watchexec

Build Status Build status Crates.io status

Software development often involves running the same commands over and over. Boring!

watchexec is a simple, standalone tool that watches a path and runs a command whenever it detects modifications.

Example use cases:

Features

Anti-Features

Usage Examples

Watch all JavaScript, CSS and HTML files in the current directory and all subdirectories for changes, running make when a change is detected:

$ watchexec --exts js,css,html make

Call make test when any file changes in this directory/subdirectory, except for everything below target:

$ watchexec -i target make test

Call ls -la when any file changes in this directory/subdirectory:

$ watchexec -- ls -la

Call/restart python server.py when any Python file in the current directory (and all subdirectories) changes:

$ watchexec -e py -r python server.py

Call/restart my_server when any file in the current directory (and all subdirectories) changes, sending SIGKILL to stop the child process:

$ watchexec -r -s SIGKILL my_server

Send a SIGHUP to the child process upon changes (Note: with using -n | --no-shell here, we're executing my_server directly, instead of wrapping it in a shell:

$ watchexec -n -s SIGHUP my_server

Run make when any file changes, using the .gitignore file in the current directory to filter:

$ watchexec make

Run make when any file in lib or src changes:

$ watchexec -w lib -w src make

Installation

Cargo

watchexec requires Rust 1.26 or later. You can install it using cargo:

$ cargo install watchexec

OS X with Homebrew

$ brew install watchexec

Linux

For now, use the GitHub Releases tab to obtain the binary. PRs for packaging in unsupported distros are welcomed.

Debian

A deb package is available for amd64 architectures in the GitHub Releases.

Arch Linux

Available on the AUR:

$ yay -S watchexec

Windows

Available using scoop:

#> scoop install watchexec

Or just unzip the binary from the GitHub Releases.

Building

Rust 1.26 or later is required.

Credits