• Stars
    star
    8,123
  • Rank 4,569 (Top 0.1 %)
  • Language
    TypeScript
  • License
    ISC License
  • Created about 15 years ago
  • Updated over 1 year ago

Reviews

There are no reviews yet. Be the first to send feedback to the community and the maintainers!

Repository Details

glob functionality for node.js

Glob

Match files using the patterns the shell uses.

The most correct and second fastest glob implementation in JavaScript. (See Comparison to Other JavaScript Glob Implementations at the bottom of this readme.)

a fun cartoon logo made of glob characters

Usage

Install with npm

npm i glob

Note the npm package name is not node-glob that's a different thing that was abandoned years ago. Just glob.

// load using import
import { glob, globSync, globStream, globStreamSync, Glob } from 'glob'
// or using commonjs, that's fine, too
const {
  glob,
  globSync,
  globStream,
  globStreamSync,
  Glob,
} = require('glob')

// the main glob() and globSync() resolve/return array of filenames

// all js files, but don't look in node_modules
const jsfiles = await glob('**/*.js', { ignore: 'node_modules/**' })

// pass in a signal to cancel the glob walk
const stopAfter100ms = await glob('**/*.css', {
  signal: AbortSignal.timeout(100),
})

// multiple patterns supported as well
const images = await glob(['css/*.{png,jpeg}', 'public/*.{png,jpeg}'])

// but of course you can do that with the glob pattern also
// the sync function is the same, just returns a string[] instead
// of Promise<string[]>
const imagesAlt = globSync('{css,public}/*.{png,jpeg}')

// you can also stream them, this is a Minipass stream
const filesStream = globStream(['**/*.dat', 'logs/**/*.log'])

// construct a Glob object if you wanna do it that way, which
// allows for much faster walks if you have to look in the same
// folder multiple times.
const g = new Glob('**/foo')
// glob objects are async iterators, can also do globIterate() or
// g.iterate(), same deal
for await (const file of g) {
  console.log('found a foo file:', file)
}
// pass a glob as the glob options to reuse its settings and caches
const g2 = new Glob('**/bar', g)
// sync iteration works as well
for (const file of g2) {
  console.log('found a bar file:', file)
}

// you can also pass withFileTypes: true to get Path objects
// these are like a Dirent, but with some more added powers
// check out http://npm.im/path-scurry for more info on their API
const g3 = new Glob('**/baz/**', { withFileTypes: true })
g3.stream().on('data', path => {
  console.log(
    'got a path object',
    path.fullpath(),
    path.isDirectory(),
    path.readdirSync().map(e => e.name)
  )
})

// if you use stat:true and withFileTypes, you can sort results
// by things like modified time, filter by permission mode, etc.
// All Stats fields will be available in that case. Slightly
// slower, though.
// For example:
const results = await glob('**', { stat: true, withFileTypes: true })

const timeSortedFiles = results
  .sort((a, b) => a.mtimeMS - b.mtimeMS)
  .map(path => path.fullpath())

const groupReadableFiles = results
  .filter(path => path.mode & 0o040)
  .map(path => path.fullpath())

// custom ignores can be done like this, for example by saying
// you'll ignore all markdown files, and all folders named 'docs'
const customIgnoreResults = await glob('**', {
  ignore: {
    ignored: p => /\.md$/.test(p.name),
    childrenIgnored: p => p.isNamed('docs'),
  },
})

// another fun use case, only return files with the same name as
// their parent folder, plus either `.ts` or `.js`
const folderNamedModules = await glob('**/*.{ts,js}', {
  ignore: {
    ignored: p => {
      const pp = p.parent
      return !(p.isNamed(pp.name + '.ts') || p.isNamed(pp.name + '.js'))
    },
  },
})

// find all files edited in the last hour, to do this, we ignore
// all of them that are more than an hour old
const newFiles = await glob('**', {
  // need stat so we have mtime
  stat: true,
  // only want the files, not the dirs
  nodir: true,
  ignore: {
    ignored: p => {
      return new Date() - p.mtime > 60 * 60 * 1000
    },
    // could add similar childrenIgnored here as well, but
    // directory mtime is inconsistent across platforms, so
    // probably better not to, unless you know the system
    // tracks this reliably.
  },
})

Note Glob patterns should always use / as a path separator, even on Windows systems, as \ is used to escape glob characters. If you wish to use \ as a path separator instead of using it as an escape character on Windows platforms, you may set windowsPathsNoEscape:true in the options. In this mode, special glob characters cannot be escaped, making it impossible to match a literal * ? and so on in filenames.

Command Line Interface

$ glob -h

Usage:
  glob [options] [<pattern> [<pattern> ...]]

Expand the positional glob expression arguments into any matching file system
paths found.

  -c<command> --cmd=<command>
                         Run the command provided, passing the glob expression
                         matches as arguments.

  -A --all               By default, the glob cli command will not expand any
                         arguments that are an exact match to a file on disk.

                         This prevents double-expanding, in case the shell
                         expands an argument whose filename is a glob
                         expression.

                         For example, if 'app/*.ts' would match 'app/[id].ts',
                         then on Windows powershell or cmd.exe, 'glob app/*.ts'
                         will expand to 'app/[id].ts', as expected. However, in
                         posix shells such as bash or zsh, the shell will first
                         expand 'app/*.ts' to a list of filenames. Then glob
                         will look for a file matching 'app/[id].ts' (ie,
                         'app/i.ts' or 'app/d.ts'), which is unexpected.

                         Setting '--all' prevents this behavior, causing glob to
                         treat ALL patterns as glob expressions to be expanded,
                         even if they are an exact match to a file on disk.

                         When setting this option, be sure to enquote arguments
                         so that the shell will not expand them prior to passing
                         them to the glob command process.

  -a --absolute          Expand to absolute paths
  -d --dot-relative      Prepend './' on relative matches
  -m --mark              Append a / on any directories matched
  -x --posix             Always resolve to posix style paths, using '/' as the
                         directory separator, even on Windows. Drive letter
                         absolute matches on Windows will be expanded to their
                         full resolved UNC maths, eg instead of 'C:\foo\bar', it
                         will expand to '//?/C:/foo/bar'.

