Update README for providers and other recent changes.

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David Humphrey (:humph) david.humphrey@senecacollege.ca 2013-11-29 10:34:38 -05:00
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README.md
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IDBFS is provides a POSIX-like file system interface for browser-based JavaScript.
###IDBFS
IDBFS is a POSIX-like file system interface for browser-based JavaScript.
The API is as close to the node.js [fs module](http://nodejs.org/api/fs.html) as possible
with the following differences:
* No synchronous versions of methods (e.g., `mkdir()` but not `mkdirSync()`).
* No permissions (e.g., no `chown()`, `chmod()`, etc.).
* No support (yet) for `fs.watchFile(), `fs.unwatchFile()`, `fs.watch()`.
* No support for stream-based operations (e.g., `fs.ReadStream`, `fs.WriteStream`).
###Downloading
Pre-built versions of the library are available in the repo:
* [idbfs.js](https://raw.github.com/js-platform/idbfs/develop/dist/idbfs.js)
* [idbfs.min.js](https://raw.github.com/js-platform/idbfs/develop/dist/idbfs.min.js)
### Contributing
The best way to get started is to read through the `Getting Started` and `Example` sections before having a look through the open [issues](https://github.com/js-platform/idbfs/issues). Some of the issues are marked as `good first bug`, but feel free to contribute to any of the issues there, or open a new one if the thing you want to work on isn't there yet. If you would like to have an issue assigned to you, please send me a message and I'll update it.
Once you've done some hacking and you'd like to have your work merged, you'll need to make a pull request. If you're patch includes code, make sure to check that all the unit tests pass, including any new tests you wrote. Finally, make sure you add yourself to the `AUTHORS` file.
### Getting Started
IDBFS is partly based on the `fs` module from node.js. The API is asynchronous and most methods require the caller to provide a callback function. Errors are passed to callbacks through the first parameter.
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#### Example
````
<script>
var fs = new IDBFS.FileSystem('local');
fs.open('/myfile', 'w+', function(err, fd) {
```javascript
var fs = new IDBFS.FileSystem();
fs.open('/myfile', 'w+', function(err, fd) {
if (err) throw err;
fs.close(fd, function(err) {
if (err) throw err;
fs.close(fd, function(err) {
fs.stat('/myfile', function(err, stats) {
if (err) throw err;
fs.stat('/myfile', function(err, stats) {
if (err) throw err;
console.log('stats: ' + JSON.stringify(stats));
});
console.log('stats: ' + JSON.stringify(stats));
});
});
</script>
````
});
```
As with node.js, there is no guarantee that file system operations will be executed in the order they are invoked. Ensure proper ordering by chaining operations in callbacks.
### Tests
### Contributing
The best way to get started is to read through the `Getting Started` and `Example` sections before having a look through the open [issues](https://github.com/js-platform/idbfs/issues). Some of the issues are marked as `good first bug`, but feel free to contribute to any of the issues there, or open a new one if the thing you want to work on isn't there yet. If you would like to have an issue assigned to you, please send me a message and I'll update it.
The build system is based on [grunt](http://gruntjs.com/). To get a working build system
do the following:
```
npm install
npm install -g grunt-cli
``
You can now run the following grunt tasks:
* `grunt check` will run [JSHint](http://www.jshint.com/) on your code (do this before submitting a pull request) to catch errors
* `grunt develop` will create a single file version of the library for testing in `dist/idbfs.js`
* `grunt release` like `develop` but will also create a minified version of the library in `dist/idbfs.min.js`
Once you've done some hacking and you'd like to have your work merged, you'll need to make a pull request. If you're patch includes code, make sure to check that all the unit tests pass, including any new tests you wrote. Finally, make sure you add yourself to the `AUTHORS` file.
#### Tests
You can run the tests from the project by opening the `tests` directory in your browser. You can also run them [here](http://js-platform.github.io/idbfs/tests/).
### API Reference
Callbacks for methods that accept them are non-optional. The first callback parameter is reserved for passing errors. It will be `undefined` if no errors occurred and should always be checked.
Like node.js, callbacks for methods that accept them are optional but suggested. The first callback parameter is reserved for passing errors. It will be `null` if no errors occurred and should always be checked.
#### IDBFS.FileSystem(name, flags)
#### IDBFS.FileSystem(options, callback)
File system constructor, invoked to open an existing file system or create a new one. Accepts a name and optional flags. Use `'FORMAT'` to force IDBFS for format the file system.
File system constructor, invoked to open an existing file system or create a new one. Accepts two arguments: an `options` object,
and an optional `callback`. The `options` object can specify a number of optional arguments, including:
* `name`: the name of the file system, defaults to "local"
* `flags`: one or more flags to use when creating/opening the file system. Use `'FORMAT'` to force IDBFS to format (i.e., erase) the file system
* `provider`: an explicit storage provider to use for the file system's database context provider. See below for details
The `callback` function indicates when the file system is ready for use. Depending on the storage provider used, this might
be right away, or could take some time. The callback should expect an `error` argument, which will be null if everything worked.
Also users should check the file system's `readyState` and `error` properties to make sure it is usable.
```javascript
var fs;
function fsReady(err) {
if(err) throw err;
// Safe to use fs now...
}
fs = new IDBFS.FileSystem({
name: "my-filesystem",
flags: 'FORMAT',
provider: new IDBFS.FileSystem.providers.Memory()
});
```
###IDBFS.FileSystem.providers - Storage Providers
IDBFS can be configured to use a number of different storage providers. The provider object encapsulates all aspects
of data access, making it possible to swap in different backend storage options. There are currently 4 different
providers to choose from:
* `FileSystem.providers.IndexedDB()` - uses IndexedDB
* `FileSystem.providers.WebSQL()` - uses WebSQL
* `FileSystem.providers.Fallback()` - attempts to use IndexedDB if possible, falling-back to WebSQL if necessary
* `FileSystem.providers.Memory()` - uses memory (not suitable for data that needs to survive the current session)
You can choose your provider when creating a `FileSystem`:
```javascript
var FileSystem = IDBFS.FileSystem;
var providers = FileSystem.providers;
// Example 1: Use the default provider (currently IndexedDB)
var fs1 = new FileSystem();
// Example 2: Explicitly use IndexedDB
var fs2 = new FileSystem({ provider: new providers.IndexedDB() });
// Example 3: Use one of IndexedDB or WebSQL, whichever is supported
var fs3 = new FileSystem({ provider: new providers.Fallback() });
```
Every provider has an `isSupported()` method, which returns `true` if the browser supports this provider:
```javascript
if( IDBFS.FileSystem.providers.WebSQL.isSupported() ) {
...
}
```
You can also write your own provider if you need a different backend. See the code in `src/providers` for details.
#### fs.stat(path, callback)
Asynchronous stat(2). Callback gets `(error, stats)`, where `stats` is an object like
{
node: <string> // internal node id (unique)
dev: <string> // file system name
size: <number> // file size in bytes
nlinks: <number> // number of links
atime: <number> // last access time
mtime: <number> // last modified time
ctime: <number> // creation time
type: <string> // file type (FILE, DIRECTORY, ...)
}
```
{
node: <string> // internal node id (unique)
dev: <string> // file system name
size: <number> // file size in bytes
nlinks: <number> // number of links
atime: <number> // last access time
mtime: <number> // last modified time
ctime: <number> // creation time
type: <string> // file type (FILE, DIRECTORY, ...)
}
```
#### fs.fstat(fd, callback)