#artificial-intelligence #llm #cat #cli #lock-files

bin+lib dircat

High-performance Rust utility that concatenates and displays directory contents, similar to the C++ DirCat

2 unstable releases

new 0.2.0 Apr 23, 2025
0.1.0 Apr 23, 2025

#1012 in Command line utilities

33 downloads per month

MIT license

200KB
3K SLoC

dircat-rust ⚡

Fast, gitignore-aware directory concatenation with Markdown output.

CI Status Latest Release Crates.io License: MIT Rust Version Downloads

dircat-rust recursively walks through a directory, concatenates the content of discovered files (respecting .gitignore rules and offering extensive filtering), and outputs everything as a single, well-formatted Markdown file.

It's designed for speed, developer convenience, and seamless integration with tools that consume Markdown (like LLMs or documentation systems).


Table of Contents


Why Use dircat-rust?

Are you tired of:

  • Manually cat-ing multiple files to create context for LLMs or documentation?
  • Wrestling with complex find ... -exec commands just to view relevant code?
  • Sharing code snippets that lack structure or ignore your project's .gitignore rules?
  • Needing a quick, readable snapshot of a directory's textual content?

dircat-rust solves these problems by providing a fast, configurable, and developer-friendly way to concatenate directory contents into a clean Markdown format.

Philosophy

  • Markdown First: Outputting Markdown provides a universally readable, portable, and easily parsable format suitable for humans, documentation systems, and AI tools.
  • Developer Focus: Deep integration with .gitignore rules (via the excellent ignore crate) ensures the output accurately reflects the relevant parts of a typical software project. Sensible defaults like skipping binary files and an option to skip lockfiles enhance usability.
  • Performance: Built in Rust with parallel processing (via rayon) to handle large directories efficiently without unnecessary overhead.

Markdown Output Benefits

  • Readability: Standardized, human-readable format with clear file separation and code block syntax highlighting (in compatible viewers).
  • Portability: Easily shared and renders consistently across platforms and tools (GitHub, VS Code preview, Obsidian, etc.).
  • LLM/AI Friendly: An excellent format for providing structured code context to Large Language Models.
  • Integration: Can be easily included in other Markdown documents or processed by Markdown-aware tools (like static site generators or documentation tools).

Key Features

Intelligent File Discovery

  • Recursive Traversal: Walks through directories recursively by default (-n to disable).
  • Comprehensive .gitignore Support: Natively respects rules from .gitignore, .ignore, global git config files, and parent directories using the ignore crate. (-t to disable).
  • Custom Ignore Patterns: Specify additional glob patterns to ignore files or directories (-i).
  • Binary File Skipping: Skips files detected as binary/non-text by default (--include-binary to override).
  • Lockfile Skipping: Option to easily skip common lockfiles (--no-lockfiles).

Flexible Filtering

  • By Size: Limit processing to files below a maximum size (-m, e.g., 1M, 512k).
  • By Extension: Include (-e) or exclude (-x) files based on their extensions (case-insensitive).
  • By Path Regex: Include only files whose full path matches a regular expression (-r).
  • By Filename Regex: Include only files whose filename (basename) matches a regular expression (-d).

Content Processing

  • Comment Removal: Option to strip C/C++ style comments (//, /* ... */) while respecting strings (-c).
  • Empty Line Removal: Option to remove lines containing only whitespace (-l).

Customizable Output

  • Markdown Format: Outputs content wrapped in Markdown code fences with language hints based on file extensions.
  • File Headers: Clear ## File: headers separate content from different files.
  • Filename Only Header: Option to show only the filename in headers instead of the relative path (-f).
  • Line Numbers: Prepend line numbers to each line of file content (-L).
  • Backticks: Wrap filenames in headers and summaries with backticks (-b).
  • Summary: Append a list of processed files, optionally with line, character, and word counts (-s, -C).

Performance

  • Rust Speed: Built in Rust for high performance and memory safety.
  • Parallel Processing: Leverages Rayon for parallel file discovery and processing, speeding up operations on multi-core systems.
  • Efficient Libraries: Uses optimized libraries like walkdir and ignore for file system operations.

