fswatch is a developer tool that triggers commands in response to filesystem changes. Works well on Mac, Linux, and should also works on Windows(not well tested).
go get -u -v github.com/codeskyblue/fswatch
Usage example
$ fswatch -v
3.0
$ fswtach --help
show help message ...
Watch file change event and trigger command
TODO: now only watch *.go, *.c, *.py
files, watch depth = 0 (current directory)
$ fswatch sh -c "ls -l | wc -l"
fswatch >>> [] exec start: sh -c 'ls -l | wc -l'
8
fswatch >>> [] finish in 11.822873ms
fswatch >>> changed: fswatch.go
fswatch >>> delay: 100ms
fswatch >>> [] exec start: [sh -c ls -l | wc -l]
8
fswatch >>> [] finish in 13.606428ms
^Cfswatch >>> Catch signal interrupt!
fswatch >>> Kill all running ... Done
Create a config file fsw.yml
config file example though command fswatch
with no arguments
desc: Auto generated by fswatch [fswatch]
triggers:
- pattens:
- '**/*.go'
- '**/*.c'
# also support '!**/test_*.go'
env:
DEBUG: "1"
# if shell is true, $cmd will be wrapped with `bash -c`
shell: true
cmd: go test -v
delay: 100ms
stop_timeout:1s
signal: "KILL"
kill_signal: "SIGTERM"
watch_paths:
- .
watch_depth: 5
Run fswatch
directly.
Every time you edit a file. Command go test -v
will be called.
$ fswatch
fswatch >>> exec start: go test -v
# github.com/codeskyblue/fswatch
./fswatch.go:281: main redeclared in this block
previous declaration at ./config.go:354
fswatch >>> program exited: exit status 2
fswatch >>> finish in 145.499911ms
support specify config file through
fswatch --config myfsw.yml
fswatch send signal to all process when restart. (mac and linux killed by pgid, windows by taskkill)
Ctrl+C
will trigger fswatch quit and kill all process it started.
More about the pattens. The patten has the same rule like .gitignore
.
So you can write like this.
- pattens:
- '*.go'
- '!*_test.go'
- '!**/bindata.go'
main.go
changed will trigger command, but a_test.go
and libs/bindata.go
will be ignored.
too many open files
For mac, run the following command
sysctl -w kern.maxfiles=20480
sysctl -w kern.maxfilesperproc=18000
ulimit -S -n 2048
Chinese Blog: http://my.oschina.net/goskyblue/blog/194240
I reviewed the first version of fswatch(which was taged 0.1). The code I look now is shit. So I deleted almost 80% code, And left some very useful functions.
- https://github.com/cortesi/modd
- https://github.com/emcrisostomo/fswatch write with cpp
- https://github.com/Unknwon/bra Funny name.
Under MIT