Skip to content

BrowserFS is an in-browser filesystem that emulates the Node JS filesystem API and supports storing and retrieving files from various backends.

License

Notifications You must be signed in to change notification settings

neuroradiology/BrowserFS

 
 

Repository files navigation

BrowserFS v1.1.0

BrowserFS is an in-browser file system that emulates the Node JS file system API and supports storing and retrieving files from various backends. BrowserFS also integrates nicely into the Emscripten file system.

Build Status Build Status NPM version david-dm-status-badge david-dm-status-badge

Backends

BrowserFS is highly extensible, and ships with many filesystem backends:

  • XmlHttpRequest: Downloads files on-demand from a webserver via XMLHttpRequest
  • LocalStorage: Stores files in the browser's localStorage.
  • HTML5FS: Stores files into the HTML5 FileSystem API
  • IndexedDB: Stores files into the browser's IndexedDB object database.
  • Dropbox: Stores files into the user's Dropbox account.
  • InMemory: Stores files in-memory. Thus, it is a temporary file store that clears when the user navigates away.
  • ZipFS: Read-only zip file-backed FS. Lazily decompresses files as you access them.
  • IsoFS: Mount an .iso file into the file system.
    • Supports Microsoft Joliet and Rock Ridge extensions to the ISO9660 standard.
  • WorkerFS: Lets you mount the BrowserFS file system configured in the main thread in a WebWorker, or the other way around!
  • MountableFileSystem: Lets you mount multiple file systems into a single directory hierarchy, as in *nix-based OSes.
  • OverlayFS: Mount a read-only file system as read-write by overlaying a writable file system on top of it. Like Docker's overlayfs, it will only write changed files to the writable file system.
  • AsyncMirrorFS: Use an asynchronous backend synchronously. Invaluable for Emscripten; let your Emscripten applications write to larger file stores with no additional effort!
    • Note: Loads the entire contents of the file system into a synchronous backend during construction. Performs synchronous operations in-memory, and enqueues them to be mirrored onto the asynchronous backend.
  • FolderAdapter: Wraps a file system, and scopes all interactions to a subfolder of that file system.
  • Emscripten: Lets you mount Emscripten file systems inside BrowserFS.

More backends can be defined by separate libraries, so long as they extend the BaseFileSystem. Multiple backends can be active at once at different locations in the directory hierarchy.

For more information, see the wiki.

Building

Prerequisites:

  • Node and NPM
  • Run npm install to install local dependencies

Build:

npm run dist

A minified build can be found in dist/browserfs.min.js, and the unminified build can be found in dist/browserfs.js.

Custom builds:

If you want to build BrowserFS with a subset of the available backends, change src/core/backends.ts to include only the backends you require, and re-build.

Using

Here's a simple usage example using the LocalStorage-backed file system:

<script type="text/javascript" src="browserfs.min.js"></script>
<script type="text/javascript">
  // Installs globals onto window:
  // * Buffer
  // * require (monkey-patches if already defined)
  // * process
  // You can pass in an arbitrary object if you do not wish to pollute
  // the global namespace.
  BrowserFS.install(window);
  // Constructs an instance of the LocalStorage-backed file system.
  var lsfs = new BrowserFS.FileSystem.LocalStorage();
  // Initialize it as the root file system.
  BrowserFS.initialize(lsfs);
</script>

Now, you can write code like this:

var fs = require('fs');
fs.writeFile('/test.txt', 'Cool, I can do this in the browser!', function(err) {
  fs.readFile('/test.txt', function(err, contents) {
    console.log(contents.toString());
  });
});

Using with Browserify and Webpack

BrowserFS is published as a UMD module, so you can either include it on your webpage in a script tag or bundle it with your favorite JavaScript module bundler.

You can also use BrowserFS to supply your application with fs, path, and buffer modules, as well as the Buffer and process globals. BrowserFS contains shim modules for fs, buffer, path, and process that you can use with Webpack and Browserify.

