This threads the original glob given by end users through all of the glob parsing errors. This was slightly trickier than it might appear because the gitignore implementation actually modifies the glob before compiling it. So in order to get better glob error messages everywhere, we need to track the original glob both in the glob parser and in the higher-level abstractions in the `ignore` crate. Fixes #444
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.
Dual-licensed under MIT or the UNLICENSE.
Documentation
Usage
Add this to your Cargo.toml
:
[dependencies]
ignore = "0.1"
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.