  -f --follow            Follow symlinked directories when expanding '**'
  -R --realpath          Call 'fs.realpath' on all of the results. In the case
                         of an entry that cannot be resolved, the entry is
                         omitted. This incurs a slight performance penalty, of
                         course, because of the added system calls.

  -s --stat              Call 'fs.lstat' on all entries, whether required or not
                         to determine if it's a valid match.

  -b --match-base        Perform a basename-only match if the pattern does not
                         contain any slash characters. That is, '*.js' would be
                         treated as equivalent to '**/*.js', matching js files
                         in all directories.

  --dot                  Allow patterns to match files/directories that start
                         with '.', even if the pattern does not start with '.'

  --nobrace              Do not expand {...} patterns
  --nocase               Perform a case-insensitive match. This defaults to
                         'true' on macOS and Windows platforms, and false on all
                         others.

                         Note: 'nocase' should only be explicitly set when it is
                         known that the filesystem's case sensitivity differs
                         from the platform default. If set 'true' on
                         case-insensitive file systems, then the walk may return
                         more or less results than expected.

  --nodir                Do not match directories, only files.

                         Note: to *only* match directories, append a '/' at the
                         end of the pattern.

  --noext                Do not expand extglob patterns, such as '+(a|b)'
  --noglobstar           Do not expand '**' against multiple path portions. Ie,
                         treat it as a normal '*' instead.

  --windows-path-no-escape
                         Use '\' as a path separator *only*, and *never* as an
                         escape character. If set, all '\' characters are
                         replaced with '/' in the pattern.

  -D<n> --max-depth=<n>  Maximum depth to traverse from the current working
                         directory

  -C<cwd> --cwd=<cwd>    Current working directory to execute/match in
  -r<root> --root=<root> A string path resolved against the 'cwd', which is used
                         as the starting point for absolute patterns that start
                         with '/' (but not drive letters or UNC paths on
                         Windows).

                         Note that this *doesn't* necessarily limit the walk to
                         the 'root' directory, and doesn't affect the cwd
                         starting point for non-absolute patterns. A pattern
                         containing '..' will still be able to traverse out of
                         the root directory, if it is not an actual root
                         directory on the filesystem, and any non-absolute
                         patterns will still be matched in the 'cwd'.

                         To start absolute and non-absolute patterns in the same
                         path, you can use '--root=' to set it to the empty
                         string. However, be aware that on Windows systems, a
                         pattern like 'x:/*' or '//host/share/*' will *always*
                         start in the 'x:/' or '//host/share/' directory,
                         regardless of the --root setting.

  --platform=<platform>  Defaults to the value of 'process.platform' if
                         available, or 'linux' if not. Setting --platform=win32
                         on non-Windows systems may cause strange behavior!

  -i<ignore> --ignore=<ignore>
                         Glob patterns to ignore Can be set multiple times
  -v --debug             Output a huge amount of noisy debug information about
                         patterns as they are parsed and used to match files.

  -h --help              Show this usage information

glob(pattern: string | string[], options?: GlobOptions) => Promise<string[] | Path[]>

Perform an asynchronous glob search for the pattern(s) specified. Returns Path objects if the withFileTypes option is set to true. See below for full options field desciptions.

globSync(pattern: string | string[], options?: GlobOptions) => string[] | Path[]

Synchronous form of glob().

Alias: glob.sync()

globIterate(pattern: string | string[], options?: GlobOptions) => AsyncGenerator<string>

Return an async iterator for walking glob pattern matches.

Alias: glob.iterate()

globIterateSync(pattern: string | string[], options?: GlobOptions) => Generator<string>

Return a sync iterator for walking glob pattern matches.

Alias: glob.iterate.sync(), glob.sync.iterate()

globStream(pattern: string | string[], options?: GlobOptions) => Minipass<string | Path>

Return a stream that emits all the strings or Path objects and then emits end when completed.

Alias: glob.stream()

globStreamSync(pattern: string | string[], options?: GlobOptions) => Minipass<string | Path>

Syncronous form of globStream(). Will read all the matches as fast as you consume them, even all in a single tick if you consume them immediately, but will still respond to backpressure if they're not consumed immediately.

Alias: glob.stream.sync(), glob.sync.stream()

hasMagic(pattern: string | string[], options?: GlobOptions) => boolean

Returns true if the provided pattern contains any "magic" glob characters, given the options provided.

Brace expansion is not considered "magic" unless the magicalBraces option is set, as brace expansion just turns one string into an array of strings. So a pattern like 'x{a,b}y' would return false, because 'xay' and 'xby' both do not contain any magic glob characters, and it's treated the same as if you had called it on ['xay', 'xby']. When magicalBraces:true is in the options, brace expansion is treated as a pattern having magic.

escape(pattern: string, options?: GlobOptions) => string

Escape all magic characters in a glob pattern, so that it will only ever match literal strings

If the windowsPathsNoEscape option is used, then characters are escaped by wrapping in [], because a magic character wrapped in a character class can only be satisfied by that exact character.

Slashes (and backslashes in windowsPathsNoEscape mode) cannot be escaped or unescaped.

unescape(pattern: string, options?: GlobOptions) => string

Un-escape a glob string that may contain some escaped characters.

If the windowsPathsNoEscape option is used, then square-brace escapes are removed, but not backslash escapes. For example, it will turn the string '[*]' into *, but it will not turn '\\*' into '*', because \ is a path separator in windowsPathsNoEscape mode.

When windowsPathsNoEscape is not set, then both brace escapes and backslash escapes are removed.

Slashes (and backslashes in windowsPathsNoEscape mode) cannot be escaped or unescaped.

Class Glob

An object that can perform glob pattern traversals.

const g = new Glob(pattern: string | string[], options: GlobOptions)

See full options descriptions below.

