Code Monkey home page Code Monkey logo

shelljs's Introduction

ShellJS - Unix shell commands for Node.js Build Status

This project is young and experimental. Use at your own risk.

ShellJS is a portable (Windows included) implementation of Unix shell commands on top of the Node.js API. You can use it to eliminate your shell script's dependency on Unix while still keeping its familiar and powerful commands.

The project is unit-tested and is being used at Mozilla's pdf.js.

Example

require('shelljs/global');

// Copy files to release dir
mkdir('-p', 'out/Release');
cp('-R', 'stuff/*', 'out/Release');

// Replace macros in each .js file
cd('lib');
for (file in ls('*.js')) {
  sed('-i', 'BUILD_VERSION', 'v0.1.2', file);
  sed('-i', /.*REMOVE_THIS_LINE.*\n/, '', file);
  sed('-i', /.*REPLACE_LINE_WITH_MACRO.*\n/, cat('macro.js'), file);
}
cd('..');

// Run external tool synchronously
if (exec('git commit -am "Auto-commit"').code !== 0) {
  echo('Error: Git commit failed');
  exit(1);
}

Global vs. Local

The example above uses the convenience script shelljs/global to reduce verbosity. If polluting your global namespace is not desirable, simply require shelljs.

Example:

var shell = require('shelljs');
shell.echo('hello world');

Make tool

A convenience script shelljs/make is also provided to mimic the behavior of a Unix Makefile. In this case all shell objects are global, and command line arguments will cause the script to execute only the corresponding function in the global target object. To avoid redundant calls, target functions are executed only once per script.

Example:

//
// Example file: make.js
//
require('shelljs/make');

target.all = function() {
  target.bundle();
  target.docs();
}

// Bundle JS files
target.bundle = function() {
  cd(__dirname);
  mkdir('build');
  cd('lib');
  cat('*.js').to('../build/output.js');
}

// Generate docs
target.docs = function() {
  cd(__dirname);
  mkdir('docs');
  cd('lib');
  for (file in ls('*.js')) {
    var text = grep('//@', file); // extract special comments
    text.replace('//@', ''); // remove comment tags
    text.to('docs/my_docs.md');
  }
}

To run the target all, call the above script without arguments: $ node make. To run the target docs: $ node make docs, and so on.

Installing

Via npm:

$ npm install shelljs

Or simply copy shell.js into your project's directory, and require() accordingly.

Command reference

All commands run synchronously, unless otherwise stated.

cd('dir')

Changes to directory dir for the duration of the script

pwd()

Returns the current directory.

ls([options ,] path [,path ...])

ls([options ,] path_array)

Available options:

  • -R: recursive
  • -a: all files (include files beginning with .)

Examples:

ls('projs/*.js');
ls('-R', '/users/me', '/tmp');
ls('-R', ['/users/me', '/tmp']); // same as above

Returns list of files in the given path, or in current directory if no path provided. For convenient iteration via for (file in ls()), the format returned is a hash object: { 'file1':null, 'dir1/file2':null, ...}.

cp('[options ,] source [,source ...], dest')

cp('[options ,] source_array, dest')

Available options:

  • -f: force
  • -r, -R: recursive

Examples:

cp('file1', 'dir1');
cp('-Rf', '/tmp/*', '/usr/local/*', '/home/tmp');
cp('-Rf', ['/tmp/*', '/usr/local/*'], '/home/tmp'); // same as above

Copies files. The wildcard * is accepted.

rm([options ,] file [, file ...])

rm([options ,] file_array)

Available options:

  • -f: force
  • -r, -R: recursive

Examples:

rm('-rf', '/tmp/*');
rm('some_file.txt', 'another_file.txt');
rm(['some_file.txt', 'another_file.txt']); // same as above

Removes files. The wildcard * is accepted.

mv(source [, source ...], dest')

mv(source_array, dest')

Available options:

  • f: force

Examples:

mv('-f', 'file', 'dir/');
mv('file1', 'file2', 'dir/');
mv(['file1', 'file2'], 'dir/'); // same as above

Moves files. The wildcard * is accepted.

mkdir([options ,] dir [, dir ...])

mkdir([options ,] dir_array)

Available options:

  • p: full path (will create intermediate dirs if necessary)

Examples:

mkdir('-p', '/tmp/a/b/c/d', '/tmp/e/f/g');
mkdir('-p', ['/tmp/a/b/c/d', '/tmp/e/f/g']); // same as above

Creates directories.

cat(file [, file ...])

cat(file_array)

Examples:

var str = cat('file*.txt');
var str = cat('file1', 'file2');
var str = cat(['file1', 'file2']); // same as above

Returns a string containing the given file, or a concatenated string containing the files if more than one file is given (a new line character is introduced between each file). Wildcard * accepted.

