Broccoli plugin for creating "source" nodes that refer to physical file system directories.
In Brocfile.js
:
var broccoliSource = require('broccoli-source');
var WatchedDir = broccoliSource.WatchedDir;
var UnwatchedDir = broccoliSource.UnwatchedDir;
// Refers to the ./lib directory on disk, and watches it.
var lib = new WatchedDir('lib');
// Note: this is equivalent to the deprecated plain-string syntax:
//var lib = 'lib';
// Refers to the ./bower_components/jquery directory, but does not watch it.
var jquery = new UnwatchedDir('bower_components/jquery');
new WatchedDir(directoryPath, options)
Create a Broccoli node referring to a directory on disk. The Broccoli watcher
used by broccoli serve
will watch the directory and all subdirectories, and
trigger a rebuild whenever something changes.
directoryPath
: A path to a directory, either absolute, or relative to the
working directory (typically the directory containing Brocfile.js
).
The directory must exist, or Broccoli will abort.
options
annotation
: A human-readable description for this node.new UnwatchedDir(directoryPath, options)
Same as WatchedDir
, but the directory will not be watched.
This can be useful for performance reasons. For example, say you want to refer
to a large directory hierarchy of third-party code in your Brocfile.js
. Such
third-party code is rarely edited in practice. Using UnwatchedDir
instead of
WatchedDir
saves the overhead of setting up useless file system watchers.
When in doubt, use WatchedDir
instead.
# Broccoli Source [![Build Status](https://travis-ci.org/broccolijs/broccoli-source.svg?branch=master)](https://travis-ci.org/broccolijs/broccoli-source) Broccoli plugin for creating "source" nodes that refer to physical file system directories. ## Example Usage In `Brocfile.js`: ```js var broccoliSource = require('broccoli-source'); var WatchedDir = broccoliSource.WatchedDir; var UnwatchedDir = broccoliSource.UnwatchedDir; // Refers to the ./lib directory on disk, and watches it. var lib = new WatchedDir('lib'); // Note: this is equivalent to the deprecated plain-string syntax: //var lib = 'lib'; // Refers to the ./bower_components/jquery directory, but does not watch it. var jquery = new UnwatchedDir('bower_components/jquery'); ``` ## Reference ### `new WatchedDir(directoryPath, options)` Create a Broccoli node referring to a directory on disk. The Broccoli watcher used by `broccoli serve` will watch the directory and all subdirectories, and trigger a rebuild whenever something changes. * `directoryPath`: A path to a directory, either absolute, or relative to the working directory (typically the directory containing `Brocfile.js`). The directory must exist, or Broccoli will abort. * `options` * `annotation`: A human-readable description for this node. ### `new UnwatchedDir(directoryPath, options)` Same as `WatchedDir`, but the directory will not be watched. This can be useful for performance reasons. For example, say you want to refer to a large directory hierarchy of third-party code in your `Brocfile.js`. Such third-party code is rarely edited in practice. Using `UnwatchedDir` instead of `WatchedDir` saves the overhead of setting up useless file system watchers. When in doubt, use `WatchedDir` instead.