watchexec/doc/watchexec.1.ronn

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watchexec(1) -- execute commands when watched files change
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## SYNOPSIS
watchexec [`--exts` | `-e` <extensions>]... [`--filter` | `-f` <pattern>]... [`--ignore` | `-i` <pattern>]... [`--watch` | `-w` <path>]... [`--restart` | `-r`] [`--clear` | `-c`] [`--postpone` | `-p`] [`--force-poll` <interval>] [`--debounce` | `-d` <interval>] [`--no-vcs-ignore`] [`--no-default-ignore`] [`--verbose` | `-v`] [`--version` | `-V`] [--] <command> [<argument>...]
## DESCRIPTION
Recursively monitors the current directory for changes, executing the command when a filesystem change is detected. By default, watchexec uses efficient kernel-level mechanisms to watch for changes.
At startup, the specified <command> (passing any supplied <argument>s) is run once, and watchexec begins monitoring for changes.
## OPTIONS
* <command>:
Command to run when watched files are modified, and at startup, unless `--postpone` is specified. All <argument>s are passed to <command>. If you pass flags to the command, you should separate it with `--`, for example: `watchexec -w src -- rsync -a src dest`.
* `-e`, `--exts` <extensions>:
Comma-separated list of file extensions to filter by. Leading dots (.rs) are allowed. (This is a shorthand for `-f`).
* `-f`, `--filter` <pattern>:
Ignores modifications from paths that do not match <pattern>. This option can be specified multiple times, where a match on any given pattern causes the path to trigger <command>.
* `-s`, `--signal`:
Sends the specified signal (e.g. `SIGKILL`) to the child process. Defaults to `SIGTERM`.
* `-n`, `--no-shell`:
Execute command directly, do not wrap it in `sh -c` resp. `cmd.exe /C`. This is especially useful in combination with `--signal`, as the signal is then send directly to the specified command. While `--no-shell` is a little more performant than the default, it prevents using shell-features like pipes and redirects.
* `--no-environment`:
Do not set WATCHEXEC_*_PATH environment variables for child process.
* `-i`, `--ignore` <pattern>:
Ignores modifications from paths that match <pattern>. This option can be specified multiple times, and a match on any pattern causes the path to be ignored.
* `-w`, `--watch` <path>:
Monitor a specific path for changes. By default, the current working directory is watched. This may be specified multiple times, where a change in any watched directory (and subdirectories) causes <command> to be executed.
* `-r`, `--restart`:
Terminates the child process group if it is still running when subsequent file modifications are detected. By default, sends `SIGTERM`; use `--kill` to send `SIGKILL`.
* `-c`, `--clear`:
Clears the screen before executing <command>.
* `-p`, `--postpone`:
Postpone execution of <command> until the first file modification is detected.
* `--force-poll` <interval>:
Poll for changes every <interval> ms instead of using system-specific notification mechanisms (such as inotify). This is useful when you are monitoring NFS shares.
* `-d`, `--debounce`:
Set the timeout between detected change and command execution, to avoid restarting too frequently when there are many events; defaults to 500ms.
* `--no-vcs-ignore`:
Skip loading of version control system (VCS) ignore files. By default, watchexec loads .gitignore files in the current directory (or parent directories) and uses them to populate the ignore list.
* `--no-default-ignore`:
Skip default ignore statements. By default, watchexec ignores common temporary files for you, for example `*.swp`, `*.pyc`, and `.DS_Store`.
* `-v`, `--verbose`:
Prints diagnostic messages to STDERR
* `-V`, `--version`:
Print the version of watchexec.
* `-h`, `--help`:
Print a help message.
## ENVIRONMENT
Processes started by watchexec have environment variables set describing the modification(s) observed. Which variable is set depends on how many modifications were observed and/or what type they were.
If a single file changed (depending on the event type):
* `$WATCHEXEC_CREATED_PATH`, the path of the file that was created
* `$WATCHEXEC_REMOVED_PATH`, the path of the file that was removed
* `$WATCHEXEC_RENAMED_PATH`, the path of the file that was renamed
* `$WATCHEXEC_WRITTEN_PATH`, the path of the file that was modified
* `$WATCHEXEC_META_CHANGED_PATH`, the path of the file whose metadata changed
If multiple files changed:
* `$WATCHEXEC_COMMON_PATH`, the longest common path of all of the files that triggered a change
## EXAMPLES
Rebuild a project when source files change:
$ watchexec make
Watch all HTML, CSS, and JavaScript files for changes:
$ watchexec -e html,css,js make
Run tests when source files change, clearing the screen each time:
$ watchexec -c make test
Launch and restart a node.js server:
$ watchexec -r node app.js
Watch lib and src directories for changes, rebuilding each time:
$ watchexec -w lib -w src make