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a glob matcher in javascript

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Top Related Projects

Highly optimized wildcard and glob matching library. Faster, drop-in replacement to minimatch and multimatch. Used by square, webpack, babel core, yarn, jest, ract-native, taro, bulma, browser-sync, stylelint, nyc, ava, and many others! Follow micromatch's author: https://github.com/jonschlinkert

2,514

User-friendly glob matching

:rocket: It's a very fast and efficient glob library for Node.js

glob functionality for node.js

Quick Overview

Minimatch is a minimal matching utility for JavaScript, designed to match filenames or other strings against glob patterns. It's widely used in various Node.js projects and build tools for tasks like file selection and pattern matching.

Pros

  • Lightweight and fast implementation of glob matching
  • Supports both simple and complex glob patterns
  • Well-maintained and battle-tested in many popular projects
  • Provides both synchronous and asynchronous matching options

Cons

  • Limited to glob pattern matching, not a full-featured regex alternative
  • Some advanced features may require additional configuration
  • Performance can degrade with extremely complex patterns
  • Documentation could be more comprehensive for advanced use cases

Code Examples

  1. Basic file matching:
const minimatch = require('minimatch');

console.log(minimatch('file.txt', '*.txt')); // true
console.log(minimatch('file.js', '*.txt')); // false
  1. Using options for case-insensitive matching:
const minimatch = require('minimatch');

console.log(minimatch('File.TXT', '*.txt', { nocase: true })); // true
  1. Matching multiple patterns:
const minimatch = require('minimatch');

const files = ['file.txt', 'image.png', 'document.pdf'];
const matchingFiles = files.filter(file => minimatch(file, '*.{txt,png}'));
console.log(matchingFiles); // ['file.txt', 'image.png']
  1. Creating a reusable matcher function:
const minimatch = require('minimatch');

const matcher = minimatch.filter('*.js');
const files = ['script.js', 'style.css', 'index.html'];
console.log(files.filter(matcher)); // ['script.js']

Getting Started

To use Minimatch in your project, follow these steps:

  1. Install the package:

    npm install minimatch
    
  2. Import and use in your JavaScript code:

    const minimatch = require('minimatch');
    
    if (minimatch('filename.txt', '*.txt')) {
      console.log('Match found!');
    }
    
  3. For more advanced usage, refer to the GitHub repository for additional options and patterns.

Competitor Comparisons

Highly optimized wildcard and glob matching library. Faster, drop-in replacement to minimatch and multimatch. Used by square, webpack, babel core, yarn, jest, ract-native, taro, bulma, browser-sync, stylelint, nyc, ava, and many others! Follow micromatch's author: https://github.com/jonschlinkert

Pros of micromatch

  • Faster performance, especially for large sets of patterns
  • More extensive feature set, including support for extended globbing syntax
  • Better handling of Windows-style paths

Cons of micromatch

  • Larger package size and more dependencies
  • Slightly steeper learning curve due to additional features

Code comparison

minimatch:

const minimatch = require('minimatch');
console.log(minimatch('file.txt', '*.txt')); // true
console.log(minimatch('file.txt', '*.md')); // false

micromatch:

const micromatch = require('micromatch');
console.log(micromatch.isMatch('file.txt', '*.txt')); // true
console.log(micromatch.isMatch('file.txt', '*.md')); // false

Summary

minimatch is a lightweight and straightforward glob matching library, while micromatch offers more advanced features and better performance at the cost of a larger package size. minimatch is suitable for simple use cases, whereas micromatch is better for complex pattern matching scenarios or when dealing with large sets of files. Both libraries provide similar basic functionality, but micromatch extends the capabilities with additional matching options and improved cross-platform support.

