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toolkit/packages/glob
ruvceskistefan 8f2bd5d713
Added verbose mode in hashFiles (#1052)
* Added verbose mode in hashFiles

* Code formatting

* Change verboseMode arg to verbose

Co-authored-by: Thomas Boop <52323235+thboop@users.noreply.github.com>

* Using verbose instead of verboseMode as arg

Co-authored-by: Thomas Boop <52323235+thboop@users.noreply.github.com>
2022-04-18 14:29:24 -04:00
..
__tests__ Add HashFiles to the toolkit (#830) 2021-06-07 14:26:00 -04:00
src Added verbose mode in hashFiles (#1052) 2022-04-18 14:29:24 -04:00
LICENSE.md Add License.md to all npm packages (#548) 2020-08-25 16:26:50 -04:00
README.md glob readme (#296) 2020-01-10 12:00:22 -05:00
RELEASES.md Update `lockfileVersion` in `package-lock.json` in `glob` package (#1023) 2022-03-16 11:24:24 -07:00
package-lock.json Update `lockfileVersion` in `package-lock.json` in `glob` package (#1023) 2022-03-16 11:24:24 -07:00
package.json Update `lockfileVersion` in `package-lock.json` in `glob` package (#1023) 2022-03-16 11:24:24 -07:00
tsconfig.json glob (#268) 2019-12-31 10:16:18 -05:00

README.md

@actions/glob

Usage

Basic

You can use this package to search for files matching glob patterns.

Relative paths and absolute paths are both allowed. Relative paths are rooted against the current working directory.

const glob = require('@actions/glob');

const patterns = ['**/tar.gz', '**/tar.bz']
const globber = await glob.create(patterns.join('\n'))
const files = await globber.glob()
const glob = require('@actions/glob');

const globber = await glob.create('**', {followSymbolicLinks: false})
const files = await globber.glob()

Iterator

When dealing with a large amount of results, consider iterating the results as they are returned:

const glob = require('@actions/glob');

const globber = await glob.create('**')
for await (const file of globber.globGenerator()) {
  console.log(file)
}

Glob follows symbolic links by default. Following is often appropriate unless deleting files.

Users may want to opt-out from following symbolic links for other reasons. For example, excessive amounts of symbolic links can create the appearance of very, very many files and slow the search.

When an action allows a user to specify input patterns, it is generally recommended to allow users to opt-out from following symbolic links.

Snippet from action.yml:

inputs:
  files:
    description: 'Files to print'
    required: true
  follow-symbolic-links:
    description: 'Indicates whether to follow symbolic links'
    default: true

And corresponding toolkit consumption:

const core = require('@actions/core')
const glob = require('@actions/glob')

const globOptions = {
  followSymbolicLinks: core.getInput('follow-symbolic-links').toUpper() !== 'FALSE'
}
const globber = glob.create(core.getInput('files'), globOptions)
for await (const file of globber.globGenerator()) {
  console.log(file)
}

Patterns

Glob behavior

Patterns *, ?, [...], ** (globstar) are supported.

With the following behaviors:

  • File names that begin with . may be included in the results
  • Case insensitive on Windows
  • Directory separator / and \ both supported on Windows

Tilde expansion

Supports basic tilde expansion, for current user HOME replacement only.

Example:

  • ~ may expand to /Users/johndoe
  • ~/foo may expand to /Users/johndoe/foo

Comments

Patterns that begin with # are treated as comments.

Exclude patterns

Leading ! changes the meaning of an include pattern to exclude.

Multiple leading ! flips the meaning.

Escaping

Wrapping special characters in [] can be used to escape literal glob characters in a file name. For example the literal file name hello[a-z] can be escaped as hello[[]a-z].

On Linux/macOS \ is also treated as an escape character.