User Experience

  • Cross-Platform: Provides pre-compiled binaries for Linux, macOS, and Windows.
  • Multiple Output Options: Write to stdout (default), a file (-o), or the system clipboard (-p, requires clipboard feature).
  • Dry Run: Preview which files would be processed without reading or concatenating content (-D).
  • User-Friendly Errors: Clear error messages for issues like invalid paths, incorrect arguments, or file access problems.

Installation

Download the appropriate binary for your system from the Latest Release page.

(Note: Binaries are self-contained and do not require installing Rust or any other language runtime.)

Linux (x86_64 / aarch64) / macOS (Intel x86_64 / Apple Silicon arm64):

# --- Adjust VERSION and TARGET ---
VERSION="v0.1.0" # Replace with the desired version
# TARGET options: x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu, aarch64-unknown-linux-gnu, x86_64-apple-darwin, aarch64-apple-darwin
TARGET="x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu"
# --- --- --- --- --- --- --- ---

# Download (using curl)
curl -L "https://github.com/romelium/dircat-rust/releases/download/${VERSION}/dircat-${VERSION}-${TARGET}.tar.gz" -o dircat.tar.gz

# OR Download (using wget)
# wget "https://github.com/romelium/dircat-rust/releases/download/${VERSION}/dircat-${VERSION}-${TARGET}.tar.gz" -O dircat.tar.gz

# Extract
tar xzf dircat.tar.gz

# Make executable
chmod +x dircat

# Optional: Move to a directory in your PATH
# sudo mv dircat /usr/local/bin/
# OR (if you have a ~/bin directory in your PATH)
# mkdir -p ~/bin && mv dircat ~/bin/

Windows (x86_64):

# --- Adjust VERSION ---
$VERSION = "v0.1.0" # Replace with the desired version
$TARGET = "x86_64-pc-windows-msvc"
# --- --- --- --- ---

# Download (using Invoke-WebRequest)
$URL = "https://github.com/romelium/dircat-rust/releases/download/${VERSION}/dircat-${VERSION}-${TARGET}.zip"
$OUTPUT = "dircat.zip"
Invoke-WebRequest -Uri $URL -OutFile $OUTPUT

# OR Download (using curl, if available)
# curl.exe -L $URL -o $OUTPUT

# Extract
Expand-Archive -Path $OUTPUT -DestinationPath .

# Optional: Add the directory containing dircat.exe to your system's PATH environment variable
# Or move dircat.exe to a directory already in your PATH

Via Cargo

If you have the Rust toolchain installed (rustup), you can install dircat-rust using cargo:

cargo install dircat

(Requires Rust 1.70 or later - check project's Cargo.toml for exact MSRV if specified).

From Source

# Clone the repository
git clone https://github.com/romelium/dircat-rust.git
cd dircat-rust

# Build the release binary
cargo build --release

# The executable will be in ./target/release/dircat
./target/release/dircat --version

Quick Start

  1. Install dircat using one of the methods above (pre-compiled binary recommended).

  2. Run it in your project directory:

    # Concatenate all relevant text files in the current directory into output.md
    # (skips binaries, respects .gitignore by default)
    dircat . > output.md
    
  3. Check output.md! You should see something like:

    # File generated by DirCat
    
    ## File: src/main.rs
    ```rs
    fn main() { /* ... */ }
    ```
    
    ## File: README.md
    ```md
    # My Project
    ...
    ```
    

🚀 Start using dircat now! Try dircat . in your project.

Usage

dircat [OPTIONS] [INPUT_PATH]
  • INPUT_PATH: The directory or specific file to process. Defaults to the current directory (.).

Basic Examples:

# Process the current directory (text files, respecting .gitignore), print to stdout
dircat

# Process the 'src' subdirectory
dircat src

# Process only a single file (binary check still applies unless --include-binary)
dircat src/main.rs

# Process the current directory and save to a file
dircat . -o project_snapshot.md

# Process the current directory, including binary files
dircat . --include-binary > output_with_binaries.md

# Process the current directory, excluding common lockfiles
dircat . --no-lockfiles > output_without_locks.md

Command-Line Options

Below are the most common options. For a full, definitive list, run dircat --help.

