listen 3.2.1 → 3.5.1

This diff represents the content of publicly available package versions that have been released to one of the supported registries. The information contained in this diff is provided for informational purposes only and reflects changes between package versions as they appear in their respective public registries.
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data/CONTRIBUTING.md CHANGED
@@ -4,7 +4,7 @@ Contribute to Listen
4
4
  File an issue
5
5
  -------------
6
6
 
7
- If you haven't already, first see [TROUBLESHOOTING](https://github.com/guard/listen/wiki/Troubleshooting) for known issues, solutions and workarounds.
7
+ If you haven't already, first see [TROUBLESHOOTING](https://github.com/guard/listen/blob/master/README.md#Issues-and-Troubleshooting) for known issues, solutions and workarounds.
8
8
 
9
9
  You can report bugs and feature requests to [GitHub Issues](https://github.com/guard/listen/issues).
10
10
 
@@ -16,7 +16,7 @@ Try to figure out where the issue belongs to: Is it an issue with Listen itself
16
16
 
17
17
  **It's most likely that your bug gets resolved faster if you provide as much information as possible!**
18
18
 
19
- The MOST useful information is debugging output from Listen (`LISTEN_GEM_DEBUGGING=1`) - see [TROUBLESHOOTING](https://github.com/guard/listen/wiki/Troubleshooting) for details.
19
+ The MOST useful information is debugging output from Listen (`LISTEN_GEM_DEBUGGING=1`) - see [TROUBLESHOOTING](https://github.com/guard/listen/blob/master/README.md#Issues-and-Troubleshooting) for details.
20
20
 
21
21
 
22
22
  Development
data/README.md CHANGED
@@ -1,12 +1,11 @@
1
- ## IMPORTANT: If you cannot install Listen (e.g. on Travis/CI builds), [a workaround is here](https://github.com/guard/listen/wiki/Ruby-version-requirements)
2
-
3
- :exclamation: Listen is currently accepting more maintainers. Please [read this](https://github.com/guard/guard/wiki/Maintainers) if you're interested in joining the team.
4
-
5
1
  # Listen
6
2
 
7
- [![Gem Version](https://badge.fury.io/rb/listen.svg)](http://badge.fury.io/rb/listen) [![Build Status](https://travis-ci.org/guard/listen.svg)](https://travis-ci.org/guard/listen) [![Code Climate](https://codeclimate.com/github/guard/listen.svg)](https://codeclimate.com/github/guard/listen) [![Coverage Status](https://coveralls.io/repos/guard/listen/badge.svg?branch=master)](https://coveralls.io/r/guard/listen)
3
+ The `listen` gem listens to file modifications and notifies you about the changes.
8
4
 
9
- The Listen gem listens to file modifications and notifies you about the changes.
5
+ [![Development Status](https://github.com/guard/listen/workflows/Development/badge.svg)](https://github.com/guard/listen/actions?workflow=Development)
6
+ [![Gem Version](https://badge.fury.io/rb/listen.svg)](http://badge.fury.io/rb/listen)
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+ [![Code Climate](https://codeclimate.com/github/guard/listen.svg)](https://codeclimate.com/github/guard/listen)
8
+ [![Coverage Status](https://coveralls.io/repos/guard/listen/badge.svg?branch=master)](https://coveralls.io/r/guard/listen)
10
9
 
11
10
  ## Features
12
11
 
@@ -15,46 +14,90 @@ The Listen gem listens to file modifications and notifies you about the changes.
15
14
  * You can watch multiple directories.
16
15
  * Regexp-patterns for ignoring paths for more accuracy and speed
17
16
  * Increased change detection accuracy on OS X HFS and VFAT volumes.
18
- * Tested on selected Ruby environments via [Travis CI](https://travis-ci.org/guard/listen). (See [.travis.yml](https:///github.com/guard/listen/master/.travis.yml) for supported/tested Ruby Versions),
17
+ * Continuous Integration: tested on selected Ruby environments via [Github Workflows](https:///github.com/guard/listen/master/.github/workflows).
19
18
 
