fswatch
is a file change monitor that receives notifications when the contents
of the specified files or directories are modified. fswatch
implements
several monitors:
- A monitor based on the File System Events API of Apple OS X.
- A monitor based on kqueue, a notification interface introduced in FreeBSD 4.1 (and supported on most *BSD systems, including OS X).
- A monitor based on the File Events Notification API of the Solaris kernel and its derivatives.
- A monitor based on inotify, a Linux kernel subsystem that reports file system changes to applications.
- A monitor based on ReadDirectoryChangesW, a Microsoft Windows API that reports changes to a directory.
- A monitor which periodically stats the file system, saves file modification
times in memory, and manually calculates file system changes (which works
anywhere
stat (2)
can be used).
fswatch
should build and work correctly on any system shipping either of the
aforementioned APIs.
- libfswatch
- Features
- Limitations
- Getting fswatch
- Building from Source
- Installation
- Documentation
- Localization
- Usage
- Contributing
- Bug Reports
fswatch
is a frontend of libfswatch
, a library with C and C++ binding. More
information on libfswatch
can be found here.
fswatch
main features are:
- Support for many OS-specific APIs such as kevent, inotify, and FSEvents.
- Recursive directory monitoring.
- Path filtering using including and excluding regular expressions.
- Customizable record format.
- Support for periodic idle events.
The limitations of fswatch
depend largely on the monitor being used:
-
The FSEvents monitor, available only on OS X, has no known limitations, and scales very well with the number of files being observed.
-
The File Events Notification monitor, available on Solaris kernels and its derivatives, has no known limitations.
-
The kqueue monitor, available on any *BSD system featuring kqueue, requires a file descriptor to be opened for every file being watched. As a result, this monitor scales badly with the number of files being observed, and may begin to misbehave as soon as the
fswatch
process runs out of file descriptors. In this case,fswatch
dumps one error on standard error for every file that cannot be opened. -
The inotify monitor, available on Linux since kernel 2.6.13, may suffer a queue overflow if events are generated faster than they are read from the queue. In any case, the application is guaranteed to receive an overflow notification which can be handled to gracefully recover.
fswatch
currently throws an exception if a queue overflow occurs. Future versions will handle the overflow by emitting proper notifications. -
The Windows monitor can only establish a watch directories, not files. To watch a file, its parent directory must be watched in order to receive change events for all the directory's children, recursively at any depth. Optionally, change events can be filtered to include only changes to the desired file.
-
The poll monitor, available on any platform, only relies on available CPU and memory to perform its task. The performance of this monitor degrades linearly with the number of files being watched.
Usage recommendations are as follows:
-
On OS X, use only the
FSEvents
monitor (which is the default behaviour). -
On Solaris and its derivatives use the File Events Notification monitor.
-
On Linux, use the
inotify
monitor (which is the default behaviour). -
If the number of files to observe is sufficiently small, use the
kqueue
monitor. Beware that on some systems the maximum number of file descriptors that can be opened by a process is set to a very low value (values as low as 256 are not uncommon), even if the operating system may allow a much larger value. In this case, check your OS documentation to raise this limit on either a per process or a system-wide basis. -
If feasible, watch directories instead of files. Properly crafting the receiving side of the events to deal with directories may sensibly reduce the monitor resource consumption.
-
On Windows, use the
windows
monitor. -
If none of the above applies, use the poll monitor. The authors' experience indicates that
fswatch
requires approximately 150 MB of RAM memory to observe a hierarchy of 500.000 files with a minimum path length of 32 characters. A common bottleneck of the poll monitor is disk access, sincestat()
-ing a great number of files may take a huge amount of time. In this case, the latency should be set to a sufficiently large value in order to reduce the performance degradation that may result from frequent disk access.
A regular user may be able to fetch fswatch
from the package manager of your
OS or a third-party one. If you are looking for fswatch
for OS X, you can
install it using either MacPorts or Homebrew:
# MacPorts
$ port install fswatch
# Homebrew
$ brew install fswatch
Check your favourite package manager and let us know if fswatch
is missing
there.