Filtering Options

Option Alias Description Example
--max-size BYTES -m Skip files larger than this size (e.g., "1M", "512k", "1024"). -m 1M
--no-recursive -n Process only the top-level directory or specified file (disable recursion). -n
--ext EXT -e Include only files with these extensions (case-insensitive, repeatable). -e rs -e toml
--exclude-ext EXT -x Exclude files with these extensions (case-insensitive, repeatable, overrides -e). -x log -x tmp
--ignore GLOB -i Ignore files/directories matching these custom glob patterns (relative to input path, repeatable). -i "target/*" -i "*.lock"
--regex REGEX -r Include only files whose full path matches any of these regexes (case-insensitive, repeatable). -r "src/.*\.rs$"
--filename-regex REGEX -d Include only files whose filename matches any of these regexes (case-insensitive, repeatable). -d "^test_.*"
--no-gitignore -t Process all files, ignoring .gitignore, .ignore, hidden files, etc. -t
--include-binary -B Include files detected as binary/non-text (default is to skip them). --include-binary
--no-lockfiles -K Skip common lockfiles (e.g., Cargo.lock, package-lock.json). --no-lockfiles

Content Processing Options

Option Alias Description
--remove-comments -c Remove C/C++ style comments (//, /* ... */) from content.
--remove-empty-lines -l Remove lines containing only whitespace from content.

Output Formatting Options

Option Alias Description
--filename-only -f Show only the filename (basename) in ## File: headers, not the relative path.
--line-numbers -L Add line numbers to the beginning of each content line.
--backticks -b Wrap filenames in headers and summary list with backticks (`).

Output Destination & Summary Options

Option Alias Description
--output FILE -o Write output to the specified file instead of stdout.
--paste -p Copy output to the system clipboard (requires clipboard feature).
--summary -s Print a summary list of processed files at the end.
--counts -C Include line, character (byte), and word counts in the summary (implies -s).

Processing Order Options

Option Alias Description Example
--last GLOB -z Process files matching these glob patterns (relative path/filename) last, in the order specified. Repeatable. -z README.md -z src/main.rs
--only-last -Z Only process files specified with -z/--last. Skip all others (requires -z). -Z

Execution Control Options

Option Alias Description
--dry-run -D Print files that would be processed (respecting filters/order), but not content.

💡 Explore further! Experiment with different filters or check dircat --help for all options.

Examples / Use Cases

Goal: Concatenate all Rust files in src and tests

dircat . -e rs -r "^(src|tests)/" > rust_code.md

Output Snippet:

    # File generated by DirCat

    ## File: src/lib.rs
    ```rs
    // Library code...
    ```

    ## File: tests/integration.rs
    ```rs
        // Test code...
    ```
    ````

    #### Goal: Create context for an LLM, excluding tests, logs, and comments

    ```bash
        dircat . -e rs -e py -e toml -x log -i "tests/*" -c --no-lockfiles -o llm_context.md
    ```

    *Output Snippet:*

    ````markdown
    # File generated by DirCat

    ## File: src/config.py
    ```py
        # Config loading logic (comments removed)
    ```

    ## File: Cargo.toml
    ```toml
        # Dependencies (comments removed)
    ```
    ````

    #### Goal: See which files would be included if max size is 50kB

    ```bash
        dircat . -m 50k -D
    ```

    *Output Snippet:*

    ```
        --- Dry Run: Files that would be processed ---
        - src/small_module.rs
        - config/settings.toml
        --- End Dry Run ---
    ```

    #### Goal: Process `README.md` and `LICENSE` last

    ```bash
        dircat . -z README.md -z LICENSE > project_with_readme_last.md
    ```

    *Output Snippet:* (Other files appear first, then README, then LICENSE)

    ````markdown
    # File generated by DirCat
    ...
    ## File: src/main.rs
    ```rs
        ...
    ```
    ...
    ## File: README.md
    ```md
        ...
    ```

