.. | ||
integration | ||
src | ||
tests | ||
build.rs | ||
Cargo.toml | ||
README.md | ||
release.toml | ||
run-tests.sh | ||
watchexec-manifest.rc | ||
watchexec.exe.manifest |
Watchexec CLI
A simple standalone tool that watches a path and runs a command whenever it detects modifications.
Example use cases:
- Automatically run unit tests
- Run linters/syntax checkers
Features
-
Simple invocation and use
-
Runs on Linux, Mac, Windows, and more
-
Monitors current directory and all subdirectories for changes
- Uses efficient event polling mechanism (on Linux, Mac, Windows, BSD)
-
Coalesces multiple filesystem events into one, for editors that use swap/backup files during saving
-
By default, uses
.gitignore
,.ignore
, and other such files to determine which files to ignore notifications for -
Support for watching files with a specific extension
-
Support for filtering/ignoring events based on glob patterns
-
Launches the command in a new process group (can be disabled with
--no-process-group
) -
Optionally clears screen between executions
-
Optionally restarts the command with every modification (good for servers)
-
Optionally sends a desktop notification on command start and end
-
Does not require a language runtime
-
Sets the following environment variables in the process:
$WATCHEXEC_COMMON_PATH
is set to the longest common path of all of the below variables, and so should be prepended to each path to obtain the full/real path.Variable name Event kind $WATCHEXEC_CREATED_PATH
files/folders were created $WATCHEXEC_REMOVED_PATH
files/folders were removed $WATCHEXEC_RENAMED_PATH
files/folders were renamed $WATCHEXEC_WRITTEN_PATH
files/folders were modified $WATCHEXEC_META_CHANGED_PATH
files/folders' metadata were modified $WATCHEXEC_OTHERWISE_CHANGED_PATH
every other kind of event These variables may contain multiple paths: these are separated by the platform's path separator, as with the
PATH
system environment variable. On Unix that is:
, and on Windows;
. Within each variable, paths are deduplicated and sorted in binary order (i.e. neither Unicode nor locale aware).This can be disabled with
--emit-events=none
or changed to JSON events on STDIN with--emit-events=json-stdio
.
Anti-Features
- Not tied to any particular language or ecosystem
- Not tied to Git or the presence of a repository/project
- Does not require a cryptic command line involving
xargs
Usage Examples
Watch all JavaScript, CSS and HTML files in the current directory and all subdirectories for changes, running make
when a change is detected:
$ watchexec --exts js,css,html make
Call make test
when any file changes in this directory/subdirectory, except for everything below target
:
$ watchexec -i "target/**" make test
Call ls -la
when any file changes in this directory/subdirectory:
$ watchexec -- ls -la
Call/restart python server.py
when any Python file in the current directory (and all subdirectories) changes:
$ watchexec -e py -r python server.py
Call/restart my_server
when any file in the current directory (and all subdirectories) changes, sending SIGKILL
to stop the command:
$ watchexec -r --stop-signal SIGKILL my_server
Send a SIGHUP to the command upon changes (Note: using -n
here we're executing my_server
directly, instead of wrapping it in a shell:
$ watchexec -n --signal SIGHUP my_server
Run make
when any file changes, using the .gitignore
file in the current directory to filter:
$ watchexec make
Run make
when any file in lib
or src
changes:
$ watchexec -w lib -w src make
Run bundle install
when the Gemfile
changes:
$ watchexec -w Gemfile bundle install
Run two commands:
$ watchexec 'date; make'
Get desktop ("toast") notifications when the command starts and finishes:
$ watchexec -N go build
Only run when files are created:
$ watchexec --fs-events create -- s3 sync . s3://my-bucket
If you come from entr
, note that the watchexec command is run in a shell by default. You can use -n
or --shell=none
to not do that:
$ watchexec -n -- echo ';' lorem ipsum
On Windows, you may prefer to use Powershell:
$ watchexec --shell=pwsh -- Test-Connection example.com
You can eschew running commands entirely and get a stream of events to process on your own:
$ watchexec --emit-events-to=json-stdio --only-emit-events
{"tags":[{"kind":"source","source":"filesystem"},{"kind":"fs","simple":"modify","full":"Modify(Data(Any))"},{"kind":"path","absolute":"/home/code/rust/watchexec/crates/cli/README.md","filetype":"file"}]}
{"tags":[{"kind":"source","source":"filesystem"},{"kind":"fs","simple":"modify","full":"Modify(Data(Any))"},{"kind":"path","absolute":"/home/code/rust/watchexec/crates/lib/Cargo.toml","filetype":"file"}]}
{"tags":[{"kind":"source","source":"filesystem"},{"kind":"fs","simple":"modify","full":"Modify(Data(Any))"},{"kind":"path","absolute":"/home/code/rust/watchexec/crates/cli/src/args.rs","filetype":"file"}]}
Print the time commands take to run:
$ watchexec --timings -- make
[Running: make]
...
[Command was successful, lasted 52.748081074s]
Installation
Package manager
Watchexec is in many package managers. A full list of known packages is available, and there may be more out there! Please contribute any you find to the list :)
Common package managers:
- Alpine:
$ apk add watchexec
- ArchLinux:
$ pacman -S watchexec
- Nix:
$ nix-shell -p watchexec
- Debian/Ubuntu via apt.cli.rs:
$ apt install watchexec
- Homebrew on Mac:
$ brew install watchexec
- Chocolatey on Windows:
#> choco install watchexec
Binstall
$ cargo binstall watchexec-cli
Pre-built binaries
Use the download section on Github
or the website to obtain the package appropriate for your
platform and architecture, extract it, and place it in your PATH
.
There are also Debian/Ubuntu (DEB) and Fedora/RedHat (RPM) packages.
Checksums and signatures are available.
Cargo (from source)
Only the latest Rust stable is supported, but older versions may work.
$ cargo install watchexec-cli
Shell completions
Currently available shell completions:
- bash:
completions/bash
should be installed to/usr/share/bash-completion/completions/watchexec
- elvish:
completions/elvish
should be installed to$XDG_CONFIG_HOME/elvish/completions/
- fish:
completions/fish
should be installed to/usr/share/fish/vendor_completions.d/watchexec.fish
- nu:
completions/nu
should be installed to$XDG_CONFIG_HOME/nu/completions/
- powershell:
completions/powershell
should be installed to$PROFILE/
- zsh:
completions/zsh
should be installed to/usr/share/zsh/site-functions/_watchexec
If not bundled, you can generate completions for your shell with watchexec --completions <shell>
.
Manual
There's a manual page at doc/watchexec.1
. Install it to /usr/share/man/man1/
.
If not bundled, you can generate a manual page with watchexec --manual > /path/to/watchexec.1
, or view it inline with watchexec --manual
(requires man
).
You can also read a text version.
Note that it is automatically generated from the help text, so it is not as pretty as a carefully hand-written one.
Advanced builds
These are additional options available with custom builds by setting features:
PID1
If you're using Watchexec as PID1 (most frequently in containers or namespaces), and it's not doing what you expect, you can create a build with PID1 early logging: --features pid1-withlog
.
If you don't need PID1 support, or if you're doing something that conflicts with this program's PID1 support, you can disable it with --no-default-features
.
Eyra
Eyra is a system to build Linux programs with no dependency on C code (in the libc path). To build Watchexec like this, use --features eyra
and a Nightly compiler.
This feature also lets you get early logging into program startup, with RUST_LOG=trace
.