Backs out file tree changes
npm install fs-tree-diff
FSTree provides the means to calculate a patch (set of operations) between one file system tree and another.
The possible operations are:
* unlink – remove the specified file
* rmdir – remove the specified folder
* mkdir – create the specified folder
* create – create the specified file
* change – update the specified file to reflect changes
The operations chosen aim to minimize the amount of IO required to apply a given patch.
For example, a naive rm -rf of a directory tree is actually quite costly, as child directories
must be recursively traversed, entries stated.. etc, all to figure out what first must be deleted.
Since we patch from tree to tree, discovering new files is both wasteful and un-needed.
The operations will also be provided in a correct order, allowing us to safely
replay operations without having to first confirm the FS is as we expect. For
example, unlinks for files will occur before a rmdir of those files' parent
dir. Although the ordering will be safe, a specific order is not guaranteed.
A simple example:
``js
const FSTree = require('fs-tree-diff');
const current = FSTree.fromPaths([
'a.js'
]);
const next = FSTree.fromPaths([
'b.js'
]);
current.calculatePatch(next) === [
['unlink', 'a.js', entryA],
['create', 'b.js', entryB]
];
`
A slightly more complicated example:
`js
const FSTree = require('fs-tree-diff');
const current = FSTree.fromPaths([
'a.js',
'b/',
'b/f.js'
]);
const next = FSTree.fromPaths([
'b.js',
'b/',
'b/c/',
'b/c/d.js',
'b/e.js'
]);
current.calculatePatch(next) === [
['unlink', 'a.js', entryA],
['create', 'b.js', entryB],
['mkdir', 'b/c', entryBC],
['create', 'b/c/d.js', entryBCD],
['create', 'b/e.js', entryBE]
['unlink', 'b/f.js', entryBF],
]
`
Now, the above examples do not demonstrate change operations. This is because
when providing only paths, we do not have sufficient information to check if
one entry is merely different from another with the same relativePath.
For this, FSTree supports more complex input structure. To demonstrate, we
will use the walk-sync module,
which provides higher fidelity input, allowing FSTree to also detect changes.
(See also the documentation for
walkSync.entries.)
`js
const walkSync = require('walk-sync');
// path/to/root/foo.js
// path/to/root/bar.js
const current = new FSTree({
entries: walkSync.entries('path/to/root')
});
writeFileSync('path/to/root/foo.js', 'new content');
writeFileSync('path/to/root/baz.js', 'new file');
const next = new FSTree({
entries: walkSync.entries('path/to/root')
});
current.calculatePatch(next) === [
['change', 'foo.js', entryFoo], // mtime + size changed, so this input is stale and needs updating.
['create', 'baz.js', entryBaz] // new file, so we should create it
/ bar stays the same and is left inert/
];
`
The entry objects provided depend on the operation. For rmdir and unlinkmkdir
operations, the current entry is provided. For , change and create
operations the new entry is provided.
The public API is:
- FSTree.fromPaths initialize a tree from an array of string paths.FSTree.fromEntries
- initialize a tree from an array of Entry objects.
Each entry must have the following properties (but may have more):
- relativePathmode
- size
- mtime
- FSTree.applyPatch(inputDir, outputDir, patch, delegate)
- applies the givenFSTree.prototype.calculatePatch(newTree, isEqual)
patch from the input directory to the output directory. You can optionally
provide a delegate object to handle individual types of patch operations.
- calculate a patch againstnewTree
. Optionally specify a custom isEqual (see Change Calculation).FSTree.prototype.calculateAndApplyPatch(newTree, inputDir, outputDir, delegate)
- calculatePatch
does a followed by applyPatch.FSTree.prototype.addEntries(entries, options)
- adds entries to anFSTree.fromEntries
existing tree. Options are the same as for .FSTree.prototype.addPaths(paths, options)
Entries added with the same path will overwrite any existing entries.
- adds paths to anFSTree.fromPaths
existing tree. Options are the same as for .Entry.fromStat(relativePath, stat)
If entries already exist for any of the paths added, those entries will
be updated.
- creates an Entry from a given path andfs.Stats
object. It canfromEntries
then be used with or addEntries.
The trees returned from fromPaths and fromEntries are relative to some basecalculatePatch
directory. , applyPatch and calculateAndApplyPatch all
assume that the base directory has not changed.
FSTree.fromPaths, FSTree.fromEntries, FSTree.prototype.addPaths,FSTree.prototype.addEntries
and all validate their inputs. InputsrelativePath
must be sorted, path-unique (i.e. two entries with the same butsize
different s would still be illegal input) and include intermediate
directories.
For example, the following input is invalid
`js`
FSTree.fromPaths([
// => missing a/ and a/b/
'a/b/c.js'
]);
To have FSTree sort and expand (include intermediate directories) for you, add
the option sortAndExpand).
`js
FStree.fromPaths([
'a/b/q/r/bar.js',
'a/b/c/d/foo.js',
], { sortAndExpand: true });
// The above is equivalent to
FSTree.fromPaths([
'a/',
'a/b/',
'a/b/c/',
'a/b/c/d/',
'a/b/c/d/foo.js',
'a/b/q/',
'a/b/q/r/',
'a/b/q/r/bar.js',
]);
`
FSTree.fromEntries requires you to supply your own Entry objects. Your
entry objects must contain the following properties:
- relativePathmode
- size
- mtime
-
They must also implement the following API:
- isDirectory() true iff this entry is a directory
FSTree.fromEntries composes well with the output of walkSync.entries:
`js
const walkSync = require('walk-sync');
// path/to/root/foo.js
// path/to/root/bar.js
const current = FSTree.fromEntries(walkSync.entries('path/to/root'));
`
When a prior entry has a relativePath that matches that of a current entry, aisEqual
change operation is included if the new entry is different from the previous
entry. This is determined by calling , the optional second argumentcalculatePatch
to . If no isEqual is provided, a default isEqual is used.
The default isEqual treats directories as always equal and files as different
if any of the following properties have changed.
- modesize
- mtime
-
User specified isEqual will often want to use the default isEqual, so it is exported on FSTree.
Example
`js
const defaultIsEqual = FSTree.defaultIsEqual;
function isEqualCheckingMeta(a, b) {
return defaultIsEqual(a, b) && isMetaEqual(a, b);
}
function isMetaEqual(a, b) {
// ...
}
`
When you want to apply changes from one tree to another easily, you can use the
FSTree.applyPatch method. For example, given:
`js`
const patch = oldInputTree.calculatePatch(newInputTree);
const inputDir = 'src';
const outputDir = 'dist';
FSTree.applyPatch(inputDir, outputDir, patch);
It will apply the patch changes to dist while using src as a reference formkdir
non-destructive operations (, create, change). If you want to calculate
and apply a patch without any intermediate operations, you can do:
`js`
const inputDir = 'src';
const outputDir = 'dist';
oldInputTree.calculateAndApplyPatch(newInputTree, inputDir, outputDir);
You can optionally provide a delegate object to handle applying specific types
of operations:
`js`
let createCount = 0;
FSTree.applyPatch(inputDir, outputDir, patch, {
create: function(inputPath, outputPath, relativePath) {
createCount++;
copy(inputPath, outputPath);
}
});
The available delegate functions are the same as the supported operations:
unlink, rmdir, mkdir, create, and change. Each delegate functioninputPath
receives the reference , the outputPath, and relativePath` of the file
or directory for which to apply the operation.