ignore
ignore
is a manager and filter which implemented in pure JavaScript according to the .gitignore spec.
Pay attention that minimatch
does not work in the gitignore way. To filter filenames according to .gitignore file, I recommend this module.
Installation
npm install ignore --save
Usage
var ignore = require('ignore');
var ig = ignore(options).addPattern(['.abc/*', '!.abc/d/']);
Filter the given paths
var paths = [
'.abc/a.js', // filtered out
'.abc/d/e.js' // included
];
ig.filter(paths); // ['.abc/d/e.js']
As the filter function
paths.filter(ig.createFilter()); // ['.abc/d/e.js']
With ignore files
For most cases, we'd better use only one ignore file. We could use ignore.select
to select the first existing file.
ignore().addIgnoreFile(
ignore.select([
'.xxxignore',
'.gitignore',
'.ignore'
])
);
Why another ignore?
ignore
is a standalone module, and is much simpler so that it could easy work with other programs, unlike isaacs's fstream-ignore which must work with the modules of the fstream family.ignore
only contains utility methods to filter paths according to the specified ignore rules, so
ignore
never try to find out ignore rules by traversing directories or fetching from git configurations.ignore
don't cares about sub-modules of git projects.
- Exactly according to gitignore man page, fixes some known matching issues of fstream-ignore, such as:
- '
/*.js
' should only match 'a.js
', but not 'abc/a.js
'. - '
**/foo
' should match 'foo
' anywhere.
- '
Methods
.addPattern(pattern)
Adds a rule or several rules to the current manager.
Returns this
pattern String|Array.<String>
The ignore rule or a array of rules.
Notice that a line starting with '#'
(hash) is treated as a comment. Put a backslash ('\'
) in front of the first hash for patterns that begin with a hash, if you want to ignore a file with a hash at the beginning of the filename.
ignore().addPattern('#abc').filter(['#abc']); // ['#abc']
ignore().addPattern('\#abc').filter(['#abc']); // []
.addIgnoreFile(path)
Adds rules from a ignore file or several files
Returns this
Rule String|Array.<String>
.filter(paths)
Filters the given array of pathnames, and returns the filtered array.
paths Array.<path>
The array of paths to be filtered.
NOTICE that each path
here should be a relative path to the root of your repository. Suppose the dir structure is:
/path/to/your/repo
|-- a
| |-- a.js
|
|-- .b
|
|-- .c
|-- .DS_store
Then the paths
might be like this:
[
'a/a.js'
'.b',
'.c/.DS_store'
]
Usually, you could use glob
to fetch the structure of the current directory:
var glob = require('glob');
glob('**', function(err, files){
var filtered;
if ( err ) {
console.log(err);
} else {
filtered = ignore().addIgnoreFile('.gitignore').filter(files);
console.log(filtered);
}
});
.createFilter()
Creates a filter function which could filter an array of paths with Array.prototype.filter
.
Returns function(path)
The filter function.
Constructor: ignore.Ignore
new ignore.Ignore(options);
ignore(options);
options.matchCase boolean=false
By default, all ignore rules will be treated as case-insensitive ones as well as the git does.
options.twoGlobstars boolean=false
By defailt, ignoreRules
will omit every pattern that includes '**
' (two consecutive asterisks) which is not compatible cross operating systems, because the behavior of file .gitignore depends on the implementation of command fnmatch
in shell.
By the way, Mac OS doesn't support '**
'.
options.ignore Array.<String>
The ignore rules to be added. Default to ['.git', '.svn', '.DS_Store']
If you want those directories to be included, you could
ignore({
ignore: []
});
You can also use .addPattern()
method to do this.