Mini Shell
/// <reference types="node" resolution-mode="require"/>
import { Minimatch } from 'minimatch';
import { Minipass } from 'minipass';
import { FSOption, Path, PathScurry } from 'path-scurry';
import { IgnoreLike } from './ignore.js';
import { Pattern } from './pattern.js';
export type MatchSet = Minimatch['set'];
export type GlobParts = Exclude<Minimatch['globParts'], undefined>;
/**
* A `GlobOptions` object may be provided to any of the exported methods, and
* must be provided to the `Glob` constructor.
*
* All options are optional, boolean, and false by default, unless otherwise
* noted.
*
* All resolved options are added to the Glob object as properties.
*
* If you are running many `glob` operations, you can pass a Glob object as the
* `options` argument to a subsequent operation to share the previously loaded
* cache.
*/
export interface GlobOptions {
/**
* Set to `true` to always receive absolute paths for
* matched files. Set to `false` to always return relative paths.
*
* When this option is not set, absolute paths are returned for patterns
* that are absolute, and otherwise paths are returned that are relative
* to the `cwd` setting.
*
* This does _not_ make an extra system call to get
* the realpath, it only does string path resolution.
*
* Conflicts with {@link withFileTypes}
*/
absolute?: boolean;
/**
* Set to false to enable {@link windowsPathsNoEscape}
*
* @deprecated
*/
allowWindowsEscape?: boolean;
/**
* The current working directory in which to search. Defaults to
* `process.cwd()`.
*
* May be eiher a string path or a `file://` URL object or string.
*/
cwd?: string | URL;
/**
* Include `.dot` files in normal matches and `globstar`
* matches. Note that an explicit dot in a portion of the pattern
* will always match dot files.
*/
dot?: boolean;
/**
* Prepend all relative path strings with `./` (or `.\` on Windows).
*
* Without this option, returned relative paths are "bare", so instead of
* returning `'./foo/bar'`, they are returned as `'foo/bar'`.
*
* Relative patterns starting with `'../'` are not prepended with `./`, even
* if this option is set.
*/
dotRelative?: boolean;
/**
* Follow symlinked directories when expanding `**`
* patterns. This can result in a lot of duplicate references in
* the presence of cyclic links, and make performance quite bad.
*
* By default, a `**` in a pattern will follow 1 symbolic link if
* it is not the first item in the pattern, or none if it is the
* first item in the pattern, following the same behavior as Bash.
*/
follow?: boolean;
/**
* string or string[], or an object with `ignore` and `ignoreChildren`
* methods.
*
* If a string or string[] is provided, then this is treated as a glob
* pattern or array of glob patterns to exclude from matches. To ignore all
* children within a directory, as well as the entry itself, append `'/**'`
* to the ignore pattern.
*
* **Note** `ignore` patterns are _always_ in `dot:true` mode, regardless of
* any other settings.
*
* If an object is provided that has `ignored(path)` and/or
* `childrenIgnored(path)` methods, then these methods will be called to
* determine whether any Path is a match or if its children should be
* traversed, respectively.
*/
ignore?: string | string[] | IgnoreLike;
/**
* Treat brace expansion like `{a,b}` as a "magic" pattern. Has no
* effect if {@link nobrace} is set.
*
* Only has effect on the {@link hasMagic} function.
*/
magicalBraces?: boolean;
/**
* Add a `/` character to directory matches. Note that this requires
* additional stat calls in some cases.
*/
mark?: boolean;
/**
* Perform a basename-only match if the pattern does not contain any slash
* characters. That is, `*.js` would be treated as equivalent to
* `**\/*.js`, matching all js files in all directories.
*/
matchBase?: boolean;
/**
* Limit the directory traversal to a given depth below the cwd.
* Note that this does NOT prevent traversal to sibling folders,
* root patterns, and so on. It only limits the maximum folder depth
* that the walk will descend, relative to the cwd.