Note that a previous Glob object can be passed as the GlobOptions to another Glob instantiation to re-use settings and caches with a new pattern.

Traversal functions can be called multiple times to run the walk again.

g.stream()

Stream results asynchronously,

g.streamSync()

Stream results synchronously.

g.iterate()

Default async iteration function. Returns an AsyncGenerator that iterates over the results.

g.iterateSync()

Default sync iteration function. Returns a Generator that iterates over the results.

g.walk()

Returns a Promise that resolves to the results array.

g.walkSync()

Returns a results array.

Properties

All options are stored as properties on the Glob object.

  • opts The options provided to the constructor.
  • patterns An array of parsed immutable Pattern objects.

Options

Exported as GlobOptions TypeScript interface. A GlobOptions object may be provided to any of the exported methods, and must be provided to the Glob constructor.

All options are optional, boolean, and false by default, unless otherwise noted.

All resolved options are added to the Glob object as properties.

If you are running many glob operations, you can pass a Glob object as the options argument to a subsequent operation to share the previously loaded cache.

  • cwd String path or file:// string or URL object. The current working directory in which to search. Defaults to process.cwd(). See also: "Windows, CWDs, Drive Letters, and UNC Paths", below.

    This option may be eiher a string path or a file:// URL object or string.

  • root A string path resolved against the cwd option, which is used as the starting point for absolute patterns that start with /, (but not drive letters or UNC paths on Windows).

    Note that this doesn't necessarily limit the walk to the root directory, and doesn't affect the cwd starting point for non-absolute patterns. A pattern containing .. will still be able to traverse out of the root directory, if it is not an actual root directory on the filesystem, and any non-absolute patterns will be matched in the cwd. For example, the pattern /../* with {root:'/some/path'} will return all files in /some, not all files in /some/path. The pattern * with {root:'/some/path'} will return all the entries in the cwd, not the entries in /some/path.

    To start absolute and non-absolute patterns in the same path, you can use {root:''}. However, be aware that on Windows systems, a pattern like x:/* or //host/share/* will always start in the x:/ or //host/share directory, regardless of the root setting.

  • windowsPathsNoEscape Use \\ as a path separator only, and never as an escape character. If set, all \\ characters are replaced with / in the pattern.

    Note that this makes it impossible to match against paths containing literal glob pattern characters, but allows matching with patterns constructed using path.join() and path.resolve() on Windows platforms, mimicking the (buggy!) behavior of Glob v7 and before on Windows. Please use with caution, and be mindful of the caveat below about Windows paths. (For legacy reasons, this is also set if allowWindowsEscape is set to the exact value false.)

  • dot Include .dot files in normal matches and globstar matches. Note that an explicit dot in a portion of the pattern will always match dot files.

  • magicalBraces Treat brace expansion like {a,b} as a "magic" pattern. Has no effect if {@link nobrace} is set.

    Only has effect on the {@link hasMagic} function, no effect on glob pattern matching itself.

  • dotRelative Prepend all relative path strings with ./ (or .\ on Windows).

    Without this option, returned relative paths are "bare", so instead of returning './foo/bar', they are returned as 'foo/bar'.

    Relative patterns starting with '../' are not prepended with ./, even if this option is set.

  • mark Add a / character to directory matches. Note that this requires additional stat calls.

  • nobrace Do not expand {a,b} and {1..3} brace sets.

  • noglobstar Do not match ** against multiple filenames. (Ie, treat it as a normal * instead.)

  • noext Do not match "extglob" patterns such as +(a|b).

  • nocase Perform a case-insensitive match. This defaults to true on macOS and Windows systems, and false on all others.

    Note nocase should only be explicitly set when it is known that the filesystem's case sensitivity differs from the platform default. If set true on case-sensitive file systems, or false on case-insensitive file systems, then the walk may return more or less results than expected.

  • maxDepth Specify a number to limit the depth of the directory traversal to this many levels below the cwd.

  • matchBase Perform a basename-only match if the pattern does not contain any slash characters. That is, *.js would be treated as equivalent to **/*.js, matching all js files in all directories.

  • nodir Do not match directories, only files. (Note: to match only directories, put a / at the end of the pattern.)

  • stat Call lstat() on all entries, whether required or not to determine whether it's a valid match. When used with withFileTypes, this means that matches will include data such as modified time, permissions, and so on. Note that this will incur a performance cost due to the added system calls.

  • ignore string or string[], or an object with ignore and ignoreChildren methods.

    If a string or string[] is provided, then this is treated as a glob pattern or array of glob patterns to exclude from matches. To ignore all children within a directory, as well as the entry itself, append '/**' to the ignore pattern.

    Note ignore patterns are always in dot:true mode, regardless of any other settings.

    If an object is provided that has ignored(path) and/or childrenIgnored(path) methods, then these methods will be called to determine whether any Path is a match or if its children should be traversed, respectively.

  • follow Follow symlinked directories when expanding ** patterns. This can result in a lot of duplicate references in the presence of cyclic links, and make performance quite bad.

    By default, a ** in a pattern will follow 1 symbolic link if it is not the first item in the pattern, or none if it is the first item in the pattern, following the same behavior as Bash.

  • realpath Set to true to call fs.realpath on all of the results. In the case of an entry that cannot be resolved, the entry is omitted. This incurs a slight performance penalty, of course, because of the added system calls.

  • absolute Set to true to always receive absolute paths for matched files. Set to false to always receive relative paths for matched files.

    By default, when this option is not set, absolute paths are returned for patterns that are absolute, and otherwise paths are returned that are relative to the cwd setting.

    This does not make an extra system call to get the realpath, it only does string path resolution.

    absolute may not be used along with withFileTypes.

  • posix Set to true to use / as the path separator in returned results. On posix systems, this has no effect. On Windows systems, this will return / delimited path results, and absolute paths will be returned in their full resolved UNC path form, eg insted of 'C:\\foo\\bar', it will return //?/C:/foo/bar.

