var fs = require('fs'); var path = require('path'); var common = require('./common'); var _ls = require('./ls'); common.register('find', _find, {}); //@ //@ ### find(path [, path ...]) //@ ### find(path_array) //@ Examples: //@ //@ ```javascript //@ find('src', 'lib'); //@ find(['src', 'lib']); // same as above //@ find('.').filter(function(file) { return file.match(/\.js$/); }); //@ ``` //@ //@ Returns array of all files (however deep) in the given paths. //@ //@ The main difference from `ls('-R', path)` is that the resulting file names //@ include the base directories, e.g. `lib/resources/file1` instead of just `file1`. function _find(options, paths) { if (!paths) { common.error('no path specified'); } else if (typeof paths === 'string') { paths = [].slice.call(arguments, 1); } var list = []; function pushFile(file) { if (process.platform === 'win32') { file = file.replace(/\\/g, '/'); } list.push(file); } // why not simply do ls('-R', paths)? because the output wouldn't give the base dirs // to get the base dir in the output, we need instead ls('-R', 'dir/*') for every directory paths.forEach(function (file) { var stat; try { stat = fs.statSync(file); } catch (e) { common.error('no such file or directory: ' + file); } pushFile(file); if (stat.isDirectory()) { _ls({ recursive: true, all: true }, file).forEach(function (subfile) { pushFile(path.join(file, subfile)); }); } }); return list; } module.exports = _find;