Webpack:

module.exports = {
  resolve: {
    // Use our versions of Node modules.
    alias: {
      'fs': 'browserfs/dist/shims/fs.js',
      'buffer': 'browserfs/dist/shims/buffer.js',
      'path': 'browserfs/dist/shims/path.js',
      'processGlobal': 'browserfs/dist/shims/process.js',
      'bufferGlobal': 'browserfs/dist/shims/bufferGlobal.js',
      'bfsGlobal': require.resolve('browserfs')
    }
  },
  plugins: [
    // Expose BrowserFS, process, and Buffer globals.
    // NOTE: If you intend to use BrowserFS in a script tag, you do not need
    // to expose a BrowserFS global.
    new webpack.ProvidePlugin({ BrowserFS: 'bfsGlobal', process: 'processGlobal', Buffer: 'bufferGlobal' })
  ],
  // DISABLE Webpack's built-in process and Buffer polyfills!
  node: {
    process: false,
    Buffer: false
  }
};

Browserify:

var browserfsPath = require.resolve('browserfs');
var browserifyConfig = {
  // Override Browserify's builtins for buffer/fs/path.
  builtins: Object.assign({}, require('browserify/lib/builtins'), {
    "buffer": require.resolve('browserfs/dist/shims/buffer.js'),
    "fs": require.resolve("browserfs/dist/shims/fs.js"),
    "path": require.resolve("browserfs/dist/shims/path.js")
  }),
  insertGlobalVars: {
    // process, Buffer, and BrowserFS globals.
    // BrowserFS global is not required if you include browserfs.js
    // in a script tag.
    "process": function () { return "require('browserfs/dist/shims/process.js')" },
    'Buffer': function () { return "require('buffer').Buffer" },
    "BrowserFS": function() { return "require('" + browserfsPath + "')" }
  }
};

Using with Node

You can use BrowserFS with Node. Simply add browserfs as an NPM dependency, and require('browserfs'). The object returned from this action is the same BrowserFS global described above.

If you need BrowserFS to return Node Buffer objects (instead of objects that implement the same interface), simply require('browserfs/dist/node/index') instead.

Using with Emscripten

You can use any synchronous BrowserFS file systems with Emscripten! Persist particular folders in the Emscripten file system to localStorage, or enable Emscripten to synchronously download files from another folder as they are requested.

Include browserfs.min.js into the page, and add code similar to the following to your Module's preRun array:

/**
 * Mounts a localStorage-backed file system into the /data folder of Emscripten's file system.
 */
function setupBFS() {
  // Constructs an instance of the LocalStorage-backed file system.
  var lsfs = new BrowserFS.FileSystem.LocalStorage();
  // Initialize it as the root file system.
  BrowserFS.initialize(lsfs);
  // Grab the BrowserFS Emscripten FS plugin.
  var BFS = new BrowserFS.EmscriptenFS();
  // Create the folder that we'll turn into a mount point.
  FS.createFolder(FS.root, 'data', true, true);
  // Mount BFS's root folder into the '/data' folder.
  FS.mount(BFS, {root: '/'}, '/data');
}

Note: Do NOT use BrowserFS.install(window) on a page with an Emscripten application! Emscripten will be tricked into thinking that it is running in Node JS.

If you wish to use an asynchronous BrowserFS backend with Emscripten (e.g. Dropbox), you'll need to wrap it into an AsyncMirror file system first:

/**
 * Run this prior to starting your Emscripten module.
 * @param dropboxClient An authenticated DropboxJS client.
 */
function asyncSetup(dropboxClient, cb) {
  var dbfs = new BrowserFS.FileSystem.Dropbox(dropboxClient);
  // Wrap in AsyncMirrorFS.
  var asyncMirror = new BrowserFS.FileSystem.AsyncMirror(
    new BrowserFS.FileSystem.InMemory(), dbfs);

  // Downloads the entire contents of the Dropbox backend into memory.
  // You'll probably want to use an app folder, and check that you
  // aren't pulling in a huge amount of data here.
  asyncMirror.initialize(function(err) {
    // Initialize it as the root file system.
    BrowserFS.initialize(asyncMirror);
    // BFS is ready for Emscripten!
    cb();
  });
}
function setupBFS() {
  // Grab the BrowserFS Emscripten FS plugin.
  var BFS = new BrowserFS.EmscriptenFS();
  // Create the folder that we'll turn into a mount point.
  FS.createFolder(FS.root, 'data', true, true);
  // Mount BFS's root folder into the '/data' folder.
  FS.mount(BFS, {root: '/'}, '/data');
}

Testing

To run unit tests, simply run npm test.

License

BrowserFS is licensed under the MIT License. See LICENSE for details.

About

BrowserFS is an in-browser filesystem that emulates the Node JS filesystem API and supports storing and retrieving files from various backends.

Resources

License

Stars

Watchers

Forks

Packages

No packages published

Languages

  • JavaScript 81.2%
  • TypeScript 18.6%
  • Other 0.2%