Files
ripgrep/ignore
Andrew Gallant e5bb750995 ignore: add 'stdout' skipping to the walker
This commit adds a new 'skip_stdout' option to the directory walker. When
enabled, it will skip yielding any directory entries that are believed to
correspond to stdout for the current process. This is useful for filtering
out 'results' in a command like 'grep -r foo > results' in order to avoid
an unbounded feedback mechanism.
2018-08-27 21:18:53 -04:00
..
2018-07-29 08:31:04 -04:00
2017-03-12 16:57:15 -04:00
2017-03-12 16:57:15 -04:00
2018-08-20 07:10:19 -04:00
2017-03-12 16:57:15 -04:00

ignore

The ignore crate provides a fast recursive directory iterator that respects various filters such as globs, file types and .gitignore files. This crate also provides lower level direct access to gitignore and file type matchers.

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Dual-licensed under MIT or the UNLICENSE.

Documentation

https://docs.rs/ignore

Usage

Add this to your Cargo.toml:

[dependencies]
ignore = "0.4"

and this to your crate root:

extern crate ignore;

Example

This example shows the most basic usage of this crate. This code will recursively traverse the current directory while automatically filtering out files and directories according to ignore globs found in files like .ignore and .gitignore:

use ignore::Walk;

for result in Walk::new("./") {
    // Each item yielded by the iterator is either a directory entry or an
    // error, so either print the path or the error.
    match result {
        Ok(entry) => println!("{}", entry.path().display()),
        Err(err) => println!("ERROR: {}", err),
    }
}

Example: advanced

By default, the recursive directory iterator will ignore hidden files and directories. This can be disabled by building the iterator with WalkBuilder:

use ignore::WalkBuilder;

for result in WalkBuilder::new("./").hidden(false).build() {
    println!("{:?}", result);
}

See the documentation for WalkBuilder for many other options.