Like mkdir -p
, but in node.js!
var mkdirp = require('mkdirp'); mkdirp('/tmp/foo/bar/baz', function (err) { if (err) console.error(err) else console.log('pow!') });
Output
pow!
And now /tmp/foo/bar/baz exists, huzzah!
var mkdirp = require('mkdirp');
Create a new directory and any necessary subdirectories at dir
with octal permission string opts.mode
. If opts
is a non-object, it will be treated as the opts.mode
.
If opts.mode
isn't specified, it defaults to 0777
.
cb(err, made)
fires with the error or the first directory made
that had to be created, if any.
You can optionally pass in an alternate fs
implementation by passing in opts.fs
. Your implementation should have opts.fs.mkdir(path, mode, cb)
and opts.fs.stat(path, cb)
.
Synchronously create a new directory and any necessary subdirectories at dir
with octal permission string opts.mode
. If opts
is a non-object, it will be treated as the opts.mode
.
If opts.mode
isn't specified, it defaults to 0777
.
Returns the first directory that had to be created, if any.
You can optionally pass in an alternate fs
implementation by passing in opts.fs
. Your implementation should have opts.fs.mkdirSync(path, mode)
and opts.fs.statSync(path)
.
This package also ships with a mkdirp
command.
usage: mkdirp [DIR1,DIR2..] {OPTIONS} Create each supplied directory including any necessary parent directories that don't yet exist. If the directory already exists, do nothing. OPTIONS are: -m, --mode If a directory needs to be created, set the mode as an octal permission string.
With npm do:
npm install mkdirp
to get the library, or
npm install -g mkdirp
to get the command.
MIT