  • platform Defaults to value of process.platform if available, or 'linux' if not. Setting platform:'win32' on non-Windows systems may cause strange behavior.

  • withFileTypes Return PathScurry Path objects instead of strings. These are similar to a NodeJS Dirent object, but with additional methods and properties.

    withFileTypes may not be used along with absolute.

  • signal An AbortSignal which will cancel the Glob walk when triggered.

  • fs An override object to pass in custom filesystem methods. See PathScurry docs for what can be overridden.

  • scurry A PathScurry object used to traverse the file system. If the nocase option is set explicitly, then any provided scurry object must match this setting.

Glob Primer

Much more information about glob pattern expansion can be found by running man bash and searching for Pattern Matching.

"Globs" are the patterns you type when you do stuff like ls *.js on the command line, or put build/* in a .gitignore file.

Before parsing the path part patterns, braced sections are expanded into a set. Braced sections start with { and end with }, with 2 or more comma-delimited sections within. Braced sections may contain slash characters, so a{/b/c,bcd} would expand into a/b/c and abcd.

The following characters have special magic meaning when used in a path portion. With the exception of **, none of these match path separators (ie, / on all platforms, and \ on Windows).

  • * Matches 0 or more characters in a single path portion. When alone in a path portion, it must match at least 1 character. If dot:true is not specified, then * will not match against a . character at the start of a path portion.
  • ? Matches 1 character. If dot:true is not specified, then ? will not match against a . character at the start of a path portion.
  • [...] Matches a range of characters, similar to a RegExp range. If the first character of the range is ! or ^ then it matches any character not in the range. If the first character is ], then it will be considered the same as \], rather than the end of the character class.
  • !(pattern|pattern|pattern) Matches anything that does not match any of the patterns provided. May not contain / characters. Similar to *, if alone in a path portion, then the path portion must have at least one character.
  • ?(pattern|pattern|pattern) Matches zero or one occurrence of the patterns provided. May not contain / characters.
  • +(pattern|pattern|pattern) Matches one or more occurrences of the patterns provided. May not contain / characters.
  • *(a|b|c) Matches zero or more occurrences of the patterns provided. May not contain / characters.
  • @(pattern|pat*|pat?erN) Matches exactly one of the patterns provided. May not contain / characters.
  • ** If a "globstar" is alone in a path portion, then it matches zero or more directories and subdirectories searching for matches. It does not crawl symlinked directories, unless {follow:true} is passed in the options object. A pattern like a/b/** will only match a/b if it is a directory. Follows 1 symbolic link if not the first item in the pattern, or 0 if it is the first item, unless follow:true is set, in which case it follows all symbolic links.

[:class:] patterns are supported by this implementation, but [=c=] and [.symbol.] style class patterns are not.

Dots

If a file or directory path portion has a . as the first character, then it will not match any glob pattern unless that pattern's corresponding path part also has a . as its first character.

For example, the pattern a/.*/c would match the file at a/.b/c. However the pattern a/*/c would not, because * does not start with a dot character.

You can make glob treat dots as normal characters by setting dot:true in the options.

Basename Matching

If you set matchBase:true in the options, and the pattern has no slashes in it, then it will seek for any file anywhere in the tree with a matching basename. For example, *.js would match test/simple/basic.js.

Empty Sets

If no matching files are found, then an empty array is returned. This differs from the shell, where the pattern itself is returned. For example:

$ echo a*s*d*f
a*s*d*f

Comparisons to other fnmatch/glob implementations

While strict compliance with the existing standards is a worthwhile goal, some discrepancies exist between node-glob and other implementations, and are intentional.

The double-star character ** is supported by default, unless the noglobstar flag is set. This is supported in the manner of bsdglob and bash 5, where ** only has special significance if it is the only thing in a path part. That is, a/**/b will match a/x/y/b, but a/**b will not.

Note that symlinked directories are not traversed as part of a **, though their contents may match against subsequent portions of the pattern. This prevents infinite loops and duplicates and the like. You can force glob to traverse symlinks with ** by setting {follow:true} in the options.

There is no equivalent of the nonull option. A pattern that does not find any matches simply resolves to nothing. (An empty array, immediately ended stream, etc.)

If brace expansion is not disabled, then it is performed before any other interpretation of the glob pattern. Thus, a pattern like +(a|{b),c)}, which would not be valid in bash or zsh, is expanded first into the set of +(a|b) and +(a|c), and those patterns are checked for validity. Since those two are valid, matching proceeds.

The character class patterns [:class:] (posix standard named classes) style class patterns are supported and unicode-aware, but [=c=] (locale-specific character collation weight), and [.symbol.] (collating symbol), are not.

Repeated Slashes

Unlike Bash and zsh, repeated / are always coalesced into a single path separator.

Comments and Negation

Previously, this module let you mark a pattern as a "comment" if it started with a # character, or a "negated" pattern if it started with a ! character.

These options were deprecated in version 5, and removed in version 6.

To specify things that should not match, use the ignore option.

Windows

Please only use forward-slashes in glob expressions.

Though windows uses either / or \ as its path separator, only / characters are used by this glob implementation. You must use forward-slashes only in glob expressions. Back-slashes will always be interpreted as escape characters, not path separators.

Results from absolute patterns such as /foo/* are mounted onto the root setting using path.join. On windows, this will by default result in /foo/* matching C:\foo\bar.txt.

To automatically coerce all \ characters to / in pattern strings, thus making it impossible to escape literal glob characters, you may set the windowsPathsNoEscape option to true.

Windows, CWDs, Drive Letters, and UNC Paths

On posix systems, when a pattern starts with /, any cwd option is ignored, and the traversal starts at /, plus any non-magic path portions specified in the pattern.

On Windows systems, the behavior is similar, but the concept of an "absolute path" is somewhat more involved.

UNC Paths

A UNC path may be used as the start of a pattern on Windows platforms. For example, a pattern like: //?/x:/* will return all file entries in the root of the x: drive. A pattern like //ComputerName/Share/* will return all files in the associated share.

UNC path roots are always compared case insensitively.

