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The Listen gem listens to file modifications and notifies you about the changes.

Features

  • Works everywhere!
  • Supports watching multiple directories from a single listener.
  • OS-specific adapters for Mac OS X 10.6+, Linux, *BSD and Windows.
  • Automatic fallback to polling if OS-specific adapter doesn't work.
  • Detects file modification, addition and removal.
  • Checksum comparison for modifications made under the same second.
  • Allows supplying regexp-patterns to ignore and filter paths for better results.
  • Tested on all Ruby environments via Travis CI.

Install

Using Bundler

The simplest way to install Listen is to use Bundler.

Add Listen to your Gemfile:

group :development do
  gem 'listen'
end

and install it by running Bundler:

$ bundle

Install the gem with RubyGems

$ gem install listen

On Windows

If your are on Windows and using Ruby MRI >= 1.9.2 you can try to use the wdm instead of polling. Please add the following to your Gemfile:

require 'rbconfig'
gem 'wdm', '>= 0.1.0' if RbConfig::CONFIG['target_os'] =~ /mswin|mingw/i

Usage

There are two ways to use Listen:

  1. Block API: Call Listen.to/Listen.to! with either a single directory or multiple directories, then define the change callback in a block.
  2. "Object" API: Create a listener object and use it in a chainable way.

Block API

# Listen to a single directory.
Listen.to('dir/path/to/listen', :filter => /\.rb$/, :ignore => %r{ignored/path/}) do |modified, added, removed|
  # ...
end

# Listen to multiple directories.
Listen.to('dir/to/awesome_app', 'dir/to/other_app', :filter => /\.rb$/, :latency => 0.1) do |modified, added, removed|
  # ...
end

"Object" API

listener = Listen.to('dir/path/to/listen')
listener = listener.ignore(%r{^ignored/path/})
listener = listener.filter(/\.rb$/)
listener = listener.latency(0.5)
listener = listener.force_polling(true)
listener = listener.polling_fallback_message(false)
listener = listener.change(&callback)
listener.start

Note: All the "Object" API methods except start/start! return the listener and are thus chainable:

Listen.to('dir/path/to/listen')
      .ignore(%r{^ignored/path/})
      .filter(/\.rb$/)
      .latency(0.5)
      .force_polling(true)
      .polling_fallback_message('custom message')
      .change(&callback)
      .start

Pause/Unpause

Listener can also easily be paused/unpaused:

listener = Listen.to('dir/path/to/listen')
listener.start   # non-blocking mode
listener.pause   # stop listening to changes
listener.paused? # => true
listener.unpause # start listening to changes again
listener.stop    # stop completely the listener

Changes callback

Changes to the listened-to directories gets reported back to the user in a callback. The registered callback gets invoked, when there are changes, with three parameters: modified_paths, added_paths and removed_paths in that particular order.

You can register a callback in two ways. The first way is by passing a block when calling the Listen.to/Listen.to! method or when initializing a listener object:

Listen.to('path/to/app') do |modified, added, removed|
  # This block will be called when there are changes.
end

# or ...

listener = Listen::Listener.new('path/to/app') do |modified, added, removed|
  # This block will be called when there are changes.
end

The second way to register a callback is by calling the #change method on a listener passing it a block:

# Create a callback
callback = Proc.new do |modified, added, removed|
  # This proc will be called when there are changes.
end

listener = Listen.to('dir')
listener.change(&callback) # convert the callback to a block and register it

listener.start

Paths in callbacks

Listeners invoke callbacks passing them absolute paths by default:

# Assume someone changes the 'style.css' file in '/home/user/app/css' after creating
# the listener.
Listen.to('/home/user/app/css') do |modified, added, removed|
  modified.inspect # => ['/home/user/app/css/style.css']
end

Relative paths in callbacks

When creating a listener for a single path (more specifically a Listen::Listener instance), you can pass :relative_paths => true as an option to get relative paths in your callback:

# Assume someone changes the 'style.css' file in '/home/user/app/css' after creating
# the listener.
Listen.to('/home/user/app/css', :relative_paths => true) do |modified, added, removed|
  modified.inspect # => ['style.css']
end

