walk
walkdir
walk | walkdir | |
---|---|---|
4 | 5 | |
70 | 1,183 | |
- | - | |
0.0 | 4.3 | |
over 3 years ago | 26 days ago | |
C | Rust | |
Apache License 2.0 | The Unlicense |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
Activity is a relative number indicating how actively a project is being developed. Recent commits have higher weight than older ones.
For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.
walk
- I Didn’t Learn Unix by Reading All the Manpages
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Why doesn’t grep permit searching in filenames?
Depending on what you want to do, walk may be an option. From the docs:
- Git ls-files is Faster Than Fd and Find
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Robust and beginner friendly dotfiles skeleton. Did not find anything robust to restore easily with backups.
You can eventually work around walk and sor. Perhaps you will find them more suckless
walkdir
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Project idea: port markdownlint to Rust
https://github.com/BurntSushi/walkdir for discovering markdown files
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Blazingly fast file search library built in Rust 🔥
The API looks really nice! What is your vision for the project? How is it going to compare to (walkdir)[https://github.com/BurntSushi/walkdir] performance and feature-wise?
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Git ls-files is Faster Than Fd and Find
> I believe that GNU find is slow because it is specifically written to allow arbitrary filesystem depth as opposed to "open file descriptor limit-limited depth".
I haven't benchmarked find specifically, but I believe the most common Rust library for the purpose, walkdir[1], also allows arbitrary file system recursion depth, and is extremely fast. It was fairly close to some "naive" limited depth code I wrote in C for the same purpose.
I'd be curious to see benchmarks of whether this actually makes a difference.
[1] https://github.com/BurntSushi/walkdir
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Your favorite Rust CLI utility? I have my top 10 below.
It relies pretty heavily on the walkdir library from burntsushi so kudos to them!
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Rust, musl and glibc in 2021
Although, I don't think FileType is the only problem. There's also Metadata, which I also had to re-roll: https://github.com/BurntSushi/walkdir/blob/1d7293a5a1ef548ce587a0b08abce5f21571a100/src/os/unix/stat.rs
What are some alternatives?
cligen - Nim library to infer/generate command-line-interfaces / option / argument parsing; Docs at
parallel-disk-usage - Highly parallelized, blazing fast directory tree analyzer
dotfiles_skeleton - robust and beginner friendly dotfile skeleton
zenith - Zenith - sort of like top or htop but with zoom-able charts, CPU, GPU, network, and disk usage
loggedfs - LoggedFS - Filesystem monitoring with Fuse
tools
hexyl - A command-line hex viewer
sauce - A tool to help manage context/project specific shell-things like environment variables.
exa - A modern replacement for ‘ls’.
just - 🤖 Just a command runner