Provided by: inotify-hookable_0.7-1_all bug

NAME

       inotify-hookable - blocking command-line interface to inotify

SYNOPSIS

       Watch a directory, tell us when things change in it:

           inotify-hookable --watch-directories /tmp/watch-this

       Watch a git tree, some configs, and a repository of static assets, restart the webserver
       or compress those assets if anything changes:

           inotify-hookable \
               --watch-directories /etc/uwsgi \
               --watch-directories /git_tree/central \
               --watch-directories /etc/app-config \
               --watch-directories /git_tree/static_assets \
               --on-modify-path-command "^(/etc/uwsgi|/git_tree/central|/etc/app-config)=sudo /etc/init.d/uwsgi restart" \
               --on-modify-path-command "^/git_tree/static_assets=(cd /git_tree/static_assets && compress_static_assets)"

       Or watch specific files:

           inotify-hookable \
               --watch-files /var/www/cgi-bin/mod_perl_handler \
               --on-modify-command "apachectl restart"

DESCRIPTION

       This simple command-line program is my replacement for the functionality offered by
       Plack's Filesys::Notify::Simple. I found that on very large git trees Plack would spend an
       inordinate amount watching the filesystem for changes.

       This program uses Linux::Inotify2, so the kernel will notify it instantly when something
       changes (actually it's so fast that we have to work around how fast it sends us events).

       The result is that you can run this e.g. in a screen session and have it watch your
       development environment, and your webserver will have begun restarting before your finger
       leaves the save button.

       vim and emacs temporary files are ignored by default (see "--ignore-paths".)  so you can
       edit your files without your server restarting unnecessarily.

       Currently the command-line interface for this is the only one that really makes sense,
       this module is entirely blocking (although it could probably run in another process via
       POE or something). Patches welcome.

OPTIONS

   "-w" or "--watch-directories"
       Specify this to watch a directory, you can give this however many times you like to watch
       lots of directories.

   "-f" or "--watch-files"
       Watch a file, specify multiple times for multiple files.  You can watch files and
       directories in the same command.

   "-r" or "--recursive"
       If you supply this any directory you give will be recursively watched. This is on by
       default.

   "-c" or "--on-modify-command"
       A command that will be run when something is modified.

   "-C" or "--on-modify-path-command"
       A key-value pair where the key is a regex that'll be matched against a modified path, and
       the value is a command that'll be run. See the "SYNOPSIS" for an example.

       Useful for e.g. restarting a webserver if you modify directory A but compressing some
       static assets if you modify directory B.

   "-t" or "--buffer-time"
       Linux will send you inotify events really fast, so fast that if you run something like:

           touch foo bar

       You might get an event for foo in one batch, followed by an event for bar later on.

       To deal with this we enter a loop when we start getting events and sleep for a default of
       100 microseconds, as long as we keep getting events we keep sleeping for 100 microseconds,
       but as soon as we haven't received anything new we fire off our event handlers.

   "-i" or "--ignore-paths"
       Regexes for files/directories to ignore events for. By default this is set to regexes for
       vim and emacs temporary files, "qr{\..*sw.\z}" and "qr{\.\#[^/]+\z}" respectively.

       The regexes match after any "/" in the path or the beginning of the string.

   "-d" or "--debug"
       Spew out some verbose debug output while running.

ACKNOWLEDGMENT

       This module was originally developed at and for Booking.com. With approval from
       Booking.com, this module was generalized and put on CPAN, for which the authors would like
       to express their gratitude.

AUTHOR

       AEvar Arnfjoer` Bjarmason <avar@cpan.org>