2,514

User-friendly glob matching

Pros of globby

  • Supports multiple glob patterns and negation patterns
  • Provides additional features like ignoring VCS files and expanding directories
  • Offers a Promise-based API for asynchronous operations

Cons of globby

  • Larger package size due to additional dependencies
  • May have slightly slower performance for simple glob patterns
  • Requires Node.js 10 or later, limiting compatibility with older systems

Code Comparison

minimatch:

const minimatch = require('minimatch');
const result = minimatch('file.txt', '*.txt');

globby:

const globby = require('globby');
(async () => {
  const paths = await globby(['*.txt', '!excluded.txt']);
  console.log(paths);
})();

Key Differences

  • minimatch focuses on single pattern matching, while globby handles multiple patterns
  • globby provides a higher-level API with more features, whereas minimatch offers a simpler, more focused functionality
  • minimatch is a lightweight solution for basic glob matching, while globby is more suitable for complex file searching and pattern matching scenarios

Both libraries have their merits, and the choice between them depends on the specific requirements of your project. minimatch is ideal for simple pattern matching, while globby excels in more complex file searching and pattern matching tasks.

:rocket: It's a very fast and efficient glob library for Node.js

Pros of fast-glob

  • Significantly faster performance, especially for large file sets
  • Supports multiple glob patterns in a single call
  • Provides more advanced features like ignore patterns and cwd option

Cons of fast-glob

  • Larger package size and more dependencies
  • Slightly more complex API, which may be overkill for simple use cases
  • Not as widely adopted as minimatch

Code Comparison

minimatch:

const minimatch = require('minimatch');
const result = minimatch('file.txt', '*.txt');

fast-glob:

const fg = require('fast-glob');
const entries = await fg(['**/*.txt', '!node_modules']);

Key Differences

  • minimatch is primarily a pattern matching library, while fast-glob is a file system globbing tool
  • fast-glob is designed for high-performance file system operations, whereas minimatch focuses on pattern matching
  • minimatch is more suitable for simple pattern matching tasks, while fast-glob excels in complex file searching scenarios

Use Cases

  • Choose minimatch for lightweight pattern matching or when working with individual file names
  • Opt for fast-glob when dealing with file system operations, multiple patterns, or requiring high performance for large file sets

glob functionality for node.js

Pros of node-glob

  • More powerful and feature-rich, supporting advanced globbing patterns
  • Provides asynchronous and streaming APIs for better performance
  • Offers additional options like ignore patterns and cwd setting

Cons of node-glob

  • Larger package size and more dependencies
  • Slightly more complex API due to additional features
  • May have a steeper learning curve for beginners

Code Comparison

minimatch:

const minimatch = require('minimatch');
const result = minimatch('file.txt', '*.txt');
console.log(result); // true

node-glob:

const glob = require('glob');
glob('**/*.txt', (err, files) => {
  console.log(files);
});

Summary

minimatch is a lightweight and focused package for pattern matching, while node-glob is a more comprehensive solution for file system globbing. minimatch is simpler and has fewer dependencies, making it ideal for basic pattern matching tasks. node-glob offers more advanced features and flexibility, but comes with a larger footprint and slightly more complex API. Choose minimatch for simple pattern matching, and node-glob for more advanced file system operations and globbing needs.

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README

minimatch

A minimal matching utility.

This is the matching library used internally by npm.

It works by converting glob expressions into JavaScript RegExp objects.

Usage

// hybrid module, load with require() or import
import { minimatch } from 'minimatch'
// or:
const { minimatch } = require('minimatch')

minimatch('bar.foo', '*.foo') // true!
minimatch('bar.foo', '*.bar') // false!
minimatch('bar.foo', '*.+(bar|foo)', { debug: true }) // true, and noisy!

Features

Supports these glob features:

  • Brace Expansion
  • Extended glob matching
  • "Globstar" ** matching
  • Posix character classes, like [[:alpha:]], supporting the full range of Unicode characters. For example, [[:alpha:]] will match against 'é', though [a-zA-Z] will not. Collating symbol and set matching is not supported, so [[=e=]] will not match 'é' and [[.ch.]] will not match 'ch' in locales where ch is considered a single character.

See:

Windows

Please only use forward-slashes in glob expressions.

Though windows uses either / or \ as its path separator, only / characters are used by this glob implementation. You must use forward-slashes only in glob expressions. Back-slashes in patterns will always be interpreted as escape characters, not path separators.

