Watch Files and Directories with Node.js

By  on  

Watching a file or directory for changes is an important part of automation.  We all enjoy using our favorite CSS preprocessor's "watch" feature -- we can still refresh the page and see our changes as though we were simply writing in pure CSS.  Node.js makes both file and directory watching easy -- but it's a bit more difficult than you may think.

Simply put:  Node.js' watching features aren't consistent or performant yet, which the documentation admits.  The good news:  a utility called chokidar stabilizes file watching and provides added insight into what has happened.  chokidar provides a wealth of listeners;  instead of providing boring reduced examples, here's what chokidar provides you:

var chokidar = require('chokidar');

var watcher = chokidar.watch('file, dir, or glob', {
  ignored: /[\/\\]\./, persistent: true
});

var log = console.log.bind(console);

watcher
  .on('add', function(path) { log('File', path, 'has been added'); })
  .on('addDir', function(path) { log('Directory', path, 'has been added'); })
  .on('change', function(path) { log('File', path, 'has been changed'); })
  .on('unlink', function(path) { log('File', path, 'has been removed'); })
  .on('unlinkDir', function(path) { log('Directory', path, 'has been removed'); })
  .on('error', function(error) { log('Error happened', error); })
  .on('ready', function() { log('Initial scan complete. Ready for changes.'); })
  .on('raw', function(event, path, details) { log('Raw event info:', event, path, details); })

// 'add', 'addDir' and 'change' events also receive stat() results as second
// argument when available: http://nodejs.org/api/fs.html#fs_class_fs_stats
watcher.on('change', function(path, stats) {
  if (stats) console.log('File', path, 'changed size to', stats.size);
});

// Watch new files.
watcher.add('new-file');
watcher.add(['new-file-2', 'new-file-3', '**/other-file*']);

// Un-watch some files.
watcher.unwatch('new-file*');

// Only needed if watching is `persistent: true`.
watcher.close();

// One-liner
require('chokidar').watch('.', {ignored: /[\/\\]\./}).on('all', function(event, path) {
  console.log(event, path);
});

What a wealth of handles, especially when you've experienced the perils of `fs` watch functionality.  File watching is essential to seamless development and chokidar makes life easy!

Recent Features

  • By
    Write Better JavaScript with Promises

    You've probably heard the talk around the water cooler about how promises are the future. All of the cool kids are using them, but you don't see what makes them so special. Can't you just use a callback? What's the big deal? In this article, we'll...

  • By
    Serving Fonts from CDN

    For maximum performance, we all know we must put our assets on CDN (another domain).  Along with those assets are custom web fonts.  Unfortunately custom web fonts via CDN (or any cross-domain font request) don't work in Firefox or Internet Explorer (correctly so, by spec) though...

Incredible Demos

Discussion

  1. This tool was missing in Node.js, with it, it will be easier to play and manipulate with the directory structure and files.

  2. ravindranath

    The term “chokidar” seems to be a Hindi word, which literally means watcher. :)

  3. I have try fs.watch function of nodejs, it’s work fine but can you let me watcher work after complete change.

    fs.watch function start working when changes start.

  4. One of my favorite libraries. Keep spreading the good news!

  5. Jamie

    you can now also watch for file changes on a remote server using this module:

    https://www.npmjs.com/package/remote-file-watcher

  6. abhishek

    Is it possible to get process id or name from chokidar? I mean the process which updated the file system.

  7. Elia

    Hello!

    I’ve created an app using javascript. What I want to do is to continuously check the state of a directory. Since I’m not able to do this in javascript for security reasons I was thinking of using node.js. Is it possible to run run node.js in the background while javascript continues?

    Thanks

Wrap your code in <pre class="{language}"></pre> tags, link to a GitHub gist, JSFiddle fiddle, or CodePen pen to embed!