Buckets:
| # minimatch | |
| A minimal matching utility. | |
| This is the matching library used internally by npm. | |
| It works by converting glob expressions into JavaScript `RegExp` | |
| objects. | |
| ## Important Security Consideration! | |
| > [!WARNING] | |
| > This library uses JavaScript regular expressions. Please read | |
| > the following warning carefully, and be thoughtful about what | |
| > you provide to this library in production systems. | |
| _Any_ library in JavaScript that deals with matching string | |
| patterns using regular expressions will be subject to | |
| [ReDoS](https://owasp.org/www-community/attacks/Regular_expression_Denial_of_Service_-_ReDoS) | |
| if the pattern is generated using untrusted input. | |
| Efforts have been made to mitigate risk as much as is feasible in | |
| such a library, providing maximum recursion depths and so forth, | |
| but these measures can only ultimately protect against accidents, | |
| not malice. A dedicated attacker can _always_ find patterns that | |
| cannot be defended against by a bash-compatible glob pattern | |
| matching system that uses JavaScript regular expressions. | |
| To be extremely clear: | |
| > [!WARNING] | |
| > **If you create a system where you take user input, and use | |
| > that input as the source of a Regular Expression pattern, in | |
| > this or any extant glob matcher in JavaScript, you will be | |
| > pwned.** | |
| A future version of this library _may_ use a different matching | |
| algorithm which does not exhibit backtracking problems. If and | |
| when that happens, it will likely be a sweeping change, and those | |
| improvements will **not** be backported to legacy versions. | |
| In the near term, it is not reasonable to continue to play | |
| whack-a-mole with security advisories, and so any future ReDoS | |
| reports will be considered "working as intended", and resolved | |
| entirely by this warning. | |
| ## Usage | |
| ```js | |
| // hybrid module, load with require() or import | |
| import { minimatch } from 'minimatch' | |
| // or: | |
| const { minimatch } = require('minimatch') | |
| minimatch('bar.foo', '*.foo') // true! | |
| minimatch('bar.foo', '*.bar') // false! | |
| minimatch('bar.foo', '*.+(bar|foo)', { debug: true }) // true, and noisy! | |
| ``` | |
| ## Features | |
| Supports these glob features: | |
| - Brace Expansion | |
| - Extended glob matching | |
| - "Globstar" `**` matching | |
| - [Posix character | |
| classes](https://www.gnu.org/software/bash/manual/html_node/Pattern-Matching.html), | |
| like `[[:alpha:]]`, supporting the full range of Unicode | |
| characters. For example, `[[:alpha:]]` will match against | |
| `'é'`, though `[a-zA-Z]` will not. Collating symbol and set | |
| matching is not supported, so `[[=e=]]` will _not_ match `'é'` | |
| and `[[.ch.]]` will not match `'ch'` in locales where `ch` is | |
| considered a single character. | |
| See: | |
| - `man sh` | |
| - `man bash` [Pattern | |
| Matching](https://www.gnu.org/software/bash/manual/html_node/Pattern-Matching.html) | |
| - `man 3 fnmatch` | |
| - `man 5 gitignore` | |
| ## Windows | |
| **Please only use forward-slashes in glob expressions.** | |
| Though windows uses either `/` or `\` as its path separator, only `/` | |
| characters are used by this glob implementation. You must use | |
| forward-slashes **only** in glob expressions. Back-slashes in patterns | |
| will always be interpreted as escape characters, not path separators. | |
| Note that `\` or `/` _will_ be interpreted as path separators in paths on | |
| Windows, and will match against `/` in glob expressions. | |
| So just always use `/` in patterns. | |
| ### UNC Paths | |
| On Windows, UNC paths like `//?/c:/...` or | |
| `//ComputerName/Share/...` are handled specially. | |
| - Patterns starting with a double-slash followed by some | |
| non-slash characters will preserve their double-slash. As a | |
| result, a pattern like `//*` will match `//x`, but not `/x`. | |
| - Patterns staring with `//?/<drive letter>:` will _not_ treat | |