Note that \ or / will be interpreted as path separators in paths on Windows, and will match against / in glob expressions.

So just always use / in patterns.

UNC Paths

On Windows, UNC paths like //?/c:/... or //ComputerName/Share/... are handled specially.

  • Patterns starting with a double-slash followed by some non-slash characters will preserve their double-slash. As a result, a pattern like //* will match //x, but not /x.
  • Patterns staring with //?/<drive letter>: will not treat the ? as a wildcard character. Instead, it will be treated as a normal string.
  • Patterns starting with //?/<drive letter>:/... will match file paths starting with <drive letter>:/..., and vice versa, as if the //?/ was not present. This behavior only is present when the drive letters are a case-insensitive match to one another. The remaining portions of the path/pattern are compared case sensitively, unless nocase:true is set.

Note that specifying a UNC path using \ characters as path separators is always allowed in the file path argument, but only allowed in the pattern argument when windowsPathsNoEscape: true is set in the options.

Minimatch Class

Create a minimatch object by instantiating the minimatch.Minimatch class.

var Minimatch = require('minimatch').Minimatch
var mm = new Minimatch(pattern, options)

Properties

  • pattern The original pattern the minimatch object represents.

  • options The options supplied to the constructor.

  • set A 2-dimensional array of regexp or string expressions. Each row in the array corresponds to a brace-expanded pattern. Each item in the row corresponds to a single path-part. For example, the pattern {a,b/c}/d would expand to a set of patterns like:

      [ [ a, d ]
      , [ b, c, d ] ]
    

    If a portion of the pattern doesn't have any "magic" in it (that is, it's something like "foo" rather than fo*o?), then it will be left as a string rather than converted to a regular expression.

  • regexp Created by the makeRe method. A single regular expression expressing the entire pattern. This is useful in cases where you wish to use the pattern somewhat like fnmatch(3) with FNM_PATH enabled.

  • negate True if the pattern is negated.

  • comment True if the pattern is a comment.

  • empty True if the pattern is "".

Methods

  • makeRe() Generate the regexp member if necessary, and return it. Will return false if the pattern is invalid.

  • match(fname) Return true if the filename matches the pattern, or false otherwise.

  • matchOne(fileArray, patternArray, partial) Take a /-split filename, and match it against a single row in the regExpSet. This method is mainly for internal use, but is exposed so that it can be used by a glob-walker that needs to avoid excessive filesystem calls.

  • hasMagic() Returns true if the parsed pattern contains any magic characters. Returns false if all comparator parts are string literals. If the magicalBraces option is set on the constructor, then it will consider brace expansions which are not otherwise magical to be magic. If not set, then a pattern like a{b,c}d will return false, because neither abd nor acd contain any special glob characters.

    This does not mean that the pattern string can be used as a literal filename, as it may contain magic glob characters that are escaped. For example, the pattern \\* or [*] would not be considered to have magic, as the matching portion parses to the literal string '*' and would match a path named '*', not '\\*' or '[*]'. The minimatch.unescape() method may be used to remove escape characters.

All other methods are internal, and will be called as necessary.

minimatch(path, pattern, options)

Main export. Tests a path against the pattern using the options.

var isJS = minimatch(file, '*.js', { matchBase: true })

minimatch.filter(pattern, options)

Returns a function that tests its supplied argument, suitable for use with Array.filter. Example:

var javascripts = fileList.filter(minimatch.filter('*.js', { matchBase: true }))

minimatch.escape(pattern, options = {})

Escape all magic characters in a glob pattern, so that it will only ever match literal strings

If the windowsPathsNoEscape option is used, then characters are escaped by wrapping in [], because a magic character wrapped in a character class can only be satisfied by that exact character.

Slashes (and backslashes in windowsPathsNoEscape mode) cannot be escaped or unescaped.

minimatch.unescape(pattern, options = {})

Un-escape a glob string that may contain some escaped characters.

If the windowsPathsNoEscape option is used, then square-brace escapes are removed, but not backslash escapes. For example, it will turn the string '[*]' into *, but it will not turn '\\*' into '*', because \ is a path separator in windowsPathsNoEscape mode.

