A little tool to help you compare ESLint configurations, the way ESLint sees them.
Blog post announcing this project: https://blog.scottnonnenberg.com/eslint-part-3-analysis/
npm install @scottnonnenberg/eslint-compare-config -g
eslint-compare-config projectDirOne/ projectDirTwo/
Here's what you get if you compare @scottnonnenberg/thehelp
config versus that config merged with @scottnonnenberg/thehelp/test
:
Plugins shared: 8
filenames
import
security
@scottnonnenberg/thehelp
immutable
no-loops
jsx-a11y
react
Plugins missing from left: 2
bdd
chai-expect
Plugins missing from right: None
Extends shared: 2
@scottnonnenberg/thehelp/react
@scottnonnenberg/thehelp/functional
Extends missing from left: 1
@scottnonnenberg/thehelp/test
Extends missing from right: 1
@scottnonnenberg/thehelp
Rules matching: 271
[full list omitted for brevity]
Rules missing from left: 5
bdd/focus
bdd/exclude
chai-expect/missing-assertion
chai-expect/no-inner-compare
chai-expect/terminating-properties
Rules missing from right: 8
max-nested-callbacks
no-magic-numbers
no-sync
no-undefined
no-unused-expressions
import/no-extraneous-dependencies
security/detect-non-literal-fs-filename
immutable/no-let
Rule configuration differences: None
Differences in other configuration: 1
env.mocha:
left: undefined
right: true
Because the test
configuration only adds and disables rules, we don't see any configuration differences. We consider a rule to be 'missing' from a configuration if it is disabled.
Note that, to get around ESLint plugin/module-loading semantics, this tool puts a file in each target directory and runs it with Node.js. This means that you'll need write/delete permissions in the target directory.
If you don't have that permssion, your best bet is to go with literal mode.
First, you will always need to provide two paths to the tool. The first is the left, and the second is the right. These terms will be used in the output.
--literal
- by default, the tool uses full ESlint semantics to load configuration. Providing this option changes to arequire()
of the target path, which means normal Node.js require semantics (various transformations to find JavaScript or JSON to load) apply. Becauserequire()
is called directly, right now only JavaScript and JSON files are supported.--json
- by default, the difference between the two configurations is displayed in human-readable format (see above). If you'd like to use the data in another tool, this will print the raw JSON.stringifieddifferences
object to the console.--score
- if you'd like to see the similarity of two configurations at a glance, use this option. 0% is completely different, 100% is exactly the same.
If installed as a dependency, you can require('@scottnonnenberg/eslint-compare-config')
and get access to a number of functions:
getConfigSync(path)
- puts a file in each of the target directories whichs useseslint
APIs to load the configuration for a file in that directory, runs them, then deletes them.getLiteralConfigSync(path)
- loads the target files usingrequire()
, thus supporting only JavaScript and JSON file formatsgetDifferencesSync(left, right)
- given two configs, produces an object describing all of their differences. The same thing you get when you use the--json
optiongetScoreSync(differences)
- givengetDifferences()
output, returns a similarity score 1-100.normalizeConfigSync(config)
- removes disabled rules, and turns numeric toggles into string (1 = 'warning', 2 = 'error')renderDifferencesSync(differences)
- givengetDifferences()
output, returns string with human-readable comparison (including ANSI color codes)
This project uses standard-version
to release new versions, automatically updating the version number and changelog based on commit messages in standard format. ghooks
and validate-commit-msg
are used to ensure all commit messages match the expected format (see package.json for the configuration details).
It takes some getting used to, but this configuration is absolutely worthwhile. A changelog is way easier to understand than the chaos of a raw commit stream, especially with standard-version
providing direct links to bugs, commits and commit ranges.
- Literal mode: support eslint config in YAML and
package.json
files - Use each rule's defaults in equivalence: just 'error' is the same as ['error', {something: true}] if that config is the same as the default. How to get the default?
- Determinism: sort rules/plugins/extends by name, rules without / in them first
- Add option to include globals in the diff - there are a lot, so it's too noisy to show by default
(The MIT license)
Copyright (c) 2016 Scott Nonnenberg [email protected]
Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to any person obtaining a copy of this software and associated documentation files (the "Software"), to deal in the Software without restriction, including without limitation the rights to use, copy, modify, merge, publish, distribute, sublicense, and/or sell copies of the Software, and to permit persons to whom the Software is furnished to do so, subject to the following conditions:
The above copyright notice and this permission notice shall be included in all copies or substantial portions of the Software.
THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED "AS IS", WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO THE WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY, FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE AND NONINFRINGEMENT. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE AUTHORS OR COPYRIGHT HOLDERS BE LIABLE FOR ANY CLAIM, DAMAGES OR OTHER LIABILITY, WHETHER IN AN ACTION OF CONTRACT, TORT OR OTHERWISE, ARISING FROM, OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE SOFTWARE OR THE USE OR OTHER DEALINGS IN THE SOFTWARE.