A resource watcher allows you to watch a resource for any changes. This means you can watch a directory and then listen for any changes to files within that directory or to the directory itself.
To install Resource Watcher add it to the requires
key of your composer.json
file.
"jasonlewis/resource-watcher": "1.2.*"
Then update your project with composer update
.
The Resource Watcher is best used from a console. An example of a console command can be found in the watcher
file. This file is commented to give you
an idea of how to configure and use a resource watcher. Once you've customized the command to your liking you can run it from your console.
$ php watcher
Any changes you make to the resource will be outputted to the console.
To watch resources you first need an instance of JasonLewis\ResourceWatcher\Watcher
. This class has a few dependencies (JasonLewis\ResourceWatcher\Tracker
and Illuminate\Filesystem\Filesystem
) that must also be instantiated.
$files = new Illuminate\Filesystem\Filesystem;
$tracker = new JasonLewis\ResourceWatcher\Tracker;
$watcher = new JasonLewis\ResourceWatcher\Watcher($tracker, $files);
Now that we have our watcher we can create a listener for a given resource.
$listener = $watcher->watch('path/to/resource');
When you watch a resource an instance of JasonLewis\ResourceWatcher\Listener
is returned. With this we can now listen for certain events on a resource.
There are three events we can listen for: modify
, create
, and delete
. The callback you give to the listener receives two parameters, the first being an implementation of JasonLewis\ResourceWatcher\Resource\ResourceInterface
and the second being the absolute path to the resource.
$listener->modify(function($resource, $path) {
echo "{$path} has been modified.".PHP_EOL;
});
You can use the alias methods as well.
$listener->onModify(function($resource, $path) {
echo "{$path} has been modified.".PHP_EOL;
});
You can also listen for any of these events. This time the callback receives a different set of parameters, the first being an instance of JasonLewis\ResourceWatcher\Event
and the remaining two being the same as before.
$listener->anything(function($event, $resource, $path) {
});
Remember that each call to
$watcher->watch()
will return an instance ofJasonLewis\ResourceWatcher\Listener
, so be sure you attach listeners to the right one!
Once you're watching some resources and have your listeners set up you can start the watching process.
$watcher->start();
By default the watcher will poll for changes every second. You can adjust this by passing in an optional first parameter to the start
method. The polling interval is given in microseconds, so 1,000,000 microseconds is 1 second. The watch will continue until such time that it's aborted from the console. To set a timeout pass in the number of microseconds before the watch will abort as the second parameter.
The start
method can also be given a callback as an optional third parameter. This callback will be fired before checking for any changes to resources.
$watcher->start(1000000, null, function($watcher) {
// Perhaps perform some other check and then stop the watch.
$watcher->stop();
});
Included is a service provider for the Laravel framework. This service provider will bind an instance of JasonLewis\ResourceWatcher\Watcher
to the application container under the watcher
key.
Register JasonLewis\ResourceWatcher\Integration\LaravelServiceProvider
in the array of providers in app/config/app.php
.
$listener = $app['watcher']->watch('path/to/resource');
// Or if you don't have access to an instance of the application container.
$listener = app('watcher')->watch('path/to/resource');
Resource Watcher is released under the 2-clause BSD license. See the LICENSE
for more details.