Skip to main content

symlink()

Creates a stream for linking Vinyl objects to the file system.

Usage

const { src, symlink } = require('gulp');

function link() {
return src('input/*.js')
.pipe(symlink('output/'));
}

exports.link = link;

Signature

symlink(directory, [options])

Parameters

parametertypenote
directory
(required)
string
function
The path of the output directory where symbolic links will be created. If a function is used, the function will be called with each Vinyl object and must return a string directory path.
optionsobjectDetailed in Options below.

Returns

A stream that can be used in the middle or at the end of a pipeline to create symbolic links on the file system. Whenever a Vinyl object is passed through the stream, it creates a symbolic link to the original file on the file system at the given directory.

Whenever a symbolic link is created on the file system, the Vinyl object will be modified.

  • The cwd, base, and path properties will be updated to match the created symbolic link.
  • The stat property will be updated to match the symbolic link on the file system.
  • The contents property will be set to null.
  • The symlink property will be added or replaced with original path.

Note: On Windows, directory links are created using junctions by default. The useJunctions option disables this behavior.

Errors

When directory is an empty string, throws an error with the message, "Invalid symlink() folder argument. Please specify a non-empty string or a function."

When directory is not a string or function, throws an error with the message, "Invalid symlink() folder argument. Please specify a non-empty string or a function."

When directory is a function that returns an empty string or undefined, emits an error with the message, "Invalid output folder".

Options

For options that accept a function, the passed function will be called with each Vinyl object and must return a value of another listed type.

nametypedefaultnote
cwdstring
function
process.cwd()The directory that will be combined with any relative path to form an absolute path. Is ignored for absolute paths. Use to avoid combining directory with path.join().
dirModenumber
function
The mode used when creating directories. If not set, the process' mode will be used.
overwriteboolean
function
trueWhen true, overwrites existing files with the same path.
relativeSymlinksboolean
function
falseWhen false, any symbolic links created will be absolute.
Note: Ignored if a junction is being created, as they must be absolute.
useJunctionsboolean
function
trueThis option is only relevant on Windows and ignored elsewhere. When true, creates directory symbolic link as a junction. Detailed in Symbolic links on Windows below.

When creating symbolic links on Windows, a type argument is passed to Node's fs.symlink() method which specifies the type of target being linked. The link type is set to:

  • 'file' when the target is a regular file
  • 'junction' when the target is a directory
  • 'dir' when the target is a directory and the user disables the useJunctions option

If you try to create a dangling (pointing to a non-existent target) link, the link type can't be determined automatically. In these cases, behavior will vary depending on whether the dangling link is being created via symlink() or via dest().

For dangling links created via symlink(), the incoming Vinyl object represents the target, so its stats will determine the desired link type. If isDirectory() returns false then a 'file' link is created, otherwise a 'junction' or 'dir' link is created depending on the value of the useJunctions option.

For dangling links created via dest(), the incoming Vinyl object represents the link - typically loaded from disk via src(..., { resolveSymlinks: false }). In this case, the link type can't be reasonably determined and defaults to using 'file'. This may cause unexpected behavior when creating a dangling link to a directory. Avoid this scenario.