| the `?` as a wildcard character. Instead, it will be treated | |
| as a normal string. | |
| - Patterns starting with `//?/<drive letter>:/...` will match | |
| file paths starting with `<drive letter>:/...`, and vice versa, | |
| as if the `//?/` was not present. This behavior only is | |
| present when the drive letters are a case-insensitive match to | |
| one another. The remaining portions of the path/pattern are | |
| compared case sensitively, unless `nocase:true` is set. | |
| Note that specifying a UNC path using `\` characters as path | |
| separators is always allowed in the file path argument, but only | |
| allowed in the pattern argument when `windowsPathsNoEscape: true` | |
| is set in the options. | |
| ## Minimatch Class | |
| Create a minimatch object by instantiating the `minimatch.Minimatch` class. | |
| ```javascript | |
| var Minimatch = require('minimatch').Minimatch | |
| var mm = new Minimatch(pattern, options) | |
| ``` | |
| ### Properties | |
| - `pattern` The original pattern the minimatch object represents. | |
| - `options` The options supplied to the constructor. | |
| - `set` A 2-dimensional array of regexp or string expressions. | |
| Each row in the | |
| array corresponds to a brace-expanded pattern. Each item in the row | |
| corresponds to a single path-part. For example, the pattern | |
| `{a,b/c}/d` would expand to a set of patterns like: | |
| [ [ a, d ] | |
| , [ b, c, d ] ] | |
| If a portion of the pattern doesn't have any "magic" in it | |
| (that is, it's something like `"foo"` rather than `fo*o?`), then it | |
| will be left as a string rather than converted to a regular | |
| expression. | |
| - `regexp` Created by the `makeRe` method. A single regular expression | |
| expressing the entire pattern. This is useful in cases where you wish | |
| to use the pattern somewhat like `fnmatch(3)` with `FNM_PATH` enabled. | |
| - `negate` True if the pattern is negated. | |
| - `comment` True if the pattern is a comment. | |
| - `empty` True if the pattern is `""`. | |
| ### Methods | |
| - `makeRe()` Generate the `regexp` member if necessary, and return it. | |
| Will return `false` if the pattern is invalid. | |
| - `match(fname)` Return true if the filename matches the pattern, or | |
| false otherwise. | |
| - `matchOne(fileArray, patternArray, partial)` Take a `/`-split | |
| filename, and match it against a single row in the `regExpSet`. This | |
| method is mainly for internal use, but is exposed so that it can be | |
| used by a glob-walker that needs to avoid excessive filesystem calls. | |
| - `hasMagic()` Returns true if the parsed pattern contains any | |
| magic characters. Returns false if all comparator parts are | |
| string literals. If the `magicalBraces` option is set on the | |
| constructor, then it will consider brace expansions which are | |
| not otherwise magical to be magic. If not set, then a pattern | |
| like `a{b,c}d` will return `false`, because neither `abd` nor | |
| `acd` contain any special glob characters. | |
| This does **not** mean that the pattern string can be used as a | |
| literal filename, as it may contain magic glob characters that | |
| are escaped. For example, the pattern `\\*` or `[*]` would not | |
| be considered to have magic, as the matching portion parses to | |
| the literal string `'*'` and would match a path named `'*'`, | |
| not `'\\*'` or `'[*]'`. The `minimatch.unescape()` method may | |
| be used to remove escape characters. | |
| All other methods are internal, and will be called as necessary. | |
| ### minimatch(path, pattern, options) | |
| Main export. Tests a path against the pattern using the options. | |
| ```javascript | |
| var isJS = minimatch(file, '*.js', { matchBase: true }) | |
| ``` | |
| ### minimatch.filter(pattern, options) | |
| Returns a function that tests its | |
| supplied argument, suitable for use with `Array.filter`. Example: | |
| ```javascript | |
| var javascripts = fileList.filter(minimatch.filter('*.js', { matchBase: true })) | |
| ``` | |
| ### minimatch.escape(pattern, options = {}) | |
