| Crates.io | watchexec-cli |
| lib.rs | watchexec-cli |
| version | 2.3.2 |
| created_at | 2021-05-08 15:55:07.582701+00 |
| updated_at | 2025-05-18 11:22:09.012551+00 |
| description | Executes commands in response to file modifications |
| homepage | https://watchexec.github.io |
| repository | https://github.com/watchexec/watchexec |
| max_upload_size | |
| id | 394904 |
| size | 280,160 |
A simple standalone tool that watches a path and runs a command whenever it detects modifications.
Example use cases:
Simple invocation and use
Runs on Linux, Mac, Windows, and more
Monitors current directory and all subdirectories for changes
Coalesces multiple filesystem events into one, for editors that use swap/backup files during saving
By default, uses .gitignore, .ignore, and other such files to determine which files to ignore notifications for
Support for watching files with a specific extension
Support for filtering/ignoring events based on glob patterns
Launches the command in a new process group (can be disabled with --no-process-group)
Optionally clears screen between executions
Optionally restarts the command with every modification (good for servers)
Optionally sends a desktop notification on command start and end
Does not require a language runtime
Sets the following environment variables in the process:
$WATCHEXEC_COMMON_PATH is set to the longest common path of all of the below variables, and so should be prepended to each path to obtain the full/real path.
| Variable name | Event kind |
|---|---|
$WATCHEXEC_CREATED_PATH |
files/folders were created |
$WATCHEXEC_REMOVED_PATH |
files/folders were removed |
$WATCHEXEC_RENAMED_PATH |
files/folders were renamed |
$WATCHEXEC_WRITTEN_PATH |
files/folders were modified |
$WATCHEXEC_META_CHANGED_PATH |
files/folders' metadata were modified |
$WATCHEXEC_OTHERWISE_CHANGED_PATH |
every other kind of event |
These variables may contain multiple paths: these are separated by the platform's path separator, as with the PATH system environment variable. On Unix that is :, and on Windows ;. Within each variable, paths are deduplicated and sorted in binary order (i.e. neither Unicode nor locale aware).
This can be disabled with --emit-events=none or changed to JSON events on STDIN with --emit-events=json-stdio.
xargsWatch all JavaScript, CSS and HTML files in the current directory and all subdirectories for changes, running make when a change is detected:
$ watchexec --exts js,css,html make
Call make test when any file changes in this directory/subdirectory, except for everything below target:
$ watchexec -i "target/**" make test
Call ls -la when any file changes in this directory/subdirectory:
$ watchexec -- ls -la
Call/restart python server.py when any Python file in the current directory (and all subdirectories) changes:
$ watchexec -e py -r python server.py
Call/restart my_server when any file in the current directory (and all subdirectories) changes, sending SIGKILL to stop the command:
$ watchexec -r --stop-signal SIGKILL my_server
Send a SIGHUP to the command upon changes (Note: using -n here we're executing my_server directly, instead of wrapping it in a shell:
$ watchexec -n --signal SIGHUP my_server
Run make when any file changes, using the .gitignore file in the current directory to filter:
$ watchexec make
Run make when any file in lib or src changes:
$ watchexec -w lib -w src make
Run bundle install when the Gemfile changes:
$ watchexec -w Gemfile bundle install
Run two commands:
$ watchexec 'date; make'
Get desktop ("toast") notifications when the command starts and finishes:
$ watchexec -N go build
Only run when files are created:
$ watchexec --fs-events create -- s3 sync . s3://my-bucket
If you come from entr, note that the watchexec command is run in a shell by default. You can use -n or --shell=none to not do that:
$ watchexec -n -- echo ';' lorem ipsum
On Windows, you may prefer to use Powershell:
$ watchexec --shell=pwsh -- Test-Connection example.com
You can eschew running commands entirely and get a stream of events to process on your own:
$ watchexec --emit-events-to=json-stdio --only-emit-events
{"tags":[{"kind":"source","source":"filesystem"},{"kind":"fs","simple":"modify","full":"Modify(Data(Any))"},{"kind":"path","absolute":"/home/code/rust/watchexec/crates/cli/README.md","filetype":"file"}]}
{"tags":[{"kind":"source","source":"filesystem"},{"kind":"fs","simple":"modify","full":"Modify(Data(Any))"},{"kind":"path","absolute":"/home/code/rust/watchexec/crates/lib/Cargo.toml","filetype":"file"}]}
{"tags":[{"kind":"source","source":"filesystem"},{"kind":"fs","simple":"modify","full":"Modify(Data(Any))"},{"kind":"path","absolute":"/home/code/rust/watchexec/crates/cli/src/args.rs","filetype":"file"}]}
Print the time commands take to run:
$ watchexec --timings -- make
[Running: make]
...
[Command was successful, lasted 52.748081074s]
Watchexec is in many package managers. A full list of known packages is available, and there may be more out there! Please contribute any you find to the list :)
Common package managers:
$ apk add watchexec$ pacman -S watchexec$ nix-shell -p watchexec$ apt install watchexec$ brew install watchexec#> choco install watchexec$ cargo binstall watchexec-cli
Use the download section on Github
or the website to obtain the package appropriate for your
platform and architecture, extract it, and place it in your PATH.
There are also Debian/Ubuntu (DEB) and Fedora/RedHat (RPM) packages.
Checksums and signatures are available.
Only the latest Rust stable is supported, but older versions may work.
$ cargo install watchexec-cli
Currently available shell completions:
completions/bash should be installed to /usr/share/bash-completion/completions/watchexeccompletions/elvish should be installed to $XDG_CONFIG_HOME/elvish/completions/completions/fish should be installed to /usr/share/fish/vendor_completions.d/watchexec.fishcompletions/nu should be installed to $XDG_CONFIG_HOME/nu/completions/completions/powershell should be installed to $PROFILE/completions/zsh should be installed to /usr/share/zsh/site-functions/_watchexecIf not bundled, you can generate completions for your shell with watchexec --completions <shell>.
There's a manual page at doc/watchexec.1. Install it to /usr/share/man/man1/.
If not bundled, you can generate a manual page with watchexec --manual > /path/to/watchexec.1, or view it inline with watchexec --manual (requires man).
You can also read a text version.
Note that it is automatically generated from the help text, so it is not as pretty as a carefully hand-written one.
These are additional options available with custom builds by setting features:
If you're using Watchexec as PID1 (most frequently in containers or namespaces), and it's not doing what you expect, you can create a build with PID1 early logging: --features pid1-withlog.
If you don't need PID1 support, or if you're doing something that conflicts with this program's PID1 support, you can disable it with --no-default-features.
Eyra is a system to build Linux programs with no dependency on C code (in the libc path). To build Watchexec like this, use --features eyra and a Nightly compiler.
This feature also lets you get early logging into program startup, with RUST_LOG=trace.