A user who wishes to build fswatch
should get a release tarball.
A release tarball contains everything a user needs to build fswatch
on their
system, following the instructions detailed in the Installation section below
and the INSTALL
file.
A developer who wishes to modify fswatch
should get the sources (either from a
source tarball or cloning the repository) and have the GNU Build System
installed on their machine. Please read README.gnu-build-system
to get further
details about how to bootstrap fswatch
from sources on your machine.
Getting a copy of the source repository is not recommended unless you are a developer, you have the GNU Build System installed on your machine, and you know how to bootstrap it on the sources.
See the INSTALL
file for detailed information about how to configure and
install fswatch
. Since the fswatch
builds and uses dynamic libraries, in
some platforms you may need to perform additional tasks before you can use
fswatch
:
-
Make sure the installation directory of dynamic libraries (
$PREFIX/lib
) is included in the lookup paths of the dynamic linker of your operating system. The default path,/usr/local/lib
, will work in nearly every operating system. -
Refreshing the links and cache to the dynamic libraries may be required. In GNU/Linux systems you may need to run
ldconfig
:$ ldconfig
fswatch
is a C++ program and a C++ compiler compliant with the C++11 standard
is required to compile it. Check your OS documentation for information about
how to install the C++ toolchain and the C++ runtime.
No other software packages or dependencies are required to configure and install
fswatch
but the aforementioned APIs used by the file system monitors.
fswatch
provides the following documentation:
- Texinfo documentation, included with the distribution.
- HTML documentation.
- PDF documentation.
- A wiki page.
- A man page.
fswatch
official documentation is provided in Texinfo format. This is the
most comprehensive source of information about fswatch
and the only
authoritative one. The man page, in particular, is a stub that suggests the
user to use the info page instead.
If you are installing fswatch
using a package manager and you would like the
PDF manual to be bundled into the package, please send a feature request to the
package maintainer.
fswatch
is localizable and internally uses GNU gettext
to decouple
localizable string from their translation. The currently available locales are:
- English (
en
). - Italian (
it
). - Spanish (
es
).
To build fswatch
with localization support, you need to have gettext
installed on your system. If configure
cannot find <libintl.h>
or the
linker cannot find libintl
, then you may need to manually provide their
location to configure
, usually using the CPPFLAGS
and the LDFLAGS
variables. See README.osx
for an example.
If gettext
is not available on your system, fswatch
shall build correctly,
but it will lack localization support and the only available locale will be
English.
fswatch
accepts a list of paths for which change events should be received:
$ fswatch [options] ... path-0 ... path-n
The event stream is created even if any of the paths do not exist yet. If they
are created after fswatch
is launched, change events will be properly
received. Depending on the watcher being used, newly created paths will be
monitored after the amount of configured latency has elapsed.
The output of fswatch
can be piped to other program in order to process it
further:
$ fswatch -0 path | while read -d "" event \
do \
// do something with ${event}
done
To run a command when a set of change events is printed to standard output but no event details are required, then the following command can be used:
$ fswatch -o path | xargs -n1 -I{} program
The behaviour is consistent with earlier versions of fswatch
(v. 0.x).
Please, read the Compatibility Issues with fswatch v. 0.x section for further
information.
By default fswatch
chooses the best monitor available on the current platform,
in terms of performance and resource consumption. If the user wishes to specify
a different monitor, the -m
option can be used to specify the monitor by name:
$ fswatch -m kqueue_monitor path
The list of available monitors can be obtained with the -h
option.
For more information, refer to the fswatch
documentation.
Everybody is welcome to contribute to fswatch
. Please, see
CONTRIBUTING
for further information.
Bug reports can be sent directly to the authors.
The author can be contacted on IRC, using the Freenode #fswatch
channel.
Copyright (c) 2013-2018 Enrico M. Crisostomo
This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by the Free Software Foundation; either version 3, or (at your option) any later version.
This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU General Public License for more details.
You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License along with this program. If not, see http://www.gnu.org/licenses/.