| Escape all magic characters in a glob pattern, so that it will | |
| only ever match literal strings | |
| If the `windowsPathsNoEscape` option is used, then characters are | |
| escaped by wrapping in `[]`, because a magic character wrapped in | |
| a character class can only be satisfied by that exact character. | |
| Slashes (and backslashes in `windowsPathsNoEscape` mode) cannot | |
| be escaped or unescaped. | |
| ### minimatch.unescape(pattern, options = {}) | |
| Un-escape a glob string that may contain some escaped characters. | |
| If the `windowsPathsNoEscape` option is used, then square-brace | |
| escapes are removed, but not backslash escapes. For example, it | |
| will turn the string `'[*]'` into `*`, but it will not turn | |
| `'\\*'` into `'*'`, because `\` is a path separator in | |
| `windowsPathsNoEscape` mode. | |
| When `windowsPathsNoEscape` is not set, then both brace escapes | |
| and backslash escapes are removed. | |
| Slashes (and backslashes in `windowsPathsNoEscape` mode) cannot | |
| be escaped or unescaped. | |
| ### minimatch.match(list, pattern, options) | |
| Match against the list of | |
| files, in the style of fnmatch or glob. If nothing is matched, and | |
| options.nonull is set, then return a list containing the pattern itself. | |
| ```javascript | |
| var javascripts = minimatch.match(fileList, '*.js', { matchBase: true }) | |
| ``` | |
| ### minimatch.makeRe(pattern, options) | |
| Make a regular expression object from the pattern. | |
| ## Options | |
| All options are `false` by default. | |
| ### debug | |
| Dump a ton of stuff to stderr. | |
| ### nobrace | |
| Do not expand `{a,b}` and `{1..3}` brace sets. | |
| ### noglobstar | |
| Disable `**` matching against multiple folder names. | |
| ### dot | |
| Allow patterns to match filenames starting with a period, even if | |
| the pattern does not explicitly have a period in that spot. | |
| Note that by default, `a/**/b` will **not** match `a/.d/b`, unless `dot` | |
| is set. | |
| ### noext | |
| Disable "extglob" style patterns like `+(a|b)`. | |
| ### nocase | |
| Perform a case-insensitive match. | |
| ### nocaseMagicOnly | |
| When used with `{nocase: true}`, create regular expressions that | |
| are case-insensitive, but leave string match portions untouched. | |
| Has no effect when used without `{nocase: true}` | |
| Useful when some other form of case-insensitive matching is used, | |
| or if the original string representation is useful in some other | |
| way. | |
| ### nonull | |
| When a match is not found by `minimatch.match`, return a list containing | |
| the pattern itself if this option is set. When not set, an empty list | |
| is returned if there are no matches. | |
| ### magicalBraces | |
| This only affects the results of the `Minimatch.hasMagic` method. | |
| If the pattern contains brace expansions, such as `a{b,c}d`, but | |
| no other magic characters, then the `Minimatch.hasMagic()` method | |
| will return `false` by default. When this option set, it will | |
| return `true` for brace expansion as well as other magic glob | |
| characters. | |
| ### matchBase | |
| If set, then patterns without slashes will be matched | |
| against the basename of the path if it contains slashes. For example, | |
| `a?b` would match the path `/xyz/123/acb`, but not `/xyz/acb/123`. | |
| ### nocomment | |
| Suppress the behavior of treating `#` at the start of a pattern as a | |
| comment. | |
| ### nonegate | |
| Suppress the behavior of treating a leading `!` character as negation. | |
| ### flipNegate | |
| Returns from negate expressions the same as if they were not negated. | |
| (Ie, true on a hit, false on a miss.) | |
| ### partial | |
| Compare a partial path to a pattern. As long as the parts of the path that | |
| are present are not contradicted by the pattern, it will be treated as a | |
| match. This is useful in applications where you're walking through a | |
| folder structure, and don't yet have the full path, but want to ensure that | |
| you do not walk down paths that can never be a match. | |
