--- title: "Run a command when a file in a directory changes" date: 2024-01-05T16:00:53-05:00 draft: false tags: [] math: false medium_enabled: false --- When editing code or adding content to a HTML file for a website, it can be very useful to see the changes right away after you save the file. We'll show a lightweight way of accomplishing this task with `entr` and a bit of bash scripting. First if you don't already have it, install `entr`. ```bash sudo dnf install entr ``` This terminal application works by monitoring files passed within standard in. Therefore, to run a `$command` if any file under some `$directory` changes run the following: ```bash find $directory -type f | entr $command ``` An example can be running a build script if anything under the source folder changes: ```bash find src -type f | entr ./build.sh ``` Now this doesn't capture files that get added to the directory. To do this, we need to get `entr` to monitor the parent folder for any changes. We can do this with the `-d` flag. From the man page: > **-d** Track the directories of regular files provided as input and exit if > a new file is added. Since `entr` exits when a file gets added with this flag, the [common solution](https://superuser.com/a/665208) on the internet is to wrap it in a `while` loop. ```bash $ while sleep 0.1 ; do find $directory -type f | entr -d $command ; done ``` This solution works great as a one-liner, but it doesn't let me CTRL-C out when I'm finished. Therefore, I wrote a shell script that incorporates this solution while also adding a `trap`. ```bash #!/bin/bash set -o nounset set -o pipefail show_usage() { echo "Usage: entr-dir [dir] [command]" exit 1 } # Check argument count if [ "$#" -lt 2 ]; then show_usage fi # Make sure that the command entr exists if ! command -v entr > /dev/null ; then echo "entr not found. Exiting..." exit 1 fi DIR="$1"; shift if [[ ! -d "$DIR" ]]; then echo "First argument must be a directory. Exiting..." exit 1 fi # Allow for CTRL-C to exit script trap "exit 0;" SIGINT while sleep 0.1; do find "$DIR" -type f | entr -d "$@" done ``` I plopped this in `~/.local/bin/entr-dir`, gave it the `+x` permission, and now I can easily monitor and build projects when files get changed/added/deleted. ```bash entr-dir src ./build.sh ```