Reports require([string])
function calls. Will not report if >1 argument,
or single argument is not a literal string.
Reports module.exports
or exports.*
, also.
Intended for temporary use when migrating to pure ES6 modules.
This will be reported:
var mod = require('./mod'),
common = require('./common'),
fs = require('fs'),
whateverModule = require('./not-found')
module.exports = { a: 'b' }
exports.c = 'd'
If allowRequire
option is set to true
, require
calls are valid:
/*eslint no-commonjs: [2, { allowRequire: true }]*/
var mod = require('./mod')
but module.exports
is reported as usual.
By default, conditional requires are allowed:
var a = b && require('c')
if (typeof window !== 'undefined') {
require('that-ugly-thing')
}
var fs = null
try {
fs = require('fs')
} catch (error) {}
If the allowConditionalRequire
option is set to false
, they will be reported.
If you don't rely on synchronous module loading, check out dynamic import.
If allowPrimitiveModules
option is set to true
, the following is valid:
/*eslint no-commonjs: [2, { allowPrimitiveModules: true }]*/
module.exports = 'foo'
module.exports = function rule(context) {
return {
/* ... */
}
}
but this is still reported:
/*eslint no-commonjs: [2, { allowPrimitiveModules: true }]*/
module.exports = { x: 'y' }
exports.z = function boop() {
/* ... */
}
This is useful for things like ESLint rule modules, which must export a function as the module.
If you don't mind mixing module systems (sometimes this is useful), you probably don't want this rule.
It is also fairly noisy if you have a larger codebase that is being transitioned from CommonJS to ES6 modules.
Special thanks to @xjamundx for donating the module.exports and exports.* bits.
no-amd
: report on AMDrequire
,define
- Source: https://github.com/xjamundx/eslint-plugin-modules