| For example, | |
| ```js | |
| minimatch('/a/b', '/a/*/c/d', { partial: true }) // true, might be /a/b/c/d | |
| minimatch('/a/b', '/**/d', { partial: true }) // true, might be /a/b/.../d | |
| minimatch('/x/y/z', '/a/**/z', { partial: true }) // false, because x !== a | |
| ``` | |
| ### windowsPathsNoEscape | |
| Use `\\` as a path separator _only_, and _never_ as an escape | |
| character. If set, all `\\` characters are replaced with `/` in | |
| the pattern. Note that this makes it **impossible** to match | |
| against paths containing literal glob pattern characters, but | |
| allows matching with patterns constructed using `path.join()` and | |
| `path.resolve()` on Windows platforms, mimicking the (buggy!) | |
| behavior of earlier versions on Windows. Please use with | |
| caution, and be mindful of [the caveat about Windows | |
| paths](#windows). | |
| For legacy reasons, this is also set if | |
| `options.allowWindowsEscape` is set to the exact value `false`. | |
| ### windowsNoMagicRoot | |
| When a pattern starts with a UNC path or drive letter, and in | |
| `nocase:true` mode, do not convert the root portions of the | |
| pattern into a case-insensitive regular expression, and instead | |
| leave them as strings. | |
| This is the default when the platform is `win32` and | |
| `nocase:true` is set. | |
| ### preserveMultipleSlashes | |
| By default, multiple `/` characters (other than the leading `//` | |
| in a UNC path, see "UNC Paths" above) are treated as a single | |
| `/`. | |
| That is, a pattern like `a///b` will match the file path `a/b`. | |
| Set `preserveMultipleSlashes: true` to suppress this behavior. | |
| ### optimizationLevel | |
| A number indicating the level of optimization that should be done | |
| to the pattern prior to parsing and using it for matches. | |
| Globstar parts `**` are always converted to `*` when `noglobstar` | |
| is set, and multiple adjacent `**` parts are converted into a | |
| single `**` (ie, `a/**/**/b` will be treated as `a/**/b`, as this | |
| is equivalent in all cases). | |
| - `0` - Make no further changes. In this mode, `.` and `..` are | |
| maintained in the pattern, meaning that they must also appear | |
| in the same position in the test path string. Eg, a pattern | |
| like `a/*/../c` will match the string `a/b/../c` but not the | |
| string `a/c`. | |
| - `1` - (default) Remove cases where a double-dot `..` follows a | |
| pattern portion that is not `**`, `.`, `..`, or empty `''`. For | |
| example, the pattern `./a/b/../*` is converted to `./a/*`, and | |
| so it will match the path string `./a/c`, but not the path | |
| string `./a/b/../c`. Dots and empty path portions in the | |
| pattern are preserved. | |
| - `2` (or higher) - Much more aggressive optimizations, suitable | |
| for use with file-walking cases: | |
| - Remove cases where a double-dot `..` follows a pattern | |
| portion that is not `**`, `.`, or empty `''`. Remove empty | |
| and `.` portions of the pattern, where safe to do so (ie, | |
| anywhere other than the last position, the first position, or | |
| the second position in a pattern starting with `/`, as this | |
| may indicate a UNC path on Windows). | |
| - Convert patterns containing `<pre>/**/../<p>/<rest>` into the | |
| equivalent `<pre>/{..,**}/<p>/<rest>`, where `<p>` is a | |
| a pattern portion other than `.`, `..`, `**`, or empty | |
| `''`. | |
| - Dedupe patterns where a `**` portion is present in one and | |
| omitted in another, and it is not the final path portion, and | |
| they are otherwise equivalent. So `{a/**/b,a/b}` becomes | |
| `a/**/b`, because `**` matches against an empty path portion. | |
| - Dedupe patterns where a `*` portion is present in one, and a | |
| non-dot pattern other than `**`, `.`, `..`, or `''` is in the | |
| same position in the other. So `a/{*,x}/b` becomes `a/*/b`, | |
| because `*` can match against `x`. | |
| While these optimizations improve the performance of | |
| file-walking use cases such as [glob](http://npm.im/glob) (ie, | |