Drive Letters

A pattern starting with a drive letter, like c:/*, will search in that drive, regardless of any cwd option provided.

If the pattern starts with /, and is not a UNC path, and there is an explicit cwd option set with a drive letter, then the drive letter in the cwd is used as the root of the directory traversal.

For example, glob('/tmp', { cwd: 'c:/any/thing' }) will return ['c:/tmp'] as the result.

If an explicit cwd option is not provided, and the pattern starts with /, then the traversal will run on the root of the drive provided as the cwd option. (That is, it is the result of path.resolve('/').)

Race Conditions

Glob searching, by its very nature, is susceptible to race conditions, since it relies on directory walking.

As a result, it is possible that a file that exists when glob looks for it may have been deleted or modified by the time it returns the result.

By design, this implementation caches all readdir calls that it makes, in order to cut down on system overhead. However, this also makes it even more susceptible to races, especially if the cache object is reused between glob calls.

Users are thus advised not to use a glob result as a guarantee of filesystem state in the face of rapid changes. For the vast majority of operations, this is never a problem.

See Also:

Glob Logo

Glob's logo was created by Tanya Brassie. Logo files can be found here.

The logo is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 International License.

Contributing

Any change to behavior (including bugfixes) must come with a test.

Patches that fail tests or reduce performance will be rejected.

# to run tests
npm test

# to re-generate test fixtures
npm run test-regen

# run the benchmarks
npm run bench

# to profile javascript
npm run prof

Comparison to Other JavaScript Glob Implementations

tl;dr

  • If you want glob matching that is as faithful as possible to Bash pattern expansion semantics, and as fast as possible within that constraint, use this module.
  • If you are reasonably sure that the patterns you will encounter are relatively simple, and want the absolutely fastest glob matcher out there, use fast-glob.
  • If you are reasonably sure that the patterns you will encounter are relatively simple, and want the convenience of automatically respecting .gitignore files, use globby.

There are some other glob matcher libraries on npm, but these three are (in my opinion, as of 2023) the best.


full explanation

Every library reflects a set of opinions and priorities in the trade-offs it makes. Other than this library, I can personally recommend both globby and fast-glob, though they differ in their benefits and drawbacks.

Both have very nice APIs and are reasonably fast.

fast-glob is, as far as I am aware, the fastest glob implementation in JavaScript today. However, there are many cases where the choices that fast-glob makes in pursuit of speed mean that its results differ from the results returned by Bash and other sh-like shells, which may be surprising.

In my testing, fast-glob is around 10-20% faster than this module when walking over 200k files nested 4 directories deep1. However, there are some inconsistencies with Bash matching behavior that this module does not suffer from:

  • ** only matches files, not directories
  • .. path portions are not handled unless they appear at the start of the pattern
  • ./!(<pattern>) will not match any files that start with <pattern>, even if they do not match <pattern>. For example, !(9).txt will not match 9999.txt.
  • Some brace patterns in the middle of a pattern will result in failing to find certain matches.
  • Extglob patterns are allowed to contain / characters.

Globby exhibits all of the same pattern semantics as fast-glob, (as it is a wrapper around fast-glob) and is slightly slower than node-glob (by about 10-20% in the benchmark test set, or in other words, anywhere from 20-50% slower than fast-glob). However, it adds some API conveniences that may be worth the costs.

  • Support for .gitignore and other ignore files.
  • Support for negated globs (ie, patterns starting with ! rather than using a separate ignore option).

The priority of this module is "correctness" in the sense of performing a glob pattern expansion as faithfully as possible to the behavior of Bash and other sh-like shells, with as much speed as possible.

Note that prior versions of node-glob are not on this list. Former versions of this module are far too slow for any cases where performance matters at all, and were designed with APIs that are extremely dated by current JavaScript standards.


[1]: In the cases where this module returns results and fast-glob doesn't, it's even faster, of course.

lumpy space princess saying 'oh my GLOB'

Benchmark Results

First number is time, smaller is better.

Second number is the count of results returned.

--- pattern: '**' ---
~~ sync ~~
node fast-glob sync             0m0.598s  200364
node globby sync                0m0.765s  200364
node current globSync mjs       0m0.683s  222656
node current glob syncStream    0m0.649s  222656
~~ async ~~
node fast-glob async            0m0.350s  200364
node globby async               0m0.509s  200364
node current glob async mjs     0m0.463s  222656
node current glob stream        0m0.411s  222656

--- pattern: '**/..' ---
~~ sync ~~
node fast-glob sync             0m0.486s  0
node globby sync                0m0.769s  200364
node current globSync mjs       0m0.564s  2242
node current glob syncStream    0m0.583s  2242
~~ async ~~
node fast-glob async            0m0.283s  0
node globby async               0m0.512s  200364
node current glob async mjs     0m0.299s  2242
node current glob stream        0m0.312s  2242

--- pattern: './**/0/**/0/**/0/**/0/**/*.txt' ---
~~ sync ~~
node fast-glob sync             0m0.490s  10
node globby sync                0m0.517s  10
node current globSync mjs       0m0.540s  10
node current glob syncStream    0m0.550s  10
~~ async ~~
node fast-glob async            0m0.290s  10
node globby async               0m0.296s  10
node current glob async mjs     0m0.278s  10
node current glob stream        0m0.302s  10

--- pattern: './**/[01]/**/[12]/**/[23]/**/[45]/**/*.txt' ---
~~ sync ~~
node fast-glob sync             0m0.500s  160
node globby sync                0m0.528s  160
node current globSync mjs       0m0.556s  160
node current glob syncStream    0m0.573s  160
~~ async ~~
node fast-glob async            0m0.283s  160
node globby async               0m0.301s  160
node current glob async mjs     0m0.306s  160
node current glob stream        0m0.322s  160