When windowsPathsNoEscape is not set, then both brace escapes and backslash escapes are removed.

Slashes (and backslashes in windowsPathsNoEscape mode) cannot be escaped or unescaped.

minimatch.match(list, pattern, options)

Match against the list of files, in the style of fnmatch or glob. If nothing is matched, and options.nonull is set, then return a list containing the pattern itself.

var javascripts = minimatch.match(fileList, '*.js', { matchBase: true })

minimatch.makeRe(pattern, options)

Make a regular expression object from the pattern.

Options

All options are false by default.

debug

Dump a ton of stuff to stderr.

nobrace

Do not expand {a,b} and {1..3} brace sets.

noglobstar

Disable ** matching against multiple folder names.

dot

Allow patterns to match filenames starting with a period, even if the pattern does not explicitly have a period in that spot.

Note that by default, a/**/b will not match a/.d/b, unless dot is set.

noext

Disable "extglob" style patterns like +(a|b).

nocase

Perform a case-insensitive match.

nocaseMagicOnly

When used with {nocase: true}, create regular expressions that are case-insensitive, but leave string match portions untouched. Has no effect when used without {nocase: true}

Useful when some other form of case-insensitive matching is used, or if the original string representation is useful in some other way.

nonull

When a match is not found by minimatch.match, return a list containing the pattern itself if this option is set. When not set, an empty list is returned if there are no matches.

magicalBraces

This only affects the results of the Minimatch.hasMagic method.

If the pattern contains brace expansions, such as a{b,c}d, but no other magic characters, then the Minimatch.hasMagic() method will return false by default. When this option set, it will return true for brace expansion as well as other magic glob characters.

matchBase

If set, then patterns without slashes will be matched against the basename of the path if it contains slashes. For example, a?b would match the path /xyz/123/acb, but not /xyz/acb/123.

nocomment

Suppress the behavior of treating # at the start of a pattern as a comment.

nonegate

Suppress the behavior of treating a leading ! character as negation.

flipNegate

Returns from negate expressions the same as if they were not negated. (Ie, true on a hit, false on a miss.)

partial

Compare a partial path to a pattern. As long as the parts of the path that are present are not contradicted by the pattern, it will be treated as a match. This is useful in applications where you're walking through a folder structure, and don't yet have the full path, but want to ensure that you do not walk down paths that can never be a match.

For example,

minimatch('/a/b', '/a/*/c/d', { partial: true }) // true, might be /a/b/c/d
minimatch('/a/b', '/**/d', { partial: true }) // true, might be /a/b/.../d
minimatch('/x/y/z', '/a/**/z', { partial: true }) // false, because x !== a

windowsPathsNoEscape

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 earlier versions on Windows. Please use with caution, and be mindful of the caveat about Windows paths.

For legacy reasons, this is also set if options.allowWindowsEscape is set to the exact value false.

windowsNoMagicRoot

When a pattern starts with a UNC path or drive letter, and in nocase:true mode, do not convert the root portions of the pattern into a case-insensitive regular expression, and instead leave them as strings.

This is the default when the platform is win32 and nocase:true is set.

preserveMultipleSlashes

By default, multiple / characters (other than the leading // in a UNC path, see "UNC Paths" above) are treated as a single /.

That is, a pattern like a///b will match the file path a/b.

Set preserveMultipleSlashes: true to suppress this behavior.

optimizationLevel

A number indicating the level of optimization that should be done to the pattern prior to parsing and using it for matches.

Globstar parts ** are always converted to * when noglobstar is set, and multiple adjacent ** parts are converted into a single ** (ie, a/**/**/b will be treated as a/**/b, as this is equivalent in all cases).

  • 0 - Make no further changes. In this mode, . and .. are maintained in the pattern, meaning that they must also appear in the same position in the test path string. Eg, a pattern like a/*/../c will match the string a/b/../c but not the string a/c.

  • 1 - (default) Remove cases where a double-dot .. follows a pattern portion that is not **, ., .., or empty ''. For example, the pattern ./a/b/../* is converted to ./a/*, and so it will match the path string ./a/c, but not the path string ./a/b/../c. Dots and empty path portions in the pattern are preserved.