*/
maxDepth?: number;
/**
* Do not expand `{a,b}` and `{1..3}` brace sets.
*/
nobrace?: boolean;
/**
* Perform a case-insensitive match. This defaults to `true` on macOS and
* Windows systems, and `false` on all others.
*
* **Note** `nocase` should only be explicitly set when it is
* known that the filesystem's case sensitivity differs from the
* platform default. If set `true` on case-sensitive file
* systems, or `false` on case-insensitive file systems, then the
* walk may return more or less results than expected.
*/
nocase?: boolean;
/**
* Do not match directories, only files. (Note: to match
* _only_ directories, put a `/` at the end of the pattern.)
*/
nodir?: boolean;
/**
* Do not match "extglob" patterns such as `+(a|b)`.
*/
noext?: boolean;
/**
* Do not match `**` against multiple filenames. (Ie, treat it as a normal
* `*` instead.)
*
* Conflicts with {@link matchBase}
*/
noglobstar?: boolean;
/**
* Defaults to value of `process.platform` if available, or `'linux'` if
* not. Setting `platform:'win32'` on non-Windows systems may cause strange
* behavior.
*/
platform?: NodeJS.Platform;
/**
* Set to true to call `fs.realpath` on all of the
* results. In the case of an entry that cannot be resolved, the
* entry is omitted. This incurs a slight performance penalty, of
* course, because of the added system calls.
*/
realpath?: boolean;
/**
*
* A string path resolved against the `cwd` option, which
* is used as the starting point for absolute patterns that start
* with `/`, (but not drive letters or UNC paths on Windows).
*
* Note that this _doesn't_ necessarily limit the walk to the
* `root` directory, and doesn't affect the cwd starting point for
* non-absolute patterns. A pattern containing `..` will still be
* able to traverse out of the root directory, if it is not an
* actual root directory on the filesystem, and any non-absolute
* patterns will be matched in the `cwd`. For example, the
* pattern `/../*` with `{root:'/some/path'}` will return all
* files in `/some`, not all files in `/some/path`. The pattern
* `*` with `{root:'/some/path'}` will return all the entries in
* the cwd, not the entries in `/some/path`.
*
* To start absolute and non-absolute patterns in the same
* path, you can use `{root:''}`. However, be aware that on
* Windows systems, a pattern like `x:/*` or `//host/share/*` will
* _always_ start in the `x:/` or `//host/share` directory,
* regardless of the `root` setting.
*/
root?: string;
/**
* A [PathScurry](http://npm.im/path-scurry) object used
* to traverse the file system. If the `nocase` option is set
* explicitly, then any provided `scurry` object must match this
* setting.
*/
scurry?: PathScurry;
/**
* Call `lstat()` on all entries, whether required or not to determine
* if it's a valid match. When used with {@link withFileTypes}, this means
* that matches will include data such as modified time, permissions, and
* so on. Note that this will incur a performance cost due to the added
* system calls.
*/
stat?: boolean;
/**
* An AbortSignal which will cancel the Glob walk when
* triggered.
*/
signal?: AbortSignal;
/**
* Use `\\` as a path separator _only_, and
* _never_ as an escape character. If set, all `\\` characters are
* replaced with `/` in the pattern.
*
* Note that this makes it **impossible** to match against paths
* containing literal glob pattern characters, but allows matching
* with patterns constructed using `path.join()` and
* `path.resolve()` on Windows platforms, mimicking the (buggy!)
* behavior of Glob v7 and before on Windows. Please use with
* caution, and be mindful of [the caveat below about Windows
* paths](#windows). (For legacy reasons, this is also set if
* `allowWindowsEscape` is set to the exact value `false`.)
*/
windowsPathsNoEscape?: boolean;
/**
* Return [PathScurry](http://npm.im/path-scurry)
* `Path` objects instead of strings. These are similar to a
* NodeJS `Dirent` object, but with additional methods and
* properties.
