Standard ESLint configurations for Ackama projects.
Install this package & the required plugins:
npm install --save-dev eslint-config-ackama @types/eslint eslint eslint-plugin-eslint-comments eslint-plugin-import eslint-plugin-node eslint-plugin-prettier prettier
Add an .eslintrc.js
to your repo that extends from this config:
/** @type {import('eslint').Linter.Config} */
const config = {
extends: ['ackama']
};
module.exports = config;
You'll want to tell ESLint about the environment you're working in using the
env
toplevel property.
To reduce potential errors, the configurations provided by this package
deliberately avoid enabling or disabling any envs without good reason, opting to
set only the es2017
env, since the majority of projects should be using ES2017
or higher.
These are the three most common envs you'll want to use:
node
for NodeJS appsbrowser
for browser appscommonjs
for browser apps that are bundled using a bundler such as webpack
You can also add a lint
script to the scripts
property in your apps
package.json
to make it easier for developers to run eslint against the app:
{
"scripts": {
"lint": "eslint . --ext js,jsx,ts,tsx"
}
}
This can be called via npm run lint
or yarn run lint
, depending on the
package manager you're using.
In addition to the ackama
config (which pulls in index.js
) for vanilla
Javascript, this config package ships with a number of other configs for linting
specific packages and frameworks.
You can use these by extending them by their names in the same way as the base
config, except you must prefix them with ackama/
. You will also be required to
install any extra plugins and dependencies these configs require that are not
required for the base config.
Below is a complete list of the configs provided, and their dependencies:
ackama
eslint-plugin-eslint-comments
eslint-plugin-prettier
eslint-plugin-import
eslint-plugin-node
ackama/@typescript-eslint
@typescript-eslint/parser
@typescript-eslint/eslint-plugin
eslint-plugin-prettier
ackama/flowtype
@babel/eslint-parser
eslint-plugin-flowtype
eslint-plugin-prettier
ackama/jest
eslint-plugin-jest
eslint-plugin-jest-formatting
ackama/react
eslint-plugin-prettier
eslint-plugin-react
eslint-plugin-react-hooks
eslint-plugin-jsx-a11y
Often there are files and folders that you don't want ESLint to check. While the
base config already setups ignores for common folders, including node_modules
,
vendor
, coverage
, lib
, out
, and a few more, unique projects might need
to ignore additional folders, or inversely might want to un-ignore a preset
ignore.
This can be done using the
ignorePatterns
toplevel property, which is an array that accepts .gitignore
glob-like
strings:
/** @type {import('eslint').Linter.Config} */
const config = {
ignorePatterns: ['!public/', 'tmp/']
};
module.exports = config;
Here's what a typical .eslintrc.js
would look like for a TypeScript project
that uses jest
& react
:
/** @type {import('eslint').Linter.Config} */
const config = {
root: true,
parser: '@typescript-eslint/parser',
parserOptions: {
project: 'tsconfig.json',
ecmaVersion: 2019,
sourceType: 'module'
},
env: { commonjs: true },
extends: ['ackama', 'ackama/@typescript-eslint', 'ackama/react'],
ignorePatterns: ['coverage', 'lib', 'infra'],
overrides: [
{
files: ['test/**'],
extends: ['ackama/jest'],
rules: { 'jest/prefer-expect-assertions': 'off' }
}
],
rules: {}
};
module.exports = config;
Note the use of overrides
to target specific files for the ackama/jest
config. This is not a requirement, but can help reduce the changes of false
positives.
While the majority of rules enabled by these configurations are sound, a few have edge cases or are potentially not as suitable as initially hoped.
Some of these edge cases are already well-known, and may have possible fixes in the future; the details of these rules are documented below.
In general, we are more acceptance of rules that don't catch everything than rules that report too many false positives.
If you create a custom hook for a project that takes a dependency array, you can
have react-hooks/exhaustive-deps
lint it in the same manner as core hooks by
passing it the name of your custom hook via its additionalHooks
option:
{
"rules": {
"react-hooks/exhaustive-deps": ["warn", { "additionalHooks": "useHook" }]
}
}
Note that this option expects a RegExp string.
Versioning is modeled after semantic versioning; however, since these configurations are for a code quality tool meaning just about every change to a config is likely going to result in a new error in at least one of our codebases (and so arguably be a breaking change), we consider general configuration changes to be minor features, and release them as such.
In addition to this covering changes like enabling a new rule and adjusting the configuration of an already-enabled rule, this also includes updating to new major versions of a plugin which might have removed or renamed rules used in our configs.
We specify which versions of plugins is expected by our configs as optional peer dependencies, meaning your package manager should warn you if a minor version of our package requires a related plugin to be updated for compatibility.
Major versions are generally reserved for when we're making a significant number of changes, which can be common with new major versions of ESLint that have significant breaking changes that require the surrounding ecosystem to release new major versions.
Releases are handled using
semantic release, which
is run on main
and releases versions based on
the commit messages.
This repo uses
conventional commits to enable
semantic releases & changelog generation, which requires that commits on the
main
branch follow that format.
As we squash our pull requests when merging by default, you should ideally use title your pull requests using the conventional commit format since that will be used as the commit message for the squashed commit.
We run commitlint
on pull requests to ensure that commit messages follow the
format - while not strictly required when the commits will be squashed, it can
help ensure you're following the format correctly.