Skip to content

Commit

Permalink
doc: improve fs doc intro
Browse files Browse the repository at this point in the history
Signed-off-by: James M Snell <[email protected]>

PR-URL: nodejs#34843
Reviewed-By: Anna Henningsen <[email protected]>
Reviewed-By: Ricky Zhou <[email protected]>
Reviewed-By: Anto Aravinth <[email protected]>
Reviewed-By: Luigi Pinca <[email protected]>
  • Loading branch information
jasnell authored and addaleax committed Sep 22, 2020
1 parent e8ddaa3 commit 961844d
Showing 1 changed file with 60 additions and 40 deletions.
100 changes: 60 additions & 40 deletions doc/api/fs.md
Original file line number Diff line number Diff line change
Expand Up @@ -8,21 +8,42 @@

<!-- source_link=lib/fs.js -->

The `fs` module provides an API for interacting with the file system in a
manner closely modeled around standard POSIX functions.
The `fs` module enables interacting with the file system in a
way modeled on standard POSIX functions.

To use this module:

```js
const fs = require('fs');
```

All file system operations have synchronous and asynchronous forms.
All file system operations have synchronous, callback, and promise-based
forms.

The asynchronous form always takes a completion callback as its last argument.
The arguments passed to the completion callback depend on the method, but the
first argument is always reserved for an exception. If the operation was
completed successfully, then the first argument will be `null` or `undefined`.
## Synchronous example

The synchronous form blocks the Node.js event loop and further JavaScript
execution until the operation is complete. Exceptions are thrown immediately
and can be handled using `try…catch`, or can be allowed to bubble up.

```js
const fs = require('fs');

try {
fs.unlinkSync('/tmp/hello');
console.log('successfully deleted /tmp/hello');
} catch (err) {
// handle the error
}
```

## Callback example

The callback form takes a completion callback function as its last
argument and invokes the operation asynchronously. The arguments passed to
the completion callback depend on the method, but the first argument is always
reserved for an exception. If the operation is completed successfully, then
the first argument is `null` or `undefined`.

```js
const fs = require('fs');
Expand All @@ -33,23 +54,30 @@ fs.unlink('/tmp/hello', (err) => {
});
```

Exceptions that occur using synchronous operations are thrown immediately and
may be handled using `try…catch`, or may be allowed to bubble up.
## Promise example

Promise-based operations return a `Promise` that is resolved when the
asynchronous operation is complete.

```js
const fs = require('fs');
const fs = require('fs/promises');

try {
fs.unlinkSync('/tmp/hello');
console.log('successfully deleted /tmp/hello');
} catch (err) {
// handle the error
}
(async function(path) {
try {
await fs.unlink(path);
console.log(`successfully deleted ${path}`);
} catch (error) {
console.error('there was an error:', error.message);
}
})('/tmp/hello');
```

There is no guaranteed ordering when using asynchronous methods. So the
following is prone to error because the `fs.stat()` operation may complete
before the `fs.rename()` operation:
## Ordering of callback and promise-based operations

There is no guaranteed ordering when using either the callback or
promise-based methods. For example, the following is prone to error
because the `fs.stat()` operation might complete before the `fs.rename()`
operation:

```js
fs.rename('/tmp/hello', '/tmp/world', (err) => {
Expand All @@ -75,28 +103,20 @@ fs.rename('/tmp/hello', '/tmp/world', (err) => {
});
```

In busy processes, use the asynchronous versions of these calls. The synchronous
versions will block the entire process until they complete, halting all
connections.
Or, use the promise-based API:

Most asynchronous `fs` functions allow the callback argument to be omitted.
However, this usage is deprecated. When the callback is omitted, a default
callback is used that rethrows errors. To get a trace to the original call site,
set the `NODE_DEBUG` environment variable:
```js
const fs = require('fs/promises');

```console
$ cat script.js
function bad() {
require('fs').readFile('/');
}
bad();

$ env NODE_DEBUG=fs node script.js
fs.js:88
throw backtrace;
^
Error: EISDIR: illegal operation on a directory, read
<stack trace.>
(async function(from, to) {
try {
await fs.rename(from, to);
const stats = await fs.stat(to);
console.log(`stats: ${JSON.stringify(stats)}`);
} catch (error) {
console.error('there was an error:', error.message);
}
})('/tmp/hello', '/tmp/world');
```

## File paths
Expand All @@ -106,7 +126,7 @@ a string, a [`Buffer`][], or a [`URL`][] object using the `file:` protocol.

String form paths are interpreted as UTF-8 character sequences identifying
the absolute or relative filename. Relative paths will be resolved relative
to the current working directory as specified by `process.cwd()`.
to the current working directory as determined by calling `process.cwd()`.

Example using an absolute path on POSIX:

Expand Down

0 comments on commit 961844d

Please sign in to comment.