20
19
  ## Issues / limitations
21
20
 
22
21
  * Limited support for symlinked directories ([#279](https://github.com/guard/listen/issues/279)):
23
22
  * Symlinks are always followed ([#25](https://github.com/guard/listen/issues/25)).
24
- * Symlinked directories pointing within a watched directory are not supported ([#273](https://github.com/guard/listen/pull/273)- see [Duplicate directory errors](https://github.com/guard/listen/wiki/Duplicate-directory-errors)).
23
+ * Symlinked directories pointing within a watched directory are not supported ([#273](https://github.com/guard/listen/pull/273).
25
24
  * No directory/adapter-specific configuration options.
26
25
  * Support for plugins planned for future.
27
- * TCP functionality was removed in Listen [3.0.0](https://github.com/guard/listen/releases/tag/v3.0.0) ([#319](https://github.com/guard/listen/issues/319), [#218](https://github.com/guard/listen/issues/218)). There are plans to extract this feature to separate gems ([#258](https://github.com/guard/listen/issues/258)), until this is finished, you can use by locking the `listen` gem to version `'~> 2.10'`.
26
+ * TCP functionality was removed in `listen` [3.0.0](https://github.com/guard/listen/releases/tag/v3.0.0) ([#319](https://github.com/guard/listen/issues/319), [#218](https://github.com/guard/listen/issues/218)). There are plans to extract this feature to separate gems ([#258](https://github.com/guard/listen/issues/258)), until this is finished, you can use by locking the `listen` gem to version `'~> 2.10'`.
28
27
  * Some filesystems won't work without polling (VM/Vagrant Shared folders, NFS, Samba, sshfs, etc.).
29
28
  * Specs suite on JRuby and Rubinius aren't reliable on Travis CI, but should work.
30
29
  * Windows and \*BSD adapter aren't continuously and automatically tested.
31
30
  * OSX adapter has some performance limitations ([#342](https://github.com/guard/listen/issues/342)).
32
- * Ruby < 2.2.x is no longer supported - upgrade to Ruby 2.2 or 2.3.
31
+ * FreeBSD users need patched version of rb-kqueue (as of 2020/11). See #475 for the issue, mat813/rb-kqueue#12 for the patch, and Bug 250432 in bugzilla.
33
32
  * Listeners do not notify across forked processes, if you wish for multiple processes to receive change notifications you must [listen inside of each process](https://github.com/guard/listen/issues/398#issuecomment-223957952).
34
33
 
35
34
  Pull requests or help is very welcome for these.
36
35
 
37
36
  ## Install
38
37
 
39
- The simplest way to install Listen is to use [Bundler](http://bundler.io).
38
+ The simplest way to install `listen` is to use [Bundler](http://bundler.io).
40
39
 
41
40
  ```ruby
42
- gem 'listen', '~> 3.0' # NOTE: for TCP functionality, use '~> 2.10' for now
41
+ gem 'listen'
42
+ ```
43
+
44
+ ## Complete Example
45
+ Here is a complete example of using the `listen` gem:
46
+ ```ruby
47
+ require 'listen'
48
+
49
+ listener = Listen.to('/srv/app') do |modified, added, removed|
50
+ puts(modified: modified, added: added, removed: removed)
51
+ end
52
+ listener.start
53
+ sleep
54
+ ```
55
+ Running the above in the background, you can see the callback block being called in response to each command:
56
+ ```
57
+ $ cd /srv/app
58
+ $ touch a.txt
59
+ {:modified=>[], :added=>["/srv/app/a.txt"], :removed=>[]}
60
+
61
+ $ echo more >> a.txt
62
+ {:modified=>["/srv/app/a.txt"], :added=>[], :removed=>[]}
63
+
64
+ $ mv a.txt b.txt
65
+ {:modified=>[], :added=>["/srv/app/b.txt"], :removed=>["/srv/app/a.txt"]}
66
+
67
+ $ vi b.txt
68
+ # add a line to this new file and press ZZ to save and exit
69
+ {:modified=>["/srv/app/b.txt"], :added=>[], :removed=>[]}
70
+
71
+ $ vi c.txt
72
+ # add a line and press ZZ to save and exit
73
+ {:modified=>[], :added=>["/srv/app/c.txt"], :removed=>[]}
74
+
75
+ $ rm b.txt c.txt
76
+ {:modified=>[], :added=>[], :removed=>["/srv/app/b.txt", "/srv/app/c.txt"]}
43
77
  ```
44
78
 
45
79
  ## Usage
46
80
 
47
- Call `Listen.to` with either a single directory or multiple directories, then define the "changes" callback in a block.
81
+ Call `Listen.to` with one or more directories and the "changes" callback passed as a block.
48
82
 