*
* Conflicts with {@link absolute}
*/
withFileTypes?: boolean;
/**
* An fs implementation to override some or all of the defaults. See
* http://npm.im/path-scurry for details about what can be overridden.
*/
fs?: FSOption;
/**
* Just passed along to Minimatch. Note that this makes all pattern
* matching operations slower and *extremely* noisy.
*/
debug?: boolean;
/**
* Return `/` delimited paths, even on Windows.
*
* On posix systems, this has no effect. But, on Windows, it means that
* paths will be `/` delimited, and absolute paths will be their full
* resolved UNC forms, eg instead of `'C:\\foo\\bar'`, it would return
* `'//?/C:/foo/bar'`
*/
posix?: boolean;
}
export type GlobOptionsWithFileTypesTrue = GlobOptions & {
withFileTypes: true;
absolute?: undefined;
mark?: undefined;
posix?: undefined;
};
export type GlobOptionsWithFileTypesFalse = GlobOptions & {
withFileTypes?: false;
};
export type GlobOptionsWithFileTypesUnset = GlobOptions & {
withFileTypes?: undefined;
};
export type Result<Opts> = Opts extends GlobOptionsWithFileTypesTrue ? Path : Opts extends GlobOptionsWithFileTypesFalse ? string : Opts extends GlobOptionsWithFileTypesUnset ? string : string | Path;
export type Results<Opts> = Result<Opts>[];
export type FileTypes<Opts> = Opts extends GlobOptionsWithFileTypesTrue ? true : Opts extends GlobOptionsWithFileTypesFalse ? false : Opts extends GlobOptionsWithFileTypesUnset ? false : boolean;
/**
* An object that can perform glob pattern traversals.
*/
export declare class Glob<Opts extends GlobOptions> implements GlobOptions {
absolute?: boolean;
cwd: string;
root?: string;
dot: boolean;
dotRelative: boolean;
follow: boolean;
ignore?: string | string[] | IgnoreLike;
magicalBraces: boolean;
mark?: boolean;
matchBase: boolean;
maxDepth: number;
nobrace: boolean;
nocase: boolean;
nodir: boolean;
noext: boolean;
noglobstar: boolean;
pattern: string[];
platform: NodeJS.Platform;
realpath: boolean;
scurry: PathScurry;
stat: boolean;
signal?: AbortSignal;
windowsPathsNoEscape: boolean;
withFileTypes: FileTypes<Opts>;
/**
* The options provided to the constructor.
*/
opts: Opts;
/**
* An array of parsed immutable {@link Pattern} objects.
*/
patterns: Pattern[];
/**
* All options are stored as properties on the `Glob` object.
*
* See {@link GlobOptions} for full options descriptions.
*
* Note that a previous `Glob` object can be passed as the
* `GlobOptions` to another `Glob` instantiation to re-use settings
* and caches with a new pattern.
*
* Traversal functions can be called multiple times to run the walk
* again.
*/
constructor(pattern: string | string[], opts: Opts);
/**
* Returns a Promise that resolves to the results array.
*/
walk(): Promise<Results<Opts>>;
/**
* synchronous {@link Glob.walk}
*/
walkSync(): Results<Opts>;
/**
* Stream results asynchronously.
*/
stream(): Minipass<Result<Opts>, Result<Opts>>;
/**
* Stream results synchronously.
*/
streamSync(): Minipass<Result<Opts>, Result<Opts>>;
/**
* Default sync iteration function. Returns a Generator that
* iterates over the results.
*/
iterateSync(): Generator<Result<Opts>, void, void>;
[Symbol.iterator](): Generator<Result<Opts>, void, void>;
/**
* Default async iteration function. Returns an AsyncGenerator that
* iterates over the results.
*/
iterate(): AsyncGenerator<Result<Opts>, void, void>;
[Symbol.asyncIterator](): AsyncGenerator<Result<Opts>, void, void>;
}
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