Detect New File in a Directory

15 Ansichten (letzte 30 Tage)
lynniz
lynniz am 13 Okt. 2011
Beantwortet: Walter Roberson am 27 Aug. 2022
Hi All,
Last time when I google this question, I actually found a function that does what I need, but I couldn't find it this time.
Basically what I need is to monitor a directory for any new files. If there are new files, I will read the files in and continue to monitor for new files.
Any help will be greatly appreciated!
Thank you,
Lynniz
  2 Kommentare
Walter Roberson
Walter Roberson am 13 Okt. 2011
The mechanisms for doing this are operating-system specific. Please indicate which OS you are using.
lynniz
lynniz am 14 Okt. 2011
I have Windows 7. Another question is do OS always return files in an alphabetical order?
Thanks,
Lynniz

Melden Sie sich an, um zu kommentieren.

Akzeptierte Antwort

Honglei Chen
Honglei Chen am 13 Okt. 2011
Hi lynniz,
You can use dir to list all the files under a certain directory, cache it and constantly query the folder and use setdiff to see whether a new file showed up. The following example shows a brief example. Note that I'm assuming everything underneath the directory is a regular file. If you have subdirectories, you can filter them out using the isdir field in the result of dir.
dir_content = dir;
filenames = {dir_content.name};
current_files = filenames;
while true
dir_content = dir;
filenames = {dir_content.name};
new_files = setdiff(filenames,current_files);
if ~isempty(new_files)
% deal with the new files
current_files = filenames;
else
fprintf('no new files\n')
end
end
Of course you may want to define an exit flag to get you out of the loop easily.
HTH
  3 Kommentare
Fangjun Jiang
Fangjun Jiang am 13 Okt. 2011
What if file name keeps the same but it is newly updated? You might need to check the time stamp of the file, compare it to the last time that the checking is done, to see if it is "new".
lynniz
lynniz am 14 Okt. 2011
Thanks for the inputs. I will monitor the time stamp as well.

Melden Sie sich an, um zu kommentieren.

Weitere Antworten (2)

Dimitrios Patikas
Dimitrios Patikas am 27 Aug. 2022
Bearbeitet: Dimitrios Patikas am 27 Aug. 2022
To avoid looping over and over again, you may use a timer function and keep it working on the background unless younstom the timer. An example to get always the newest file:
t = timer;
t.TimerFcn = @timerFunc;
t.Period = 0.6; % how often you want to check
t.ExecutionMode = 'fixedRate';
t.start % use t.stop to stop the timer
function timerFunc(~,~)
persistent CurrentNewest
Path = 'A/path/you/want/to/keep/track';
CurrentNewest = 'NewestFilename.new'
ListFiles = dir(Path);
ListFiles = ListFiles(~[ListFiles.isdir]);
[~, idx] = sort([ListFiles.datenum]);
newest = ListFiles(idx(end));
if ~strcmp(newest.name, CurrentNewest)
disp(['The newest file is now: ', newest.name])
CurrentNewest = newest.name;
end
end

Walter Roberson
Walter Roberson am 27 Aug. 2022

Kategorien

Mehr zu File Operations finden Sie in Help Center und File Exchange

Community Treasure Hunt

Find the treasures in MATLAB Central and discover how the community can help you!

Start Hunting!

Translated by