async 0m0.315s 100000
|
|
node globby async 0m0.414s 100000
|
|
node current glob async mjs 0m0.366s 100000
|
|
node current glob stream 0m0.345s 100000
|
|
|
|
--- pattern: './{**/?{/**/?{/**/?{/**/?,,,,},,,,},,,,},,,}/**/*.txt' ---
|
|
~~ sync ~~
|
|
node fast-glob sync 0m0.588s 100000
|
|
node globby sync 0m0.670s 100000
|
|
node current globSync mjs 0m0.717s 200023
|
|
node current glob syncStream 0m0.687s 200023
|
|
~~ async ~~
|
|
node fast-glob async 0m0.343s 100000
|
|
node globby async 0m0.418s 100000
|
|
node current glob async mjs 0m0.519s 200023
|
|
node current glob stream 0m0.451s 200023
|
|
|
|
--- pattern: '**/!(0|9).txt' ---
|
|
~~ sync ~~
|
|
node fast-glob sync 0m0.573s 160023
|
|
node globby sync 0m0.731s 160023
|
|
node current globSync mjs 0m0.680s 180023
|
|
node current glob syncStream 0m0.659s 180023
|
|
~~ async ~~
|
|
node fast-glob async 0m0.345s 160023
|
|
node globby async 0m0.476s 160023
|
|
node current glob async mjs 0m0.427s 180023
|
|
node current glob stream 0m0.388s 180023
|
|
|
|
--- pattern: './{*/**/../{*/**/../{*/**/../{*/**/../{*/**,,,,},,,,},,,,},,,,},,,,}/*.txt' ---
|
|
~~ sync ~~
|
|
node fast-glob sync 0m0.483s 0
|
|
node globby sync 0m0.512s 0
|
|
node current globSync mjs 0m0.811s 200023
|
|
node current glob syncStream 0m0.773s 200023
|
|
~~ async ~~
|
|
node fast-glob async 0m0.280s 0
|
|
node globby async 0m0.299s 0
|
|
node current glob async mjs 0m0.617s 200023
|
|
node current glob stream 0m0.568s 200023
|
|
|
|
--- pattern: './*/**/../*/**/../*/**/../*/**/../*/**/../*/**/../*/**/../*/**/*.txt' ---
|
|
~~ sync ~~
|
|
node fast-glob sync 0m0.485s 0
|
|
node globby sync 0m0.507s 0
|
|
node current globSync mjs 0m0.759s 200023
|
|
node current glob syncStream 0m0.740s 200023
|
|
~~ async ~~
|
|
node fast-glob async 0m0.281s 0
|
|
node globby async 0m0.297s 0
|
|
node current glob async mjs 0m0.544s 200023
|
|
node current glob stream 0m0.464s 200023
|
|
|
|
--- pattern: './*/**/../*/**/../*/**/../*/**/../*/**/*.txt' ---
|
|
~~ sync ~~
|
|
node fast-glob sync 0m0.486s 0
|
|
node globby sync 0m0.513s 0
|
|
node current globSync mjs 0m0.734s 200023
|
|
node current glob syncStream 0m0.696s 200023
|
|
~~ async ~~
|
|
node fast-glob async 0m0.286s 0
|
|
node globby async 0m0.296s 0
|
|
node current glob async mjs 0m0.506s 200023
|
|
node current glob stream 0m0.483s 200023
|
|
|
|
--- pattern: './0/**/../1/**/../2/**/../3/**/../4/**/../5/**/../6/**/../7/**/*.txt' ---
|
|
~~ sync ~~
|
|
node fast-glob sync 0m0.060s 0
|
|
node globby sync 0m0.074s 0
|
|
node current globSync mjs 0m0.067s 0
|
|
node current glob syncStream 0m0.066s 0
|
|
~~ async ~~
|
|
node fast-glob async 0m0.060s 0
|
|
node globby async 0m0.075s 0
|
|
node current glob async mjs 0m0.066s 0
|
|
node current glob stream 0m0.067s 0
|
|
|
|
--- pattern: './**/?/**/?/**/?/**/?/**/*.txt' ---
|
|
~~ sync ~~
|
|
node fast-glob sync 0m0.568s 100000
|
|
node globby sync 0m0.651s 100000
|
|
node current globSync mjs 0m0.619s 100000
|
|
node current glob syncStream 0m0.617s 100000
|
|
~~ async ~~
|
|
node fast-glob async 0m0.332s 100000