49
83
  ``` ruby
50
84
  listener = Listen.to('dir/to/listen', 'dir/to/listen2') do |modified, added, removed|
51
- puts "modified absolute path: #{modified}"
52
- puts "added absolute path: #{added}"
53
- puts "removed absolute path: #{removed}"
85
+ puts "modified absolute path array: #{modified}"
86
+ puts "added absolute path array: #{added}"
87
+ puts "removed absolute path array: #{removed}"
54
88
  end
55
- listener.start # not blocking
89
+ listener.start # starts a listener thread--does not block
90
+
91
+ # do whatever you want here...just don't exit the process :)
92
+
56
93
  sleep
57
94
  ```
95
+ ## Changes Callback
96
+
97
+ Changes to the listened-to directories are reported by the listener thread in a callback.
98
+ The callback receives **three** array parameters: `modified`, `added` and `removed`, in that order.
99
+ Each of these three is always an array with 0 or more entries.
100
+ Each array entry is an absolute path.
58
101
 
59
102
  ### Pause / unpause / stop
60
103
 
@@ -75,13 +118,14 @@ listener.unpause # resumes processing changes ("start" would do the same)
75
118
  listener.stop # stop both listening to changes and processing them
76
119
  ```
77
120
 
78
- Note: While paused, Listen keeps on collecting changes in the background - to clear them, call "stop"
121
+ Note: While paused, `listen` keeps on collecting changes in the background - to clear them, call `stop`.
79
122
 
80
- Note: You should keep track of all started listeners and stop them properly on finish.
123
+ Note: You should keep track of all started listeners and `stop` them properly on finish.
81
124
 
82
125
  ### Ignore / ignore!
83
126
 
84
- Listen ignores some directories and extensions by default (See DEFAULT_IGNORED_DIRECTORIES and DEFAULT_IGNORED_EXTENSIONS in Listen::Silencer), you can add ignoring patterns with the `ignore` option/method or overwrite default with `ignore!` option/method.
127
+ `Listen` ignores some directories and extensions by default (See DEFAULT_IGNORED_DIRECTORIES and DEFAULT_IGNORED_EXTENSIONS in Listen::Silencer).
128
+ You can add ignoring patterns with the `ignore` option/method or overwrite default with `ignore!` option/method.
85
129
 
86
130
  ``` ruby
87
131
  listener = Listen.to('dir/path/to/listen', ignore: /\.txt/) { |modified, added, removed| # ... }
@@ -93,11 +137,11 @@ sleep
93
137
 
94
138
  Note: `:ignore` regexp patterns are evaluated against relative paths.
95
139
 
96
- Note: Ignoring paths does not improve performance, except when Polling ([#274](https://github.com/guard/listen/issues/274))
140
+ Note: Ignoring paths does not improve performance, except when Polling ([#274](https://github.com/guard/listen/issues/274)).
97
141
 
98
142
  ### Only
99
143
 
100
- Listen catches all files (less the ignored ones) by default. If you want to only listen to a specific type of file (i.e., just `.rb` extension), you should use the `only` option/method.
144
+ `Listen` watches all files (less the ignored ones) by default. If you want to only listen to a specific type of file (i.e., just `.rb` extension), you should use the `only` option/method.
101
145
 
102
146
  ``` ruby
103
147
  listener = Listen.to('dir/path/to/listen', only: /\.rb$/) { |modified, added, removed| # ... }
@@ -109,35 +153,6 @@ sleep
109
153
  Note: `:only` regexp patterns are evaluated only against relative **file** paths.
110
154
 
111
155
 
112
- ## Changes callback
113
-
114
- Changes to the listened-to directories gets reported back to the user in a callback.
115
- The registered callback gets invoked, when there are changes, with **three** parameters:
116
- `modified`, `added` and `removed` paths, in that particular order.
117
- Paths are always returned in their absolute form.
118
-
119
- Example:
120
-
121
- ```ruby
122
- listener = Listen.to('path/to/app') do |modified, added, removed|
123
- # This block will be called when there are changes.
124
- end
125
- listener.start
126
- sleep
127
- ```
128
-
129
- or ...
130
-
131
- ```ruby
132
- # Create a callback
133
- callback = Proc.new do |modified, added, removed|
134
- # This proc will be called when there are changes.
135
- end
136
- listener = Listen.to('dir', &callback)
137
- listener.start
138
- sleep
139
- ```
140
-
141
156
  ## Options
142
157
 
143
158
  All the following options can be set through the `Listen.to` after the directory path(s) params.
@@ -167,16 +182,42 @@ polling_fallback_message: 'custom message' # Set a custom polling fallback
167
182
  # default: "Listen will be polling for changes. Learn more at https://github.com/guard/listen#listen-adapters."
168
183
  ```
169
184
 
