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fs.watch should throw an exception if recursive is not supported #29901
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Seems reasonable to me. |
Okay, I believe I should wait for more approvals? |
@exx8 feel free to open a PR with the necessary changes. Such changes are rarely discussed in depth beforehand and the PR itself should be sufficient. |
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this pull request makes fs.watch throw exception, whenever it is used in an incompatible platform. for this change following changes were made to api: 1.a new error type has been introduced. 2.fs.watch has been changed accordingly. Users who use recursive on non-windows and osx platforms, will face a new exception. for this reason, it's a breaking change. Fixes: nodejs#29901
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Trott
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this pull request makes fs.watch throw exception, whenever it is used in an incompatible platform. for this change following changes were made to api: 1.a new error type has been introduced. 2.fs.watch has been changed accordingly. Users who use recursive on non-windows and osx platforms, will face a new exception. for this reason, it's a breaking change. Fixes: nodejs#29901
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event if there is no underlying data #65-Ubuntu SMP Thu Sep 12 20:31:55 UTC 2019 x86_64 x86_64 x86_64 GNU/LinuxIt has been discussed in the past, that recursion watch is not implementable with good performances in Linux . And it is actually documented, But currently, the fs.watch just ignores this option without signalling the user that the recursive has been ignored. I truly believe that an exception should be thrown if recursive is ignored, as it might cause unexpected bugs while cross-platforming an app or a script, And probably most users wouldn't imagine that such incapability exists, and probably won't look it up.
Of course, this is a breaking change.
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