  • 2 (or higher) - Much more aggressive optimizations, suitable for use with file-walking cases:

    • Remove cases where a double-dot .. follows a pattern portion that is not **, ., or empty ''. Remove empty and . portions of the pattern, where safe to do so (ie, anywhere other than the last position, the first position, or the second position in a pattern starting with /, as this may indicate a UNC path on Windows).
    • Convert patterns containing <pre>/**/../<p>/<rest> into the equivalent <pre>/{..,**}/<p>/<rest>, where <p> is a a pattern portion other than ., .., **, or empty ''.
    • Dedupe patterns where a ** portion is present in one and omitted in another, and it is not the final path portion, and they are otherwise equivalent. So {a/**/b,a/b} becomes a/**/b, because ** matches against an empty path portion.
    • Dedupe patterns where a * portion is present in one, and a non-dot pattern other than **, ., .., or '' is in the same position in the other. So a/{*,x}/b becomes a/*/b, because * can match against x.

    While these optimizations improve the performance of file-walking use cases such as glob (ie, the reason this module exists), there are cases where it will fail to match a literal string that would have been matched in optimization level 1 or 0.

    Specifically, while the Minimatch.match() method will optimize the file path string in the same ways, resulting in the same matches, it will fail when tested with the regular expression provided by Minimatch.makeRe(), unless the path string is first processed with minimatch.levelTwoFileOptimize() or similar.

platform

When set to win32, this will trigger all windows-specific behaviors (special handling for UNC paths, and treating \ as separators in file paths for comparison.)

Defaults to the value of process.platform.

Comparisons to other fnmatch/glob implementations

While strict compliance with the existing standards is a worthwhile goal, some discrepancies exist between minimatch and other implementations. Some are intentional, and some are unavoidable.

If the pattern starts with a ! character, then it is negated. Set the nonegate flag to suppress this behavior, and treat leading ! characters normally. This is perhaps relevant if you wish to start the pattern with a negative extglob pattern like !(a|B). Multiple ! characters at the start of a pattern will negate the pattern multiple times.

If a pattern starts with #, then it is treated as a comment, and will not match anything. Use \# to match a literal # at the start of a line, or set the nocomment flag to suppress this behavior.

The double-star character ** is supported by default, unless the noglobstar flag is set. This is supported in the manner of bsdglob and bash 4.1, where ** only has special significance if it is the only thing in a path part. That is, a/**/b will match a/x/y/b, but a/**b will not.

If an escaped pattern has no matches, and the nonull flag is set, then minimatch.match returns the pattern as-provided, rather than interpreting the character escapes. For example, minimatch.match([], "\\*a\\?") will return "\\*a\\?" rather than "*a?". This is akin to setting the nullglob option in bash, except that it does not resolve escaped pattern characters.

If brace expansion is not disabled, then it is performed before any other interpretation of the glob pattern. Thus, a pattern like +(a|{b),c)}, which would not be valid in bash or zsh, is expanded first into the set of +(a|b) and +(a|c), and those patterns are checked for validity. Since those two are valid, matching proceeds.

Negated extglob patterns are handled as closely as possible to Bash semantics, but there are some cases with negative extglobs which are exceedingly difficult to express in a JavaScript regular expression. In particular the negated pattern <start>!(<pattern>*|)* will in bash match anything that does not start with <start><pattern>. However, <start>!(<pattern>*)* will match paths starting with <start><pattern>, because the empty string can match against the negated portion. In this library, <start>!(<pattern>*|)* will not match any pattern starting with <start>, due to a difference in precisely which patterns are considered "greedy" in Regular Expressions vs bash path expansion. This may be fixable, but not without incurring some complexity and performance costs, and the trade-off seems to not be worth pursuing.

Note that fnmatch(3) in libc is an extremely naive string comparison matcher, which does not do anything special for slashes. This library is designed to be used in glob searching and file walkers, and so it does do special things with /. Thus, foo* will not match foo/bar in this library, even though it would in fnmatch(3).

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