| the reason this module exists), there are cases where it will | |
| fail to match a literal string that would have been matched in | |
| optimization level 1 or 0. | |
| Specifically, while the `Minimatch.match()` method will | |
| optimize the file path string in the same ways, resulting in | |
| the same matches, it will fail when tested with the regular | |
| expression provided by `Minimatch.makeRe()`, unless the path | |
| string is first processed with | |
| `minimatch.levelTwoFileOptimize()` or similar. | |
| ### platform | |
| When set to `win32`, this will trigger all windows-specific | |
| behaviors (special handling for UNC paths, and treating `\` as | |
| separators in file paths for comparison.) | |
| Defaults to the value of `process.platform`. | |
| ## Comparisons to other fnmatch/glob implementations | |
| While strict compliance with the existing standards is a | |
| worthwhile goal, some discrepancies exist between minimatch and | |
| other implementations. Some are intentional, and some are | |
| unavoidable. | |
| If the pattern starts with a `!` character, then it is negated. Set the | |
| `nonegate` flag to suppress this behavior, and treat leading `!` | |
| characters normally. This is perhaps relevant if you wish to start the | |
| pattern with a negative extglob pattern like `!(a|B)`. Multiple `!` | |
| characters at the start of a pattern will negate the pattern multiple | |
| times. | |
| If a pattern starts with `#`, then it is treated as a comment, and | |
| will not match anything. Use `\#` to match a literal `#` at the | |
| start of a line, or set the `nocomment` flag to suppress this behavior. | |
| The double-star character `**` is supported by default, unless the | |
| `noglobstar` flag is set. This is supported in the manner of bsdglob | |
| and bash 4.1, where `**` only has special significance if it is the only | |
| thing in a path part. That is, `a/**/b` will match `a/x/y/b`, but | |
| `a/**b` will not. | |
| If an escaped pattern has no matches, and the `nonull` flag is set, | |
| then minimatch.match returns the pattern as-provided, rather than | |
| interpreting the character escapes. For example, | |
| `minimatch.match([], "\\*a\\?")` will return `"\\*a\\?"` rather than | |
| `"*a?"`. This is akin to setting the `nullglob` option in bash, except | |
| that it does not resolve escaped pattern characters. | |
| If brace expansion is not disabled, then it is performed before any | |
| other interpretation of the glob pattern. Thus, a pattern like | |
| `+(a|{b),c)}`, which would not be valid in bash or zsh, is expanded | |
| **first** into the set of `+(a|b)` and `+(a|c)`, and those patterns are | |
| checked for validity. Since those two are valid, matching proceeds. | |
| Negated extglob patterns are handled as closely as possible to | |
| Bash semantics, but there are some cases with negative extglobs | |
| which are exceedingly difficult to express in a JavaScript | |
| regular expression. In particular the negated pattern | |
| `<start>!(<pattern>*|)*` will in bash match anything that does | |
| not start with `<start><pattern>`. However, | |
| `<start>!(<pattern>*)*` _will_ match paths starting with | |
| `<start><pattern>`, because the empty string can match against | |
| the negated portion. In this library, `<start>!(<pattern>*|)*` | |
| will _not_ match any pattern starting with `<start>`, due to a | |
| difference in precisely which patterns are considered "greedy" in | |
| Regular Expressions vs bash path expansion. This may be fixable, | |
| but not without incurring some complexity and performance costs, | |
| and the trade-off seems to not be worth pursuing. | |
| Note that `fnmatch(3)` in libc is an extremely naive string comparison | |
| matcher, which does not do anything special for slashes. This library is | |
| designed to be used in glob searching and file walkers, and so it does do | |
| special things with `/`. Thus, `foo*` will not match `foo/bar` in this | |
| library, even though it would in `fnmatch(3)`. | |
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