ancesdir
provides a simple, yet versatile function to find a specific ancestor/root directory given a starting location and a search parameter
There are a few packages out there that already support finding the root directory of a project based off assumptions like that directory containing package.json
or node_modules
. However, this is not always the case. I needed a way to find an ancestor directory that may not always have these markers. So, this provides the means to specify a custom marker file or directory as the means to identify the ancestor that you may need.
This may be useful in a variety of situations. For example, a monorepo where you want to differentiate in development scripts between the root folder of each package, and the root folder of the entire repository.
pnpm add ancesdir
yarn add ancesdir
npm install ancesdir
This method (the default export from the package) finds the first ancestor directory that contains a file or directory called package.json
by default, or a custom marker file or directory if specified. The search starts with the
parent of the given location.
import ancesdir from "ancesdir";
console.log(ancesdir());
Outputs the absolute path of the first parent directory to the ancesdir
package that contains package.json
.
In most cases, this is likely all you need.
import ancesdir from "ancesdir";
console.log(ancesdir(__dirname));
Outputs the absolute path of the first parent directory to __dirname
that contains package.json
.
import ancesdir from "ancesdir";
console.log(ancesdir(__dirname, ".mymarkerfile");
Outputs the absolute path of the first parent directory that contains a file or directory called .mymarkerfile
.
This is useful if you don't have a classic file hierarchy or you want to use this for more advanced use cases where having control over the file system item that identifies your ancestor is useful.
The closesdir
export provides a similar function to ancesdir
, except that
it starts the search in the starting directory, rather than its parent.
import {closesdir} from "closesdir";
console.log(closesdir());
Outputs the absolute path of the first parent directory to the ancesdir
package that contains package.json
. This is the same as calling ancesdir()
.
import {closesdir} from "closesdir";
console.log(closesdir(__dirname));
Outputs the absolute path of the first directory that contains package.json
, starting with __dirname
and then moving up the directory tree.
import {closesdir} from "closesdir";
console.log(closesdir(__dirname, ".mymarkerfile");
Outputs the absolute path of the first directory that contains a file or directory called .mymarkerfile
, starting with __dirname
and then moving up the directory tree.
This is useful if you don't have a classic file hierarchy or you want to use this for more advanced use cases where having control over the file system item that identifies your target directory is useful.
Both ancesdir
and closesdir
support an options object as the second argument. This allows you to customize the behavior of the search via those
options rather than individual arguments.
type Options = {
/**
* Whether to force a full search, or to use the cache.
* If true, the search will ignore any cached results and search the
* file system for the marker, updating the cache with the results.
* Otherwise, it will use the cached results when available.
* Defaults to false.
*/
force?: boolean;
/**
* The absolute path to start the search from.
* If not provided:
* - For `ancesdir` calls, defaults to the package directory of the
* `ancesdir` module.
* - For `closesdir` calls, defaults to the parent directory of the
* `ancesdir` module.
*/
from?: string;
/**
* The marker to look for in the directory structure.
* Defaults to "package.json".
*/
marker?: string;
};
All requests are cached so that subsequent calls to the same directory or any directory checked during the search do not require a new search. This is useful if you are calling this function multiple times in a single run of your program.
However, there may be times where you want to clear the cache, or force a specific request to be made without using the cache. For this, you can use the clearCache
, or force
options.
import {clearCache} from "ancesdir";
clearCache();
This will clear all cached results, so that subsequent calls to ancesdir
or closesdir
will start to rebuild the cache from scratch based on the current state of the file system.
Both ancesdir
and closesdir
support a call signature that takes an options
object. One of those options is a force
boolean. If this is set to true
, the function will not use the cache for the request and will always instead perform a new search, updating the cache in the process for that search.
This is less impactful than clearing the cache with clearCache
, as it only affects the specific request being made, rather than all requests.
import {ancesdir} from "ancesdir";
ancesdir({force: true});
import {closesdir} from "closesdir";
closesdir({force: true});