|
|
node globby async 0m0.409s 100000
|
|
node current glob async mjs 0m0.372s 100000
|
|
node current glob stream 0m0.351s 100000
|
|
|
|
--- pattern: '**/*/**/*/**/*/**/*/**' ---
|
|
~~ sync ~~
|
|
node fast-glob sync 0m0.603s 200113
|
|
node globby sync 0m0.798s 200113
|
|
node current globSync mjs 0m0.730s 222137
|
|
node current glob syncStream 0m0.693s 222137
|
|
~~ async ~~
|
|
node fast-glob async 0m0.356s 200113
|
|
node globby async 0m0.525s 200113
|
|
node current glob async mjs 0m0.508s 222137
|
|
node current glob stream 0m0.455s 222137
|
|
|
|
--- pattern: './**/*/**/*/**/*/**/*/**/*.txt' ---
|
|
~~ sync ~~
|
|
node fast-glob sync 0m0.622s 200000
|
|
node globby sync 0m0.792s 200000
|
|
node current globSync mjs 0m0.722s 200000
|
|
node current glob syncStream 0m0.695s 200000
|
|
~~ async ~~
|
|
node fast-glob async 0m0.369s 200000
|
|
node globby async 0m0.527s 200000
|
|
node current glob async mjs 0m0.502s 200000
|
|
node current glob stream 0m0.481s 200000
|
|
|
|
--- pattern: '**/*.txt' ---
|
|
~~ sync ~~
|
|
node fast-glob sync 0m0.588s 200023
|
|
node globby sync 0m0.771s 200023
|
|
node current globSync mjs 0m0.684s 200023
|
|
node current glob syncStream 0m0.658s 200023
|
|
~~ async ~~
|
|
node fast-glob async 0m0.352s 200023
|
|
node globby async 0m0.516s 200023
|
|
node current glob async mjs 0m0.432s 200023
|
|
node current glob stream 0m0.384s 200023
|
|
|
|
--- pattern: './**/**/**/**/**/**/**/**/*.txt' ---
|
|
~~ sync ~~
|
|
node fast-glob sync 0m0.589s 200023
|
|
node globby sync 0m0.766s 200023
|
|
node current globSync mjs 0m0.682s 200023
|
|
node current glob syncStream 0m0.652s 200023
|
|
~~ async ~~
|
|
node fast-glob async 0m0.352s 200023
|
|
node globby async 0m0.523s 200023
|
|
node current glob async mjs 0m0.436s 200023
|
|
node current glob stream 0m0.380s 200023
|
|
|
|
--- pattern: '**/*/*.txt' ---
|
|
~~ sync ~~
|
|
node fast-glob sync 0m0.592s 200023
|
|
node globby sync 0m0.776s 200023
|
|
node current globSync mjs 0m0.691s 200023
|
|
node current glob syncStream 0m0.659s 200023
|
|
~~ async ~~
|
|
node fast-glob async 0m0.357s 200023
|
|
node globby async 0m0.513s 200023
|
|
node current glob async mjs 0m0.471s 200023
|
|
node current glob stream 0m0.424s 200023
|
|
|
|
--- pattern: '**/*/**/*.txt' ---
|
|
~~ sync ~~
|
|
node fast-glob sync 0m0.585s 200023
|
|
node globby sync 0m0.766s 200023
|
|
node current globSync mjs 0m0.694s 200023
|
|
node current glob syncStream 0m0.664s 200023
|
|
~~ async ~~
|
|
node fast-glob async 0m0.350s 200023
|
|
node globby async 0m0.514s 200023
|
|
node current glob async mjs 0m0.472s 200023
|
|
node current glob stream 0m0.424s 200023
|
|
|
|
--- pattern: '**/[0-9]/**/*.txt' ---
|
|
~~ sync ~~
|
|
node fast-glob sync 0m0.544s 100000
|
|
node globby sync 0m0.636s 100000
|
|
node current globSync mjs 0m0.626s 100000
|
|
node current glob syncStream 0m0.621s 100000
|
|
~~ async ~~
|
|
node fast-glob async 0m0.322s 100000
|
|
node globby async 0m0.404s 100000
|
|
node current glob async mjs 0m0.360s 100000
|
|
node current glob stream 0m0.352s 100000
|
|
```
|