Passing the :relative_paths => true option won't work when listening to multiple directories:

# Assume someone changes the 'style.css' file in '/home/user/app/css' after creating
# the listener.
Listen.to('/home/user/app/css', '/home/user/app/js', :relative_paths => true) do |modified, added, removed|
  modified.inspect # => ['/home/user/app/css/style.css']
end

Options

All the following options can be set through the Listen.to/Listen.to! params or via "Object" API methods:

:ignore => %r{app/CMake/}, /\.pid$/           # Ignore a list of paths (root directory or sub-dir)
                                              # default: See DEFAULT_IGNORED_DIRECTORIES and DEFAULT_IGNORED_EXTENSIONS in Listen::DirectoryRecord

:filter => /\.rb$/, /\.coffee$/               # Filter files to listen to via a regexps list.
                                              # default: none

:latency => 0.5                               # Set the delay (**in seconds**) between checking for changes
                                              # default: 0.25 sec (1.0 sec for polling)

:force_polling => true                        # Force the use of the polling adapter
                                              # default: none

:polling_fallback_message => 'custom message' # Set a custom polling fallback message (or disable it with false)
                                              # default: "Listen will be polling for changes. Learn more at https://github.com/guard/listen#polling-fallback."

:relative_paths => true                       # Enable the use of relative paths in the callback.
                                              # default: false

Note on the patterns for ignoring and filtering paths

Just like the unix convention of beginning absolute paths with the directory-separator (forward slash / in unix) and with no prefix for relative paths, Listen doesn't prefix relative paths (to the watched directory) with a directory-separator.

Therefore make sure NOT to prefix your regexp-patterns for filtering or ignoring paths with a directory-separator, otherwise they won't work as expected.

As an example: to ignore the build directory in a C-project, use %r{build/} and not %r{/build/}.

Use #filter! and #ignore! methods to overwrites default patterns.

Blocking listening to changes

Calling Listen.to with a block doesn't block the current thread. If you want to block the current thread instead until the listener is stopped (which needs to be done from another thread), you can use Listen.to!.

Similarly, if you're using the "Object" API, you can use #start! instead of #start to block the current thread until the listener is stopped.

Here is an example of using a listener in the blocking mode:

Listen.to!('dir/path/to/listen') # block execution

# Code here will not run until the listener is stopped

Here is an example of using a listener started with the "Object" API in blocking mode:

listener = Listen.to('dir/path/to/listen')
listener.start! # block execution

# Code here will not run until the listener is stopped

Note: Using the Listen.to! helper-method with or without a callback-block will always start the listener right away and block execution of the current thread.

Listen adapters

The Listen gem has a set of adapters to notify it when there are changes. There are 4 OS-specific adapters to support Mac, Linux, *BSD and Windows. These adapters are fast as they use some system-calls to implement the notifying function.

There is also a polling adapter which is a cross-platform adapter and it will work on any system. This adapter is unfortunately slower than the rest of the adapters.

The Listen gem will choose the best and working adapter for your machine automatically. If you want to force the use of the polling adapter, either use the :force_polling option while initializing the listener or call the #force_polling method on your listener before starting it.

Polling fallback

When a OS-specific adapter doesn't work the Listen gem automatically falls back to the polling adapter. Here are some things you could try to avoid the polling fallback:

If your application keeps using the polling-adapter and you can't figure out why, feel free to open an issue (and be sure to give all the details).

Development Dependency Status

Pull requests are very welcome! Please try to follow these simple rules if applicable:

  • Please create a topic branch for every separate change you make.
  • Make sure your patches are well tested. All specs must pass on Travis CI.
  • Update the Yard documentation.
  • Update the README.
  • Update the CHANGELOG for noteworthy changes (don't forget to run bundle exec pimpmychangelog and watch the magic happen)!
  • Please do not change the version number.

For questions please join us in our Google group or on #guard (irc.freenode.net).

Acknowledgments

Authors

Contributors

https://github.com/guard/listen/contributors