170
- ## Debugging
185
+ ## Logging and Debugging
171
186
 
172
- Setting the environment variable `LISTEN_GEM_DEBUGGING=1` sets up the INFO level logger, while `LISTEN_GEM_DEBUGGING=2` sets up the DEBUG level logger.
187
+ `Listen` logs its activity to `Listen.logger`.
188
+ This is the primary method of debugging.
189
+
190
+ ### Custom Logger
191
+ You can call `Listen.logger =` to set a custom `listen` logger for the process. For example:
192
+ ```
193
+ Listen.logger = Rails.logger
194
+ ```
173
195
 
174
- You can also set `Listen.logger` to a custom logger.
196
+ ### Default Logger
197
+ If no custom logger is set, a default `listen` logger which logs to to `STDERR` will be created and assigned to `Listen.logger`.
175
198
 
199
+ The default logger defaults to the `error` logging level (severity).
200
+ You can override the logging level by setting the environment variable `LISTEN_GEM_DEBUGGING=<level>`.
201
+ For `<level>`, all standard `::Logger` levels are supported, with any mix of upper-/lower-case:
202
+ ```
203
+ export LISTEN_GEM_DEBUGGING=debug # or 2 [deprecated]
204
+ export LISTEN_GEM_DEBUGGING=info # or 1 or true or yes [deprecated]
205
+ export LISTEN_GEM_DEBUGGING=warn
206
+ export LISTEN_GEM_DEBUGGING=fatal
207
+ export LISTEN_GEM_DEBUGGING=error
208
+ ```
209
+ The default of `error` will be used if an unsupported value is set.
176
210
 
177
- ## Listen adapters
211
+ Note: The alternate values `1`, `2`, `true` and `yes` shown above are deprecated and will be removed from `listen` v4.0.
178
212
 
179
- The Listen gem has a set of adapters to notify it when there are changes.
213
+ ### Disabling Logging
214
+ If you want to disable `listen` logging, set
215
+ ```
216
+ Listen.logger = ::Logger.new('/dev/null')
217
+ ```
218
+ ## Listen Adapters
219
+
220
+ The `Listen` gem has a set of adapters to notify it when there are changes.
180
221
 
181
222
  There are 4 OS-specific adapters to support Darwin, Linux, \*BSD and Windows.
182
223
  These adapters are fast as they use some system-calls to implement the notifying function.
@@ -184,9 +225,9 @@ These adapters are fast as they use some system-calls to implement the notifying
184
225
  There is also a polling adapter - although it's much slower than other adapters,
185
226
  it works on every platform/system and scenario (including network filesystems such as VM shared folders).
186
227
 
187
- The Darwin and Linux adapters are dependencies of the Listen gem so they work out of the box. For other adapters a specific gem will have to be added to your Gemfile, please read below.
228
+ The Darwin and Linux adapters are dependencies of the `listen` gem so they work out of the box. For other adapters a specific gem will have to be added to your Gemfile, please read below.
188
229
 
189
- The Listen gem will choose the best adapter automatically, if present. If you
230
+ The `listen` gem will choose the best adapter automatically, if present. If you
190
231
  want to force the use of the polling adapter, use the `:force_polling` option
191
232
  while initializing the listener.
192
233
 
@@ -197,7 +238,7 @@ If you are on Windows, it's recommended to use the [`wdm`](https://github.com/Ma
197
238
  Please add the following to your Gemfile:
198
239
 
199
240
  ```ruby
200
- gem 'wdm', '>= 0.1.0' if Gem.win_platform?
241
+ gem 'wdm', '>= 0.1.0', platforms: [:mingw, :mswin, :x64_mingw, :jruby]
201
242
  ```
202
243
 
203
244
  ### On \*BSD
@@ -216,35 +257,144 @@ end
216
257
 
217
258
  ### Getting the [polling fallback message](#options)?
218
259
 
219
- Please visit the [installation section of the Listen WIKI](https://github.com/guard/listen/wiki#installation) for more information and options for potential fixes.
260
+ If you see:
261
+ ```
262
+ Listen will be polling for changes.
263
+ ```
264
+
265
+ This means the Listen gem can’t find an optimized adapter. Typically this is caused by:
266
+
267
+ - You’re on Windows and WDM gem isn’t installed.
268
+ - You’re running the app without Bundler or RubyGems.
269
+ - Using Sass which includes an ancient (the “dinosaur” type of ancient) version of the Listen gem.
270
+
271
+ Possible solutions:
220
272
 
