# grunt-contrib-watch v1.0.0 [![Build Status: Linux](https://travis-ci.org/gruntjs/grunt-contrib-watch.svg?branch=master)](https://travis-ci.org/gruntjs/grunt-contrib-watch) [![Build Status: Windows](https://ci.appveyor.com/api/projects/status/olyu3uhcq59avm8v/branch/master?svg=true)](https://ci.appveyor.com/project/gruntjs/grunt-contrib-watch/branch/master) > Run predefined tasks whenever watched file patterns are added, changed or deleted ## Getting Started If you haven't used [Grunt](http://gruntjs.com/) before, be sure to check out the [Getting Started](http://gruntjs.com/getting-started) guide, as it explains how to create a [Gruntfile](http://gruntjs.com/sample-gruntfile) as well as install and use Grunt plugins. Once you're familiar with that process, you may install this plugin with this command: ```shell npm install grunt-contrib-watch --save-dev ``` Once the plugin has been installed, it may be enabled inside your Gruntfile with this line of JavaScript: ```js grunt.loadNpmTasks('grunt-contrib-watch'); ``` ## Watch task _Run this task with the `grunt watch` command._ ### Settings There are a number of options available. Please review the [minimatch options here](https://github.com/isaacs/minimatch#options). As well as some additional options as follows: #### files Type: `String|Array` This defines what file patterns this task will watch. It can be a string or an array of files and/or minimatch patterns. #### tasks Type: `String|Array` This defines which tasks to run when a watched file event occurs. #### options.spawn Type: `Boolean` Default: `true` Whether to spawn task runs in a child process. Setting this option to `false` speeds up the reaction time of the watch (usually 500ms faster for most) and allows subsequent task runs to share the same context. Not spawning task runs can make the watch more prone to failing so please use as needed. Example: ```js watch: { scripts: { files: ['**/*.js'], tasks: ['jshint'], options: { spawn: false, }, }, }, ``` *For backwards compatibility the option `nospawn` is still available and will do the opposite of `spawn`.* #### options.interrupt Type: `Boolean` Default: `false` As files are modified this watch task will spawn tasks in child processes. The default behavior will only spawn a new child process per target when the previous process has finished. Set the `interrupt` option to true to terminate the previous process and spawn a new one upon later changes. Example: ```js watch: { scripts: { files: '**/*.js', tasks: ['jshint'], options: { interrupt: true, }, }, }, ``` #### options.debounceDelay Type: `Integer` Default: `500` How long to wait before emitting events in succession for the same filepath and status. For example if your `Gruntfile.js` file was `changed`, a `changed` event will only fire again after the given milliseconds. Example: ```js watch: { scripts: { files: '**/*.js', tasks: ['jshint'], options: { debounceDelay: 250, }, }, }, ``` #### options.interval Type: `Integer` Default: `100` The `interval` is passed to `fs.watchFile`. Since `interval` is only used by `fs.watchFile` and this watcher also uses `fs.watch`; it is recommended to ignore this option. *Default is 100ms*. #### options.event Type: `String|Array` Default: `'all'` Specify the type of watch events that triggers the specified task. This option can be one or many of: `'all'`, `'changed'`, `'added'` and `'deleted'`. Example: ```js watch: { scripts: { files: '**/*.js', tasks: ['generateFileManifest'], options: { event: ['added', 'deleted'], }, }, }, ``` #### options.reload Type: `Boolean` Default: `false` By default, if `Gruntfile.js` is being watched, then changes to it will trigger the watch task to restart, and reload the `Gruntfile.js` changes. When `reload` is set to `true`, changes to *any* of the watched files will trigger the watch task to restart. This is especially useful if your `Gruntfile.js` is dependent on other files. ```js watch: { configFiles: { files: [ 'Gruntfile.js', 'config/*.js' ], options: { reload: true } } } ``` #### options.forever Type: `Boolean` Default: `true` This is *only a task level option* and cannot be configured per target. By default the watch task will duck punch `grunt.fatal` and `grunt.warn` to try and prevent them from exiting the watch process. If you don't want `grunt.fatal` and `grunt.warn` to be overridden set the `forever` option to `false`. #### options.dateFormat Type: `Function` This is *only a task level option* and cannot be configured per target. By default when the watch has finished running tasks it will display the message `Completed in 1.301s at Thu Jul 18 2013 14:58:21 GMT-0700 (PDT) - Waiting...`. You can override this message by supplying your own function: ```js watch: { options: { dateFormat: function(time) { grunt.log.writeln('The watch finished in ' + time + 'ms at' + (new Date()).toString()); grunt.log.writeln('Waiting for more changes...'); }, }, scripts: { files: '**/*.js', tasks: 'jshint', }, }, ``` #### options.atBegin Type: `Boolean` Default: `false` This option will trigger the run of each specified task at startup of the watcher. #### options.livereload Type: `Boolean|Number|Object` Default: `false` Set to `true` or set `livereload: 1337` to a port number to enable live reloading. Default and recommended port is `35729`. If enabled a live reload server will be started with the watch task per target. Then after the indicated tasks have run, the live reload server will be triggered with the modified files. See also how to [enable livereload on your HTML](https://github.com/gruntjs/grunt-contrib-watch/blob/master/docs/watch-examples.md#enabling-live-reload-in-your-html). Example: ```js watch: { css: { files: '**/*.sass', tasks: ['sass'], options: { livereload: true, }, }, }, ``` Passing an object to `livereload` allows listening on a specific port and hostname/IP or over https connections (by specifying `key` and `cert` paths). Example: ```js watch: { css: { files: '**/*.sass', tasks: ['sass'], options: { livereload: { host: 'localhost', port: 9000, key: grunt.file.read('path/to/ssl.key'), cert: grunt.file.read('path/to/ssl.crt') // you can pass in any other options you'd like to the https server, as listed here: http://nodejs.org/api/tls.html#tls_tls_createserver_options_secureconnectionlistener } }, }, }, ``` #### options.cwd Type: `String|Object` Default: `process.cwd()` Ability to set the current working directory. Defaults to `process.cwd()`. Can either be a string to set the cwd to match files and spawn tasks or an object to set each independently. Such as: ```js options: { cwd: { files: 'match/files/from/here', spawn: 'but/spawn/files/from/here' } } ``` To strip off a path before emitting events: ```js options: { cwd: { files: 'a/path', event: 'a/path' } } ``` This will strip off `a/path` before emitting events. This option is useful for specifying the base directory to use with livereload. #### options.livereloadOnError Type: `Boolean` Default: `true` Option to prevent the livereload if the executed tasks encountered an error. If set to `false`, the livereload will only be triggered if all tasks completed successfully. ### Examples ```js // Simple config to run jshint any time a file is added, changed or deleted grunt.initConfig({ watch: { files: ['**/*'], tasks: ['jshint'], }, }); ``` ```js // Advanced config. Run specific tasks when specific files are added, changed or deleted. grunt.initConfig({ watch: { gruntfile: { files: 'Gruntfile.js', tasks: ['jshint:gruntfile'], }, src: { files: ['lib/*.js', 'css/**/*.scss', '!lib/dontwatch.js'], tasks: ['default'], }, test: { files: '<%= jshint.test.src %>', tasks: ['jshint:test', 'qunit'], }, }, }); ``` #### Using the `watch` event This task will emit a `watch` event when watched files are modified. This is useful if you would like a simple notification when files are edited or if you're using this task in tandem with another task. Here is a simple example using the `watch` event: ```js grunt.initConfig({ watch: { scripts: { files: ['lib/*.js'], }, }, }); grunt.event.on('watch', function(action, filepath, target) { grunt.log.writeln(target + ': ' + filepath + ' has ' + action); }); ``` **The `watch` event is not intended for replacing the standard Grunt API for configuring and running tasks. If you're trying to run tasks from within the `watch` event you're more than likely doing it wrong. Please read [configuring tasks](http://gruntjs.com/configuring-tasks).** ##### Compiling Files As Needed A very common request is to only compile files as needed. Here is an example that will only lint changed files with the `jshint` task: ```js grunt.initConfig({ watch: { scripts: { files: ['lib/*.js'], tasks: ['jshint'], options: { spawn: false, }, }, }, jshint: { all: { src: ['lib/*.js'], }, }, }); // On watch events configure jshint:all to only run on changed file grunt.event.on('watch', function(action, filepath) { grunt.config('jshint.all.src', filepath); }); ``` If you need to dynamically modify your config, the `spawn` option must be disabled to keep the watch running under the same context. If you save multiple files simultaneously you may opt for a more robust method: ```js var changedFiles = Object.create(null); var onChange = grunt.util._.debounce(function() { grunt.config('jshint.all.src', Object.keys(changedFiles)); changedFiles = Object.create(null); }, 200); grunt.event.on('watch', function(action, filepath) { changedFiles[filepath] = action; onChange(); }); ``` #### Live Reloading Live reloading is built into the watch task. Set the option `livereload` to `true` to enable on the default port `35729` or set to a custom port: `livereload: 1337`. The simplest way to add live reloading to all your watch targets is by setting `livereload` to `true` at the task level. This will run a single live reload server and trigger the live reload for all your watch targets: ```js grunt.initConfig({ watch: { options: { livereload: true, }, css: { files: ['public/scss/*.scss'], tasks: ['compass'], }, }, }); ``` You can also configure live reload for individual watch targets or run multiple live reload servers. Just be sure if you're starting multiple servers they operate on different ports: ```js grunt.initConfig({ watch: { css: { files: ['public/scss/*.scss'], tasks: ['compass'], options: { // Start a live reload server on the default port 35729 livereload: true, }, }, another: { files: ['lib/*.js'], tasks: ['anothertask'], options: { // Start another live reload server on port 1337 livereload: 1337, }, }, dont: { files: ['other/stuff/*'], tasks: ['dostuff'], }, }, }); ``` ##### Enabling Live Reload in Your HTML Once you've started a live reload server you'll be able to access the live reload script. To enable live reload on your page, add a script tag before your closing `` tag pointing to the `livereload.js` script: ```html ``` Feel free to add this script to your template situation and toggle with some sort of `dev` flag. ##### Using Live Reload with the Browser Extension Instead of adding a script tag to your page, you can live reload your page by installing a browser extension. Please visit [how do I install and use the browser extensions](http://feedback.livereload.com/knowledgebase/articles/86242-how-do-i-install-and-use-the-browser-extensions-) for help installing an extension for your browser. Once installed please use the default live reload port `35729` and the browser extension will automatically reload your page without needing the `