skills/bun-runtime-file-io/SKILL.md
Bun provides a set of optimized APIs for reading and writing files.
npx skillsauth add jarle/bun-skills Bun File I/OInstall this skill globally with one command. Works with Claude Code, Cursor, and Windsurf.
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<Note> The `Bun.file` and `Bun.write` APIs documented on this page are heavily optimized and represent the recommended way to perform file-system tasks using Bun. For operations that are not yet available with `Bun.file`, such as `mkdir` or `readdir`, you can use Bun's [nearly complete](/runtime/nodejs-compat#node-fs) implementation of the [`node:fs`](https://nodejs.org/api/fs.html) module. </Note>Bun provides a set of optimized APIs for reading and writing files.
Bun.file())Bun.file(path): BunFile
Create a BunFile instance with the Bun.file(path) function. A BunFile represents a lazily-loaded file; initializing it does not actually read the file from disk.
const foo = Bun.file("foo.txt"); // relative to cwd
foo.size; // number of bytes
foo.type; // MIME type
The reference conforms to the Blob interface, so the contents can be read in various formats.
const foo = Bun.file("foo.txt");
await foo.text(); // contents as a string
await foo.json(); // contents as a JSON object
await foo.stream(); // contents as ReadableStream
await foo.arrayBuffer(); // contents as ArrayBuffer
await foo.bytes(); // contents as Uint8Array
File references can also be created using numerical file descriptors or file:// URLs.
Bun.file(1234);
Bun.file(new URL(import.meta.url)); // reference to the current file
A BunFile can point to a location on disk where a file does not exist.
const notreal = Bun.file("notreal.txt");
notreal.size; // 0
notreal.type; // "text/plain;charset=utf-8"
const exists = await notreal.exists(); // false
The default MIME type is text/plain;charset=utf-8, but it can be overridden by passing a second argument to Bun.file.
const notreal = Bun.file("notreal.json", { type: "application/json" });
notreal.type; // => "application/json;charset=utf-8"
For convenience, Bun exposes stdin, stdout and stderr as instances of BunFile.
Bun.stdin; // readonly
Bun.stdout;
Bun.stderr;
file.delete())You can delete a file by calling the .delete() function.
await Bun.file("logs.json").delete();
Bun.write())Bun.write(destination, data): Promise<number>
The Bun.write function is a multi-tool for writing payloads of all kinds to disk.
The first argument is the destination which can have any of the following types:
string: A path to a location on the file system. Use the "path" module to manipulate paths.URL: A file:// descriptor.BunFile: A file reference.The second argument is the data to be written. It can be any of the following:
stringBlob (including BunFile)ArrayBuffer or SharedArrayBufferTypedArray (Uint8Array, et. al.)ResponseAll possible permutations are handled using the fastest available system calls on the current platform.
<Accordion title="See syscalls"> | Output | Input | System call | Platform | | -------------------- | -------------- | ----------------------------- | -------- | | file | file | copy\_file\_range | Linux | | file | pipe | sendfile | Linux | | pipe | pipe | splice | Linux | | terminal | file | sendfile | Linux | | terminal | terminal | sendfile | Linux | | socket | file or pipe | sendfile (if http, not https) | Linux | | file (doesn't exist) | file (path) | clonefile | macOS | | file (exists) | file | fcopyfile | macOS | | file | Blob or string | write | macOS | | file | Blob or string | write | Linux | </Accordion>To write a string to disk:
const data = `It was the best of times, it was the worst of times.`;
await Bun.write("output.txt", data);
To copy a file to another location on disk:
const input = Bun.file("input.txt");
const output = Bun.file("output.txt"); // doesn't exist yet!
await Bun.write(output, input);
To write a byte array to disk:
const encoder = new TextEncoder();
const data = encoder.encode("datadatadata"); // Uint8Array
await Bun.write("output.txt", data);
To write a file to stdout:
const input = Bun.file("input.txt");
await Bun.write(Bun.stdout, input);
To write the body of an HTTP response to disk:
const response = await fetch("https://bun.com");
await Bun.write("index.html", response);
FileSinkBun provides a native incremental file writing API called FileSink. To retrieve a FileSink instance from a BunFile:
const file = Bun.file("output.txt");
const writer = file.writer();
To incrementally write to the file, call .write().
const file = Bun.file("output.txt");
const writer = file.writer();
writer.write("it was the best of times\n");
writer.write("it was the worst of times\n");
These chunks will be buffered internally. To flush the buffer to disk, use .flush(). This returns the number of flushed bytes.
writer.flush(); // write buffer to disk
The buffer will also auto-flush when the FileSink's high water mark is reached; that is, when its internal buffer is full. This value can be configured.
const file = Bun.file("output.txt");
const writer = file.writer({ highWaterMark: 1024 * 1024 }); // 1MB
To flush the buffer and close the file:
writer.end();
Note that, by default, the bun process will stay alive until this FileSink is explicitly closed with .end(). To opt out of this behavior, you can "unref" the instance.
writer.unref();
// to "re-ref" it later
writer.ref();
Bun's implementation of node:fs is fast, and we haven't implemented a Bun-specific API for reading directories just yet. For now, you should use node:fs for working with directories in Bun.
To read a directory in Bun, use readdir from node:fs.
import { readdir } from "node:fs/promises";
// read all the files in the current directory
const files = await readdir(import.meta.dir);
To recursively read a directory in Bun, use readdir with recursive: true.
import { readdir } from "node:fs/promises";
// read all the files in the current directory, recursively
const files = await readdir("../", { recursive: true });
To recursively create a directory, use mkdir in node:fs:
import { mkdir } from "node:fs/promises";
await mkdir("path/to/dir", { recursive: true });
The following is a 3-line implementation of the Linux cat command.
// Usage
// bun ./cat.ts ./path-to-file
import { resolve } from "path";
const path = resolve(process.argv.at(-1));
await Bun.write(Bun.stdout, Bun.file(path));
To run the file:
bun ./cat.ts ./path-to-file
It runs 2x faster than GNU cat for large files on Linux.
interface Bun {
stdin: BunFile;
stdout: BunFile;
stderr: BunFile;
file(path: string | number | URL, options?: { type?: string }): BunFile;
write(
destination: string | number | BunFile | URL,
input: string | Blob | ArrayBuffer | SharedArrayBuffer | TypedArray | Response,
): Promise<number>;
}
interface BunFile {
readonly size: number;
readonly type: string;
text(): Promise<string>;
stream(): ReadableStream;
arrayBuffer(): Promise<ArrayBuffer>;
json(): Promise<any>;
writer(params: { highWaterMark?: number }): FileSink;
exists(): Promise<boolean>;
}
export interface FileSink {
write(chunk: string | ArrayBufferView | ArrayBuffer | SharedArrayBuffer): number;
flush(): number | Promise<number>;
end(error?: Error): number | Promise<number>;
start(options?: { highWaterMark?: number }): void;
ref(): void;
unref(): void;
}
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