221
- ### Issues and troubleshooting
273
+ 1. Suppress the message by using the :force_polling option. Or, you could just ignore the message since it’s harmless.
274
+ 2. Windows users: Install the WDM gem.
275
+ 3. Upgrade Ruby (use RubyInstaller for Windows or RVM/rbenv for Mac) and RubyGems.
276
+ 3. Run your apps using Bundler.
277
+ 4. Sass users: Install the latest version of Listen and try again.
278
+
279
+ #### Simplified Bundler and Sass example
280
+ Create a Gemfile with these lines:
281
+ ```
282
+ source 'https://rubygems.org'
283
+ gem 'listen'
284
+ gem 'sass'
285
+ ```
286
+ Next, use Bundler to update gems:
287
+ ```
288
+ $ bundle update
289
+ $ bundle exec sass --watch # ... or whatever app is using Listen.
290
+ ```
222
291
 
223
- *NOTE: without providing the output after setting the `LISTEN_GEM_DEBUGGING=1` environment variable, it can be almost impossible to guess why listen is not working as expected.*
292
+ ### Increasing the amount of inotify watchers
224
293
 
225
- See [TROUBLESHOOTING](https://github.com/guard/listen/wiki/Troubleshooting)
294
+ If you are running Debian, RedHat, or another similar Linux distribution, run the following in a terminal:
295
+ ```
296
+ $ sudo sh -c "echo fs.inotify.max_user_watches=524288 >> /etc/sysctl.conf"
297
+ $ sudo sysctl -p
298
+ ```
299
+ If you are running ArchLinux, search the `/etc/sysctl.d/` directory for config files with the setting:
300
+ ```
301
+ $ grep -H -s "fs.inotify.max_user_watches" /etc/sysctl.d/*
302
+ /etc/sysctl.d/40-max_user_watches.conf:fs.inotify.max_user_watches=100000
303
+ ```
304
+ Then change the setting in the file you found above to a higher value (see [here](https://www.archlinux.org/news/deprecation-of-etcsysctlconf/) for why):
305
+ ```
306
+ $ sudo sh -c "echo fs.inotify.max_user_watches=524288 > /etc/sysctl.d/40-max-user-watches.conf"
307
+ $ sudo sysctl --system
308
+ ```
309
+
310
+ #### The technical details
311
+ Listen uses `inotify` by default on Linux to monitor directories for changes.
312
+ It's not uncommon to encounter a system limit on the number of files you can monitor.
313
+ For example, Ubuntu Lucid's (64bit) `inotify` limit is set to 8192.
314
+
315
+ You can get your current inotify file watch limit by executing:
316
+ ```
317
+ $ cat /proc/sys/fs/inotify/max_user_watches
318
+ ```
319
+ When this limit is not enough to monitor all files inside a directory, the limit must be increased for Listen to work properly.
320
+
321
+ You can set a new limit temporarily with:
322
+ ```
323
+ $ sudo sysctl fs.inotify.max_user_watches=524288
324
+ $ sudo sysctl -p
325
+ ```
326
+ If you like to make your limit permanent, use:
327
+ ```
328
+ $ sudo sh -c "echo fs.inotify.max_user_watches=524288 >> /etc/sysctl.conf"
329
+ $ sudo sysctl -p
330
+ ```
331
+ You may also need to pay attention to the values of `max_queued_events` and `max_user_instances` if Listen keeps on complaining.
332
+
333
+ #### More info
334
+ Man page for [inotify(7)](https://linux.die.net/man/7/inotify).
335
+ Blog post: [limit of inotify](https://blog.sorah.jp/2012/01/24/inotify-limitation).
336
+
337
+ ### Issues and Troubleshooting
338
+
339
+ If the gem doesn't work as expected, start by setting `LISTEN_GEM_DEBUGGING=debug` or `LISTEN_GEM_DEBUGGING=info` as described above in [Logging and Debugging](#logging-and-debugging).
340
+
341
+ *NOTE: without providing the output after setting the `LISTEN_GEM_DEBUGGING=debug` environment variable, it is usually impossible to guess why `listen` is not working as expected.*
342
+
343
+ #### 3 steps before you start diagnosing problems
344
+ These 3 steps will:
345
+
346
+ - help quickly troubleshoot obscure problems (trust me, most of them are obscure)
347
+ - help quickly identify the area of the problem (a full list is below)
348
+ - help you get familiar with listen's diagnostic mode (it really comes in handy, trust me)
349
+ - help you create relevant output before you submit an issue (so we can respond with answers instead of tons of questions)
350
+
351
+ Step 1 - The most important option in Listen
352
+ For effective troubleshooting set the `LISTEN_GEM_DEBUGGING=info` variable before starting `listen`.
353
+
354
+ Step 2 - Verify polling works
355
+ Polling has to work ... or something is really wrong (and we need to know that before anything else).
356
+
357
+ (see force_polling option).
358
+
359
+ After starting `listen`, you should see something like:
360
+ ```
361
+ INFO -- : Record.build(): 0.06773114204406738 seconds
362
+ ```
363
+ Step 3 - Trigger some changes directly without using editors or apps
364
+ Make changes e.g. touch foo or echo "a" >> foo (for troubleshooting, avoid using an editor which could generate too many misleading events).
365
+
366
+ You should see something like:
367
+ ```
368
+ INFO -- : listen: raw changes: [[:added, "/home/me/foo"]]
369
+ INFO -- : listen: final changes: {:modified=>[], :added=>["/home/me/foo"], :removed=>[]}
370
+ ```
371
+ "raw changes" contains changes collected during the :wait_for_delay and :latency intervals, while "final changes" is what listen decided are relevant changes (for better editor support).
226
372
 
