How to create full path with node's fs.mkdirSync?

I'm trying to create a full path if it doesn't exist.

The code looks like this:

var fs = require('fs');
if (!fs.existsSync(newDest)) fs.mkdirSync(newDest); 

This code works great as long as there is only one subdirectory (a newDest like 'dir1') however when there is a directory path like ('dir1/dir2') it fails with Error: ENOENT, no such file or directory

I'd like to be able to create the full path with as few lines of code as necessary.

I read there is a recursive option on fs and tried it like this

var fs = require('fs');
if (!fs.existsSync(newDest)) fs.mkdirSync(newDest,'0777', true);

I feel like it should be that simple to recursively create a directory that doesn't exist. Am I missing something or do I need to parse the path and check each directory and create it if it doesn't already exist?

I'm pretty new to Node. Maybe I'm using an old version of FS?


Update

NodeJS version 10.12.0 has added a native support for both mkdir and mkdirSync to create a directory recursively with recursive: true option as the following:

fs.mkdirSync(targetDir, { recursive: true });

And if you prefer fs Promises API, you can write

fs.promises.mkdir(targetDir, { recursive: true });

Original Answer

Create directories recursively if they do not exist! (Zero dependencies)

const fs = require('fs');
const path = require('path');

function mkDirByPathSync(targetDir, { isRelativeToScript = false } = {}) {
  const sep = path.sep;
  const initDir = path.isAbsolute(targetDir) ? sep : '';
  const baseDir = isRelativeToScript ? __dirname : '.';

  return targetDir.split(sep).reduce((parentDir, childDir) => {
    const curDir = path.resolve(baseDir, parentDir, childDir);
    try {
      fs.mkdirSync(curDir);
    } catch (err) {
      if (err.code === 'EEXIST') { // curDir already exists!
        return curDir;
      }

      // To avoid `EISDIR` error on Mac and `EACCES`-->`ENOENT` and `EPERM` on Windows.
      if (err.code === 'ENOENT') { // Throw the original parentDir error on curDir `ENOENT` failure.
        throw new Error(`EACCES: permission denied, mkdir '${parentDir}'`);
      }

      const caughtErr = ['EACCES', 'EPERM', 'EISDIR'].indexOf(err.code) > -1;
      if (!caughtErr || caughtErr && curDir === path.resolve(targetDir)) {
        throw err; // Throw if it's just the last created dir.
      }
    }

    return curDir;
  }, initDir);
}

Usage

// Default, make directories relative to current working directory.
mkDirByPathSync('path/to/dir');

// Make directories relative to the current script.
mkDirByPathSync('path/to/dir', {isRelativeToScript: true});

// Make directories with an absolute path.
mkDirByPathSync('/path/to/dir');

Demo

Try It!

Explanations

  • [UPDATE] This solution handles platform-specific errors like EISDIR for Mac and EPERM and EACCES for Windows. Thanks to all the reporting comments by @PediT., @JohnQ, @deed02392, @robyoder and @Almenon.
  • This solution handles both relative and absolute paths. Thanks to @john comment.
  • In the case of relative paths, target directories will be created (resolved) in the current working directory. To Resolve them relative to the current script dir, pass {isRelativeToScript: true}.
  • Using path.sep and path.resolve(), not just / concatenation, to avoid cross-platform issues.
  • Using fs.mkdirSync and handling the error with try/catch if thrown to handle race conditions: another process may add the file between the calls to fs.existsSync() and fs.mkdirSync() and causes an exception.
    • The other way to achieve that could be checking if a file exists then creating it, I.e, if (!fs.existsSync(curDir) fs.mkdirSync(curDir);. But this is an anti-pattern that leaves the code vulnerable to race conditions. Thanks to @GershomMaes comment about the directory existence check.
  • Requires Node v6 and newer to support destructuring. (If you have problems implementing this solution with old Node versions, just leave me a comment)

A more robust answer is to use use mkdirp.

var mkdirp = require('mkdirp');

mkdirp('/path/to/dir', function (err) {
    if (err) console.error(err)
    else console.log('dir created')
});

Then proceed to write the file into the full path with:

fs.writeFile ('/path/to/dir/file.dat'....

One option is to use shelljs module

npm install shelljs

var shell = require('shelljs');
shell.mkdir('-p', fullPath);

From that page:

Available options:

p: full path (will create intermediate dirs if necessary)

As others have noted, there's other more focused modules. But, outside of mkdirp, it has tons of other useful shell operations (like which, grep etc...) and it works on windows and *nix

Edit: comments suggest this doesn't work on systems that don't have mkdir cli instances. That is not the case. That's the point shelljs - create a portable cross platform set of shell like functions. It works on even windows.