'string'.to(file)

Examples:

cat('input.txt').to('output.txt');

Analogous to the redirection operator > in Unix, but works with JavaScript strings (such as those returned by cat, grep, etc). Like Unix redirections, to() will overwrite any existing file!

sed([options ,] search_regex, replace_str, file)

Available options:

  • -i: Replace contents of 'file' in-place. Note that no backups will be created!

Examples:

sed('-i', 'PROGRAM_VERSION', 'v0.1.3', 'source.js');
sed(/.*DELETE_THIS_LINE.*\n/, '', 'source.js');

Reads an input string from file and performs a JavaScript replace() on the input using the given search regex and replacement string. Returns the new string after replacement.

grep(regex_filter, file [, file ...])

grep(regex_filter, file_array)

Examples:

grep('GLOBAL_VARIABLE', '*.js');

Reads input string from given files and returns a string containing all lines of the file that match the given regex_filter. Wildcard * accepted.

which(command)

Examples:

var nodeExec = which('node');

Searches for command in the system's PATH. On Windows looks for .exe, .cmd, and .bat extensions. Returns string containing the absolute path to the command.

echo(string [,string ...])

Examples:

echo('hello world');
var str = echo('hello world');

Prints string to stdout, and returns string with additional utility methods like .to().

exit(code)

Exits the current process with the given exit code.

env['VAR_NAME']

Object containing environment variables (both getter and setter). Shortcut to process.env.

exec(command [, options] [, callback])

Available options (all false by default):

  • async: Asynchronous execution. Needs callback.
  • silent: Do not echo program output to console.

Examples:

var version = exec('node --version', {silent:true}).output;

Executes the given command synchronously, unless otherwise specified. When in synchronous mode returns the object { code:..., output:... }, containing the program's output (stdout + stderr) and its exit code. Otherwise the callback gets the arguments (code, output).

Non-Unix commands

tempdir()

Searches and returns string containing a writeable, platform-dependent temporary directory. Follows Python's tempfile algorithm.

exists(path [, path ...])

exists(path_array)

Returns true if all the given paths exist.

error()

Tests if error occurred in the last command. Returns null if no error occurred, otherwise returns string explaining the error

verbose()

Enables all output (default)

silent()

Suppresses all output, except for explict echo() calls

shelljs's People

Contributors

arturadib avatar

Stargazers

Zvi avatar

Watchers

Zvi avatar  avatar

Recommend Projects

  • React photo React

    A declarative, efficient, and flexible JavaScript library for building user interfaces.

  • Vue.js photo Vue.js

    ๐Ÿ–– Vue.js is a progressive, incrementally-adoptable JavaScript framework for building UI on the web.

  • Typescript photo Typescript

    TypeScript is a superset of JavaScript that compiles to clean JavaScript output.

  • TensorFlow photo TensorFlow

    An Open Source Machine Learning Framework for Everyone

  • Django photo Django

    The Web framework for perfectionists with deadlines.

  • D3 photo D3

    Bring data to life with SVG, Canvas and HTML. ๐Ÿ“Š๐Ÿ“ˆ๐ŸŽ‰

Recommend Topics

  • javascript

    JavaScript (JS) is a lightweight interpreted programming language with first-class functions.

  • web

    Some thing interesting about web. New door for the world.

  • server

    A server is a program made to process requests and deliver data to clients.

  • Machine learning

    Machine learning is a way of modeling and interpreting data that allows a piece of software to respond intelligently.

  • Game

    Some thing interesting about game, make everyone happy.

Recommend Org

  • Facebook photo Facebook

    We are working to build community through open source technology. NB: members must have two-factor auth.

  • Microsoft photo Microsoft

    Open source projects and samples from Microsoft.

  • Google photo Google

    Google โค๏ธ Open Source for everyone.

  • D3 photo D3

    Data-Driven Documents codes.