I had a need to recursively enumerate a directory and load the paths, and some metadata about the files, into a SQLite file. Currently, the following metadata is stored in the SQLite file
field | description |
---|---|
path | path of the file (with the root removed) |
mime_type | left-side mime type (i.e. image) |
mime_subtype | right-side mime type (i.e. jpeg) |
bytesize | size in bytes of the file. |
last_modified_at | last time the file was reported to be modified by the filesystem. |
digest | SHA256 hash of the file's contents. |
created_at | UTC date and time when the record was inserted into the DB. |
To install through Rubygems:
gem install kitkat
You can also add this to your Gemfile using:
bundle add kitkat
This library ships with an executable: kitkat
. Simply run this from your shell:
bundle exec kitkat <path> <database>
For Example: bundle exec kitkat some_directory some_directory_contents.db
. This will recursively scan the relative path at: some_directory
and list all its contents in a SQLite database file relatively located at: some_directory_contents.db
.
Notes:
- The database positional argument is optional. If it is not supplied then it will default to:
kitkat.db
You can also include this gem and use directly through code:
Kitkat.crawl(db: 'some_directory_contents.db', path: 'some_directory')
The Ruby code above is functionally equivalent to running the executable script above.
Basic steps to take to get this repository compiling:
- Install Ruby (check kitkat.gemspec for versions supported)
- Install bundler (gem install bundler)
- Clone the repository (git clone [email protected]:mattruggio/kitkat.git)
- Navigate to the root folder (cd kitkat)
- Install dependencies (bundle)
To execute the test suite run:
bin/rspec spec --format documentation
Alternatively, you can have Guard watch for changes:
bin/guard
Also, do not forget to run Rubocop:
bin/rubocop
And auditing the dependencies:
bin/bundler-audit check --update
Note: ensure you have proper authorization before trying to publish new versions.
After code changes have successfully gone through the Pull Request review process then the following steps should be followed for publishing new versions:
- Merge Pull Request into main
- Update
version.rb
using semantic versioning - Install dependencies:
bundle
- Update
CHANGELOG.md
with release notes - Commit & push main to remote and ensure CI builds main successfully
- Run
bundle exec rake release
, which will create a git tag for the version, push git commits and tags, and push the.gem
file to rubygems.org.
Everyone interacting in this codebase, issue trackers, chat rooms and mailing lists is expected to follow the code of conduct.
This project is MIT Licensed.