--- pattern: './**/0/**/0/**/*.txt' ---
~~ sync ~~
node fast-glob sync             0m0.502s  5230
node globby sync                0m0.527s  5230
node current globSync mjs       0m0.544s  5230
node current glob syncStream    0m0.557s  5230
~~ async ~~
node fast-glob async            0m0.285s  5230
node globby async               0m0.305s  5230
node current glob async mjs     0m0.304s  5230
node current glob stream        0m0.310s  5230

--- pattern: '**/*.txt' ---
~~ sync ~~
node fast-glob sync             0m0.580s  200023
node globby sync                0m0.771s  200023
node current globSync mjs       0m0.685s  200023
node current glob syncStream    0m0.649s  200023
~~ async ~~
node fast-glob async            0m0.349s  200023
node globby async               0m0.509s  200023
node current glob async mjs     0m0.427s  200023
node current glob stream        0m0.388s  200023

--- pattern: '{**/*.txt,**/?/**/*.txt,**/?/**/?/**/*.txt,**/?/**/?/**/?/**/*.txt,**/?/**/?/**/?/**/?/**/*.txt}' ---
~~ sync ~~
node fast-glob sync             0m0.589s  200023
node globby sync                0m0.771s  200023
node current globSync mjs       0m0.716s  200023
node current glob syncStream    0m0.684s  200023
~~ async ~~
node fast-glob async            0m0.351s  200023
node globby async               0m0.518s  200023
node current glob async mjs     0m0.462s  200023
node current glob stream        0m0.468s  200023

--- pattern: '**/5555/0000/*.txt' ---
~~ sync ~~
node fast-glob sync             0m0.496s  1000
node globby sync                0m0.519s  1000
node current globSync mjs       0m0.539s  1000
node current glob syncStream    0m0.567s  1000
~~ async ~~
node fast-glob async            0m0.285s  1000
node globby async               0m0.299s  1000
node current glob async mjs     0m0.305s  1000
node current glob stream        0m0.301s  1000

--- pattern: './**/0/**/../[01]/**/0/../**/0/*.txt' ---
~~ sync ~~
node fast-glob sync             0m0.484s  0
node globby sync                0m0.507s  0
node current globSync mjs       0m0.577s  4880
node current glob syncStream    0m0.586s  4880
~~ async ~~
node fast-glob async            0m0.280s  0
node globby async               0m0.298s  0
node current glob async mjs     0m0.327s  4880
node current glob stream        0m0.324s  4880

--- pattern: '**/????/????/????/????/*.txt' ---
~~ sync ~~
node fast-glob sync             0m0.547s  100000
node globby sync                0m0.673s  100000
node current globSync mjs       0m0.626s  100000
node current glob syncStream    0m0.618s  100000
~~ async ~~
node fast-glob async            0m0.315s  100000
node globby async               0m0.414s  100000
node current glob async mjs     0m0.366s  100000
node current glob stream        0m0.345s  100000

--- pattern: './{**/?{/**/?{/**/?{/**/?,,,,},,,,},,,,},,,}/**/*.txt' ---
~~ sync ~~
node fast-glob sync             0m0.588s  100000
node globby sync                0m0.670s  100000
node current globSync mjs       0m0.717s  200023
node current glob syncStream    0m0.687s  200023
~~ async ~~
node fast-glob async            0m0.343s  100000
node globby async               0m0.418s  100000
node current glob async mjs     0m0.519s  200023
node current glob stream        0m0.451s  200023

--- pattern: '**/!(0|9).txt' ---
~~ sync ~~
node fast-glob sync             0m0.573s  160023
node globby sync                0m0.731s  160023
node current globSync mjs       0m0.680s  180023
node current glob syncStream    0m0.659s  180023
~~ async ~~
node fast-glob async            0m0.345s  160023
node globby async               0m0.476s  160023
node current glob async mjs     0m0.427s  180023
node current glob stream        0m0.388s  180023

--- pattern: './{*/**/../{*/**/../{*/**/../{*/**/../{*/**,,,,},,,,},,,,},,,,},,,,}/*.txt' ---
~~ sync ~~
node fast-glob sync             0m0.483s  0
node globby sync                0m0.512s  0
node current globSync mjs       0m0.811s  200023
node current glob syncStream    0m0.773s  200023
~~ async ~~
node fast-glob async            0m0.280s  0
node globby async               0m0.299s  0
node current glob async mjs     0m0.617s  200023
node current glob stream        0m0.568s  200023

--- pattern: './*/**/../*/**/../*/**/../*/**/../*/**/../*/**/../*/**/../*/**/*.txt' ---
~~ sync ~~
node fast-glob sync             0m0.485s  0
node globby sync                0m0.507s  0
node current globSync mjs       0m0.759s  200023
node current glob syncStream    0m0.740s  200023
~~ async ~~
node fast-glob async            0m0.281s  0
node globby async               0m0.297s  0
node current glob async mjs     0m0.544s  200023
node current glob stream        0m0.464s  200023

--- pattern: './*/**/../*/**/../*/**/../*/**/../*/**/*.txt' ---
~~ sync ~~
node fast-glob sync             0m0.486s  0
node globby sync                0m0.513s  0
node current globSync mjs       0m0.734s  200023
node current glob syncStream    0m0.696s  200023
~~ async ~~
node fast-glob async            0m0.286s  0
node globby async               0m0.296s  0
node current glob async mjs     0m0.506s  200023
node current glob stream        0m0.483s  200023

--- pattern: './0/**/../1/**/../2/**/../3/**/../4/**/../5/**/../6/**/../7/**/*.txt' ---
~~ sync ~~
node fast-glob sync             0m0.060s  0
node globby sync                0m0.074s  0
node current globSync mjs       0m0.067s  0
node current glob syncStream    0m0.066s  0
~~ async ~~
node fast-glob async            0m0.060s  0
node globby async               0m0.075s  0
node current glob async mjs     0m0.066s  0
node current glob stream        0m0.067s  0

