Paul Lecuq
36c5d6f2ed
- web service with json support - web page - cron service to update database infos
43 lines
1.4 KiB
Go
43 lines
1.4 KiB
Go
/*
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Package godirwalk provides functions to read and traverse directory trees.
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In short, why do I use this library?
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* It's faster than `filepath.Walk`.
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* It's more correct on Windows than `filepath.Walk`.
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* It's more easy to use than `filepath.Walk`.
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* It's more flexible than `filepath.Walk`.
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USAGE
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This library will normalize the provided top level directory name based on the
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os-specific path separator by calling `filepath.Clean` on its first
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argument. However it always provides the pathname created by using the correct
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os-specific path separator when invoking the provided callback function.
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dirname := "some/directory/root"
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err := godirwalk.Walk(dirname, &godirwalk.Options{
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Callback: func(osPathname string, de *godirwalk.Dirent) error {
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fmt.Printf("%s %s\n", de.ModeType(), osPathname)
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return nil
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},
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})
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This library not only provides functions for traversing a file system directory
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tree, but also for obtaining a list of immediate descendants of a particular
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directory, typically much more quickly than using `os.ReadDir` or
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`os.ReadDirnames`.
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scratchBuffer := make([]byte, godirwalk.MinimumScratchBufferSize)
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names, err := godirwalk.ReadDirnames("some/directory", scratchBuffer)
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// ...
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entries, err := godirwalk.ReadDirents("another/directory", scratchBuffer)
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// ...
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*/
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package godirwalk
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