    ## File: LICENSE
    ```
        ...
    ```

Goal: Concatenate specific config files only

dircat . -z "config/*.toml" -z ".env.example" -Z > config_files.md

Output Snippet: (Only files matching the -z patterns are included)

    # File generated by DirCat

    ## File: config/database.toml
    ```toml
        ...
    ```

    ## File: .env.example
    ```
        VAR=value
    ```

Goal: Copy Python code (no comments/empty lines) to clipboard

# Requires 'clipboard' feature enabled during build/install
dircat src -e py -c -l -p

Goal: Pipe output to glow for terminal rendering

dircat src -e rs | glow -

Goal: Include binary files (e.g., images) in the output

dircat assets --include-binary > assets_output.md

Goal: Exclude lockfiles from the output

dircat . --no-lockfiles > project_without_locks.md

Tips & Considerations

  • Large Output: Running dircat on large directories can produce significant output. Consider using filters (-m, -e, -r, etc.) or the dry-run (-D) option first. Use -o FILE to redirect large outputs to a file instead of overwhelming your terminal.
  • Binary Files: By default, dircat attempts to skip binary files. Use -B if you need to include them (e.g., for embedding small images represented as text, though this is generally not recommended for large binaries). The detection is heuristic and might not be perfect.
  • Lockfiles: Use -K to easily exclude common dependency lockfiles. This is often desirable when generating context for LLMs.
  • Path Handling:
    • Display: File paths shown in ## File: headers and the summary (-s) are relative to the input path you provided (or the current directory if none was given).
    • Filtering:
      • Path Regex (-r): Matches against the full path, normalized to use / separators.
      • Filename Regex (-d): Matches against the filename (basename) only.
      • Ignore/Last Globs (-i, -z): Match against the path relative to the input path.
  • Performance: While dircat-rust is designed for speed, processing extremely large files or a vast number of files will still take time. Use filters to narrow down the scope when possible.

Comparison with Alternatives

Feature dircat-rust cat find ... -exec cat {} + tree
Directory Input ✅ Yes ❌ No ✅ Yes (via find) ✅ Yes
Concatenate Content ✅ Yes ✅ Yes (files) ✅ Yes ❌ No
Gitignore Aware ✅ Yes (Built-in) ❌ No Manual (complex) Manual
Markdown Output ✅ Yes ❌ No ❌ No ❌ No
Skip Binaries ✅ Yes (Default) Reads all Manual (e.g., file) N/A
Skip Lockfiles ✅ Yes (-K) ❌ No Manual (-name) Manual
Filtering (Size) ✅ Yes (-m) ❌ No Manual (-size) Manual
Filtering (Ext/Regex) ✅ Yes (-e/-x/-r/-d) ❌ No Manual (-name/-regex) Manual
Content Processing ✅ Yes (-c/-l) ❌ No Manual (e.g., sed) ❌ No
Speed Focus ✅ Yes (Rust/Parallel) Fast (single) Variable Fast (metadata)
Cross-Platform Binaries ✅ Yes OS specific OS specific OS specific

Development Status & Standards

dircat-rust is under active development. It utilizes modern Rust practices, including:

  • Continuous Integration (CI) via GitHub Actions.
  • Code formatting (cargo fmt) and linting (cargo clippy).
  • Conventional Commits for clear commit history.
  • Pre-commit hooks to enforce standards before committing.

Contributing

Contributions are welcome! Whether it's bug reports, feature suggestions, or code improvements, please feel free to:

  1. Check the Issue Tracker for existing bugs or ideas.
  2. Open a new issue to discuss your suggestion or report a bug.
  3. Review the Commit Message Guidelines before submitting pull requests.
  4. Set up pre-commit hooks locally (pre-commit install) to ensure your contributions meet project standards.

🤝 We welcome contributions! Please see our COMMIT.md guidelines and check the issue tracker for ways to help.

License

This project is licensed under the MIT License. See the LICENSE file for details.

Dependencies

~8–23MB
~350K SLoC