--- pattern: './**/?/**/?/**/?/**/?/**/*.txt' ---
~~ sync ~~
node fast-glob sync             0m0.568s  100000
node globby sync                0m0.651s  100000
node current globSync mjs       0m0.619s  100000
node current glob syncStream    0m0.617s  100000
~~ async ~~
node fast-glob async            0m0.332s  100000
node globby async               0m0.409s  100000
node current glob async mjs     0m0.372s  100000
node current glob stream        0m0.351s  100000

--- pattern: '**/*/**/*/**/*/**/*/**' ---
~~ sync ~~
node fast-glob sync             0m0.603s  200113
node globby sync                0m0.798s  200113
node current globSync mjs       0m0.730s  222137
node current glob syncStream    0m0.693s  222137
~~ async ~~
node fast-glob async            0m0.356s  200113
node globby async               0m0.525s  200113
node current glob async mjs     0m0.508s  222137
node current glob stream        0m0.455s  222137

--- pattern: './**/*/**/*/**/*/**/*/**/*.txt' ---
~~ sync ~~
node fast-glob sync             0m0.622s  200000
node globby sync                0m0.792s  200000
node current globSync mjs       0m0.722s  200000
node current glob syncStream    0m0.695s  200000
~~ async ~~
node fast-glob async            0m0.369s  200000
node globby async               0m0.527s  200000
node current glob async mjs     0m0.502s  200000
node current glob stream        0m0.481s  200000

--- pattern: '**/*.txt' ---
~~ sync ~~
node fast-glob sync             0m0.588s  200023
node globby sync                0m0.771s  200023
node current globSync mjs       0m0.684s  200023
node current glob syncStream    0m0.658s  200023
~~ async ~~
node fast-glob async            0m0.352s  200023
node globby async               0m0.516s  200023
node current glob async mjs     0m0.432s  200023
node current glob stream        0m0.384s  200023

--- pattern: './**/**/**/**/**/**/**/**/*.txt' ---
~~ sync ~~
node fast-glob sync             0m0.589s  200023
node globby sync                0m0.766s  200023
node current globSync mjs       0m0.682s  200023
node current glob syncStream    0m0.652s  200023
~~ async ~~
node fast-glob async            0m0.352s  200023
node globby async               0m0.523s  200023
node current glob async mjs     0m0.436s  200023
node current glob stream        0m0.380s  200023

--- pattern: '**/*/*.txt' ---
~~ sync ~~
node fast-glob sync             0m0.592s  200023
node globby sync                0m0.776s  200023
node current globSync mjs       0m0.691s  200023
node current glob syncStream    0m0.659s  200023
~~ async ~~
node fast-glob async            0m0.357s  200023
node globby async               0m0.513s  200023
node current glob async mjs     0m0.471s  200023
node current glob stream        0m0.424s  200023

--- pattern: '**/*/**/*.txt' ---
~~ sync ~~
node fast-glob sync             0m0.585s  200023
node globby sync                0m0.766s  200023
node current globSync mjs       0m0.694s  200023
node current glob syncStream    0m0.664s  200023
~~ async ~~
node fast-glob async            0m0.350s  200023
node globby async               0m0.514s  200023
node current glob async mjs     0m0.472s  200023
node current glob stream        0m0.424s  200023

--- pattern: '**/[0-9]/**/*.txt' ---
~~ sync ~~
node fast-glob sync             0m0.544s  100000
node globby sync                0m0.636s  100000
node current globSync mjs       0m0.626s  100000
node current glob syncStream    0m0.621s  100000
~~ async ~~
node fast-glob async            0m0.322s  100000
node globby async               0m0.404s  100000
node current glob async mjs     0m0.360s  100000
node current glob stream        0m0.352s  100000

More Repositories

1

rimraf

A `rm -rf` util for nodejs
JavaScript
5,309
star
2

node-lru-cache

A fast cache that automatically deletes the least recently used items
TypeScript
4,844
star
3

minimatch

a glob matcher in javascript
JavaScript
3,074
star
4

github

Just a place to track issues and feature requests that I have for github
2,209
star
5

nave

Virtual Environments for Node
Shell
1,580
star
6

node-graceful-fs

fs with incremental backoff on EMFILE
JavaScript
1,267
star
7

sax-js

A sax style parser for JS
JavaScript
1,046
star
8

tshy

JavaScript
847
star
9

node-tar

tar for node
JavaScript
755
star
10

st

A node module for serving static files. Does etags, caching, etc.
JavaScript
376
star
11

inherits

Easy simple tiny inheritance in JavaScript
JavaScript
352
star
12

cluster-master

Take advantage of node built-in cluster module behavior
JavaScript
276
star
13

minipass

A stream implementation that does more by doing less
TypeScript
246
star
14

once

Run a function exactly one time
JavaScript
216
star
15

yallist

Yet Another Linked List
JavaScript
198
star
16

server-destroy

When close() is just not enough
JavaScript
184
star
17

ttlcache

TypeScript
155
star
18

semicolons

When you require("semicolons"), THEY ARE REQUIRED.
JavaScript
145
star
19

slide-flow-control

A flow control library that fits in a slideshow
JavaScript
134
star
20

treeverse

Walk any kind of tree structure depth- or breadth-first. Supports promises and advanced map-reduce operations with a very small API.
JavaScript
130
star
21

multipart-js

JavaScript
123
star
22

reading-list

a list of books I recommend
121
star
23

node-touch

touch(1) for node
JavaScript
121
star
24

catcher

TypeScript
119
star
25

async-cache

Cache your async lookups and don't fetch the same thing more than necessary.
JavaScript
119
star
26

core-util-is

The util.is* functions from Node core
JavaScript
98
star
27

dezalgo

Contain async insanity so that the dark pony lord doesn't eat souls
JavaScript
89
star
28

github-flavored-markdown

Deprecated. Use marked instead.
JavaScript
79
star
29

minizlib

A smaller, faster, zlib stream built on http://npm.im/minipass and Node.js's zlib binding.
JavaScript
71
star
30

node-bench

JavaScript
71
star
31

free-as-in-hugs-license

A (Not OSI-Approved) software license you may use if you wish
70
star
32

sigmund

Quick and dirty psychoanalysis for objects
JavaScript
67
star
33

inflight

Add callbacks to requests in flight to avoid async duplication
JavaScript
66
star
34

