mirror-directories

mirror multiple source directories to multiple target destinations

Usage no npm install needed!

<script type="module">
  import mirrorDirectories from 'https://cdn.skypack.dev/mirror-directories';
</script>

README

mirror-directories

build status Known Vulnerabilities Renovate

Usage

Example 1

Recursively copy all the directories matching the glob src/* to out1 and out2:

% mirror-directories -s 'src/*' -d out1 -d out2

If src/project1 and src/project2 exist then they will be copied to out1/project1, out1/project2, out2/project1 and out2/project2.

Existing contents of the destination directories will be erased before the copying occurs such that the destination directories will mirror the source directories exactly.

Example 2

Recursively copy src1 and src2 to all the directories matching destinations/*:

% mirror-directories -s src1 -s src2 -d 'destinations/*'

If destinations/birthday and destinations/fear exist then at the end destinations/{birthday,fear}/{src1,src2} will be exact copies of their respective source directories.

Example 3

A trailing slash can be used to copy the contents of the source directory into the destination directory.

% mirror-directories -s 'src/' -d out

Creates out as a mirror of src instead of creating out/src as a mirror of src. This corresponds to the rename option of the API.

Example 4

The -m argument can be used to specify independent source/dest pairs.

% mirror-directories -m src:out -m friends/:enemies

This will mirror src to out/src and the contents of the friends directory to the enemies directory.

Example 5

The -m argument can be used to specify multiple source directories for a single dest directory. Either all of none of the source directories must have a trailing slash. When all source directories have a trailing slash, meaning all of them relate to rename watches, files in latter source directories will take precedence over those specified earlier.

% mirror-directories -m src1/:src2/:out

In this circumstance if both src1/file and src2/file exist then out/file will always mirror src2/file. If -w were used then any changes to src1/file would be ignored. Removing src2/file would lead to out/file being a mirror of src1/file until src2/file is recreated.

Example 6

The -e argument can be used to exclude directories

% mirror-directories -e blah -e hero/cat -m src:out -m friends/:enemies

This will mirror src to out/src and the contents of the friends directory to the enemies directory but will not mirror src/blah or src/hero/cat. If src/blah and/or src/hero/cat are directories then their contents would also be ignored.

API

This library also exports an API:

import { mirrorDirectories, watchDirectoriesForChangesAndMirror } from 'mirror-directories'

// the default options are { keep: false, rename: false }
mirrorDirectories([
  { srcDirs: ['src1'], destDirs: ['dest1', 'dest2'] },
  { srcDirs: ['src2', 'src3'], destDirs: ['dest2', 'dest3'] },
])

const stopWatching = await watchDirectoriesForChangesAndMirror(
  [{ srcDirs: ['src4'], destDirs: ['dest4', 'dest5'] }],
  {
    // keep existing contents in destination directories
    keep: true,
    // use watchman's "watch-project" command rather than "watch"
    watchProject: true,
    // mirrors `src4` to `dest4` and `dest5` instead of
    // `dest4/src4` and `dest5/src4`
    rename: true,
  },
)
process.on('exit', stopWatching())