227
373
  ## Performance
228
374
 
229
- If Listen seems slow or unresponsive, make sure you're not using the Polling adapter (you should see a warning upon startup if you are).
375
+ If `listen` seems slow or unresponsive, make sure you're not using the Polling adapter (you should see a warning upon startup if you are).
230
376
 
231
377
  Also, if the directories you're watching contain many files, make sure you're:
232
378
 
233
379
  * not using Polling (ideally)
234
380
  * using `:ignore` and `:only` options to avoid tracking directories you don't care about (important with Polling and on MacOS)
235
- * running Listen with the `:latency` and `:wait_for_delay` options not too small or too big (depends on needs)
381
+ * running `listen` with the `:latency` and `:wait_for_delay` options not too small or too big (depends on needs)
236
382
  * not watching directories with log files, database files or other frequently changing files
237
- * not using a version of Listen prior to 2.7.7
238
- * not getting silent crashes within Listen (see LISTEN_GEM_DEBUGGING=2)
239
- * not running multiple instances of Listen in the background
383
+ * not using a version of `listen` prior to 2.7.7
384
+ * not getting silent crashes within `listen` (see `LISTEN_GEM_DEBUGGING=debug`)
385
+ * not running multiple instances of `listen` in the background
240
386
  * using a file system with atime modification disabled (ideally)
241
387
  * not using a filesystem with inaccurate file modification times (ideally), e.g. HFS, VFAT
242
388
  * not buffering to a slow terminal (e.g. transparency + fancy font + slow gfx card + lots of output)
243
389
  * ideally not running a slow encryption stack, e.g. btrfs + ecryptfs
244
390
 
245
- When in doubt, LISTEN_GEM_DEBUGGING=2 can help discover the actual events and time they happened.
391
+ When in doubt, `LISTEN_GEM_DEBUGGING=debug` can help discover the actual events and time they happened.
246
392
 
247
- See also [Tips and Techniques](https://github.com/guard/listen/wiki/Tips-and-Techniques).
393
+ ## Tips and Techniques
394
+ - Watch only directories you're interested in.
395
+ - Set your editor to save quickly (e.g. without backup files, without atomic-save)
396
+ - Tweak the `:latency` and `:wait_for_delay` options until you get good results (see [options](#options)).
397
+ - Add `:ignore` rules to silence all events you don't care about (reduces a lot of noise, especially if you use it on directories)
248
398
 
249
399
  ## Development
250
400
 
data/bin/listen CHANGED
@@ -1,12 +1,11 @@
1
1
  #!/usr/bin/env ruby
2
+ # frozen_string_literal: true
2
3
 
3
4
  require 'listen'
4
5
  require 'listen/cli'
5
6
 
6
- unless defined?(JRUBY_VERSION)
7
- if Signal.list.keys.include?('INT')
8
- Signal.trap('INT') { Thread.new { Listen.stop } }
9
- end
7
+ if !defined?(JRUBY_VERSION) && Signal.list.keys.include?('INT')
8
+ Signal.trap('INT') { Thread.new { Listen.stop } }
10
9
  end
11
10
 
12
11
  Listen::CLI.start