fast-list

A fast O(1) push/pop/shift/unshift thing
JavaScript
66
star
35

gist-cli

A gist cli client written in Node
JavaScript
64
star
36

dotfiles

My Dot Files
Shell
63
star
37

wrappy

Callback wrapping utility
JavaScript
56
star
38

block-stream

A stream of fixed-size blocks
JavaScript
52
star
39

isexe

Minimal module to check if a file is executable.
TypeScript
48
star
40

.vim

My vim settings
Vim Script
47
star
41

jackspeak

A very strict and proper argument parser.
TypeScript
44
star
42

char-spinner

Put a little spinner on process.stderr, as unobtrusively as possible.
JavaScript
43
star
43

st-example

an example of serving static files easily in node using the st module
JavaScript
40
star
44

templar

A lightweight template thing for node http servers
JavaScript
37
star
45

nosync

Prevent sync functions in your node programs after first tick
JavaScript
37
star
46

use-strict

Makes all subsequent modules in Node get loaded in strict mode.
JavaScript
37
star
47

path-scurry

TypeScript
35
star
48

ssh-key-decrypt

Decrypt and encrypted ssh private keys
JavaScript
35
star
49

ejsgi

Like JSGI, but using streams.
JavaScript
35
star
50

node-eliza

A Robotic Rogerian Therapist, on IRC
JavaScript
34
star
51

natives

Do stuff with Node.js's native JavaScript modules
JavaScript
31
star
52

goosh

Front-end old-style terminal interface, for web services like those provided by Google and Yahoo.
JavaScript
31
star
53

simple-node-server

A simple fast node http server toolkit.
JavaScript
30
star
54

util-extend

Node's internal object extension function, for you!
JavaScript
30
star
55

chownr

Like `chown -R`
JavaScript
28
star
56

csrf-lite

CSRF protection utility for framework-free node sites.
JavaScript
28
star
57

chmodr

Like `chmod -R` in node
JavaScript
28
star
58

node-hexedit

hexadecimal editor in node
JavaScript
27
star
59

back-to-markdown.css

Turns any markdown editor into a WYSIWYG editor
CSS
26
star
60

node-async-simple

Multiply two numbers, slowly, on the thread pool.
C++
26
star
61

json-stringify-nice

Stringify an object sorting scalars before objects, and defaulting to 2-space indent
JavaScript
25
star
62

node-strict

Makes your Node programs strict about stuff when loaded
JavaScript
25
star
63

fs.realpath

Use node's fs.realpath, but fall back to the JS implementation if the native one fails
JavaScript
25
star
64

sock-daemon

TypeScript
24
star
65

promise-all-reject-late

Like Promise.all, but save rejections until all promises are resolved
JavaScript
24
star
66

promise-call-limit

Call an array of promise-returning functions, restricting concurrency to a specified limit.
TypeScript
24
star
67

node6-module-system-change

A demonstration of what changed in node 6's module loading logic
JavaScript
24
star
68

color-support

A module which will endeavor to guess your terminal's level of color support.
JavaScript
24
star
69

polite-json

TypeScript
23
star
70

ircretary

A note-taking IRC bot
JavaScript
23
star
71

yamlish

A parser for the yamlish format
JavaScript
22
star
72

fs-minipass

fs read and write streams based on minipass
JavaScript
21
star
73

pseudomap

Like `new Map` but for older JavaScripts
JavaScript
21
star
74

node-fuse

Fuse bindings for nodejs
21
star
75

slocket

A locking socket alternative to file-system mutex locks
JavaScript
21
star
76

proto-list

A list of objects bound by prototype chain
JavaScript
20
star
77

retry-until

A function that will keep running a function you give it as long as it throws for a period of time
JavaScript
20
star
78

node-srand

srand bindings for node - Seedable predictable pseudorandom number generator
C++
20
star
79

mutate-fs

Mutate the Node.js filesystem behavior for tests.
JavaScript
20
star
80

ryp

Featureless npm-package bundling.
Shell
19
star
81

filewatcherthing

a thing to watch a file and then run a command
JavaScript
19
star
82

gatsby-remark-tumble-media

A plugin for gatsby-transformer-remark to support photosets, video, and audio in markdown frontmatter.
JavaScript
19
star
83

sodn

SOcial DNodes
JavaScript
19
star
84

joyent-node-on-smart-example

A blog post.
JavaScript
18
star
85

error-page

Easily send errors in Node.js HTTP servers. Think like the `ErrorDocument` declarations in Apache config files.
JavaScript
17
star
86

_ify

an itty bitty curry utility
JavaScript
17
star
87

url-parse-as-address

Parse a URL assuming that it's http/https, even if protocol or // isn't present
JavaScript
17
star
88

http-https

A wrapper that chooses http or https for requests
JavaScript
17
star
89

perfalize

TypeScript
16
star
90

cssmin

A cross-platform regular-expression based minifier for CSS
16
star
91

duplex-passthrough

like a passthrough, but in both directions
JavaScript
16
star
92

mintee

a tiny module for piping an input to multiple output streams
JavaScript
16
star
93

create-isaacs

An npm init module to create modules like I do
JavaScript
16
star
94

tap-assert

An assert module that outputs tap result objects
JavaScript
16
star
95

domain-http-server

A module thingie to use domains in Express or Restify or just regular HTTP servers
JavaScript
15
star
96

fs-readstream-seek

A fs.ReadStream that supports seeking to arbtrary locations within a file.
JavaScript
15
star
97

canonical-host

Node module to redirect users to the canonical hostname for your site.
JavaScript
15
star
98

mcouch

Put your CouchDB in Manta, attachments and docs and all
JavaScript
14
star
99

hardhttps

Slightly hardened https for node
JavaScript
14
star
100

exit-code

`process.exitCode` behavior back-ported from io.js and Node.js 0.12+
JavaScript
14
star