Package Exports
- browserfs
This package does not declare an exports field, so the exports above have been automatically detected and optimized by JSPM instead. If any package subpath is missing, it is recommended to post an issue to the original package (browserfs) to support the "exports" field. If that is not possible, create a JSPM override to customize the exports field for this package.
Readme
BrowserFS
BrowserFS is an in-browser file system that emulates the Node JS file system API and supports storing and retrieving files from various backends. BrowserFS also integrates nicely into the Emscripten file system.
Provided backends:
XmlHttpRequest(downloads files on-demand from a webserver)localStorage- HTML5
FileSystem - IndexedDB
- Dropbox
- In-memory
- Zip file-backed FS (currently read only)
- WebWorker (mount the BrowserFS file system configured in the main thread in a WebWorker, or the other way around!)
More backends can be defined by separate libraries, so long as they extend the BaseFileSystem. Multiple backends can be active at once at different locations in the directory hierarchy.
For more information, see the wiki.
Building
Prerequisites:
- Node and NPM
- Grunt-CLI and Bower globally installed:
npm install -g grunt-cli bower - Run
npm installto install local dependencies
Release:
gruntThe minified release build can be found in build/browserfs.min.js.
Development:
grunt devThe development build can be found as build/browserfs.js.
Custom builds:
If you want to build BrowserFS with a subset of the available backends,
change the getBackends() function in Gruntfile.js to return an
array of backends you wish to use. Then, perform a release build.
Using
Here's a simple example, using the LocalStorage-backed file system:
<script type="text/javascript" src="browserfs.min.js"></script>
<script type="text/javascript">
// Installs globals onto window:
// * Buffer
// * require (monkey-patches if already defined)
// * process
// You can pass in an arbitrary object if you do not wish to pollute
// the global namespace.
BrowserFS.install(window);
// Constructs an instance of the LocalStorage-backed file system.
var lsfs = new BrowserFS.FileSystem.LocalStorage();
// Initialize it as the root file system.
BrowserFS.initialize(lsfs);
</script>Now, you can write code like this:
var fs = require('fs');
fs.writeFile('/test.txt', 'Cool, I can do this in the browser!', function(err) {
fs.readFile('/test.txt', function(err, contents) {
console.log(contents.toString());
});
});Using with Browserify
As of BrowserFS 0.4.0, you can use BrowserFS with your Browserify projects! At the moment, you need to 'opt in' to the entire BrowserFS ecosystem -- e.g. you need to use BrowserFS's path, process, and Buffer in place of Browserify's builtins.
I have written an example project that illustrates how to do this.
In the future, we will support mixing and matching builtin modules.
Using with Emscripten
You can use any synchronous BrowserFS file systems with Emscripten! Persist particular folders in the Emscripten file system to localStorage, or enable Emscripten to synchronously download files from another folder as they are requested.
Include browserfs.min.js into the page, and add code similar to the following to your Module's preRun array:
/**
* Mounts a localStorage-backed file system into the /data folder of Emscripten's file system.
*/
function setupBFS() {
// Constructs an instance of the LocalStorage-backed file system.
var lsfs = new BrowserFS.FileSystem.LocalStorage();
// Initialize it as the root file system.
BrowserFS.initialize(lsfs);
// Grab the BrowserFS Emscripten FS plugin.
var BFS = new BrowserFS.EmscriptenFS();
// Create the folder that we'll turn into a mount point.
FS.createFolder(FS.root, 'data', true, true);
// Mount BFS's root folder into the '/data' folder.
FS.mount(BFS, {root: '/'}, '/data');
}Note: Do NOT use BrowserFS.install(window) on a page with an Emscripten application! Emscripten will be tricked into thinking that it is running in Node JS.
Testing
Prerequisites:
- Karma globally installed:
npm install -g karma
To run unit tests, simply run grunt test (NOTE: This will launch multiple web browsers!). You may need to change build/karma.conf.js if you do not have Chrome, Safari, Opera, and Firefox installed.
License
BrowserFS is licensed under the MIT License. See LICENSE for details.