A cross-platform native Node.js module for retrieving filesystem metadata, including mount points, volume information, and space utilization statistics.
Built and supported by PhotoStructure.
-
Cross-platform support:
- Windows 10+ (x64, arm64)
- macOS 14+ (x64, arm64)
- Ubuntu 22+ (x64, arm64) (with Gnome GIO/
GVfs
mount support when available)
-
File and directory hidden attribute support:
- Get and set hidden attributes
- POSIX-style support (macOS and Linux)
- Filesystem metadata support (macOS and Windows)
- Recursive hidden checks
- Hidden metadata queries
-
ESM and CJS support
-
Full TypeScript type definitions
-
Non-blocking async native implementations
-
Timeout handling for wedged network volumes
-
Compatible with all current Node.js and Electron versions via Node-API v9 and prebuildify
-
Comprehensive test coverage
npm install @photostructure/fs-metadata
import {
getVolumeMountPoints,
getVolumeMetadata,
} from "@photostructure/fs-metadata";
// List all mounted volumes
const mountPoints = await getVolumeMountPoints();
console.dir({ mountPoints });
// Get metadata for a specific volume
const volumeMetadata = await getVolumeMetadata(mountPoints[0]);
console.dir({ volumeMetadata });
If you're using CommonJS:
const {
getVolumeMountPoints,
getVolumeMetadata,
} = require("@photostructure/fs-metadata");
// Usage is the same as the ESM example above
// (except of course no top-level awaits!)
Set NODE_DEBUG=fs-meta
or NODE_DEBUG=photostructure:fs-metadata
. The native debuglog determines if debug logging is enabled. Debug messages from both JavaScript and native code are sent to stderr
.
Operations use a default timeout, which may need adjustment for slower devices like optical drives (which can take 30+ seconds to spin up).
Windows can block system calls when remote filesystems are unhealthy due to host downtime or network issues. To handle this, we use a separate thread per mountpoint to check volume health status. While this approach uses more resources than the async N-API thread, it enables reliable timeouts for operations that would otherwise hang indefinitely.
Timeout duration may apply per-operation or per-system call, depending on the implementation.
Each platform handles system volumes differently:
- Windows provides explicit metadata for "system" or "reserved" devices, though
C:\
is both a system volume and typical user storage - Linux and macOS include various system-only mountpoints: pseudo devices, snap loopback devices, virtual memory partitions, and recovery partitions
This library uses heuristics to identify system volumes. See Options for default values and customization.
Note: getAllVolumeMetadata()
returns all volumes on Windows but only non-system volumes elsewhere by default.
This module's results are inherently platform-specific. Here are some things to keep in mind:
- Mount points are drive letters with trailing backslash (e.g.,
C:\
,D:\
) - Network shares appear as mounted drives with UNC paths
- Volume GUIDs are available through Windows API
- Hidden and system volumes may be included
- Uses forward slashes for paths (e.g.,
/
,/Users
) - Volume UUIDs may be available through the DiskArbitration framework
- Time Machine volumes should be detected and handled appropriately
- Uses forward slashes for paths (e.g.,
/
,/home
) - Network mounts (NFS/CIFS) handled through mount table
- If
GIO
support is installed, it will be queried for additional mountpoints and volume metadata - Depending on your distribution, you may want to use
{ linuxMountTablePath: "/etc/mtab" }
instead of the default,/proc/mounts
. - UUID detection is via
libblkid
, which must be installed.
- Volume status from
GetDriveType
- Size information from
GetDiskFreeSpaceEx
- Volume information (label, filesystem) from
GetVolumeInformation
fstype
will beNTFS
for remote filesystems, as that's how Windows presents the local volume. Fixing this to be more accurate requires additional heuristics that have diminshing returns.- The UUID is attempted to be extracted from the partition UUID, but if this is a remote volume, or system permissions do not provide access to this, we will fall back to returning the volume serial number that the operating system assigns. You can tell that it's a serial number UUID in that it only contains 8 characters (32 bits of entropy).
- Size calculations via
statvfs
- Volume details through DiskArbitration framework
- Network share detection via volume characteristics
- Size information from
statvfs
- Filesystem type from mount table and from
gio
- Block device metadata via
libblkid
- Network filesystem detection from mount options
- Optional GIO integration for additional metadata
- Backfills with
lsblk
metadata if native code fails
See CONTRIBUTING.md on GitHub.
See SECURITY.md on GitHub.