ESLint Compatibility Utilities
Overview
This packages contains functions that allow you to wrap existing ESLint rules, plugins, and configurations that were intended for use with ESLint v8.x to allow them to work as-is in ESLint v9.x.
Note: All plugins are not guaranteed to work in ESLint v9.x. This package fixes the most common issues but can't fix everything.
Installation
For Node.js and compatible runtimes:
npm install @eslint/compat -D
# or
yarn add @eslint/compat -D
# or
pnpm install @eslint/compat -D
# or
bun install @eslint/compat -D
For Deno:
deno add @eslint/compat
Usage
This package exports the following functions in both ESM and CommonJS format:
fixupRule(rule)
- wraps the given rule in a compatibility layer and returns the resultfixupPluginRules(plugin)
- wraps each rule in the given plugin using fixupRule()
and returns a new object that represents the plugin with the fixed-up rulesfixupConfigRules(configs)
- wraps all plugins found in an array of config objects using fixupPluginRules()
includeIgnoreFile(path)
- reads an ignore file (like .gitignore
) and converts the patterns into the correct format for the config file
Fixing Rules
If you have a rule that you'd like to make compatible with ESLint v9.x, you can do so using the fixupRule()
function:
import { fixupRule } from "@eslint/compat";
import myRule from "./local-rule.js";
const compatRule = fixupRule(myRule);
export default compatRule;
Or in CommonJS:
const { fixupRule } = require("@eslint/compat");
const myRule = require("./local-rule.js");
const compatRule = fixupRule(myRule);
module.exports = compatRule;
Fixing Plugins
If you are using a plugin in your eslint.config.js
that is not yet compatible with ESLint 9.x, you can wrap it using the fixupPluginRules()
function:
import { fixupPluginRules } from "@eslint/compat";
import somePlugin from "eslint-plugin-some-plugin";
export default [
{
plugins: {
somePlugin: fixupPluginRules(somePlugin),
},
rules: {
"somePlugin/rule-name": "error",
},
},
];
Or in CommonJS:
const { fixupPluginRules } = require("@eslint/compat");
const somePlugin = require("eslint-plugin-some-plugin");
module.exports = [
{
plugins: {
somePlugin: fixupPluginRules(somePlugin),
},
rules: {
"somePlugin/rule-name": "error",
},
},
];
Fixing Configs
If you are importing other configs into your eslint.config.js
that use plugins that are not yet compatible with ESLint 9.x, you can wrap the entire array or a single object using the fixupConfigRules()
function:
import { fixupConfigRules } from "@eslint/compat";
import someConfig from "eslint-config-some-config";
export default [
...fixupConfigRules(someConfig),
{
},
];
Or in CommonJS:
const { fixupConfigRules } = require("@eslint/compat");
const someConfig = require("eslint-config-some-config");
module.exports = [
...fixupConfigRules(someConfig),
{
},
];
Including Ignore Files
If you were using an alternate ignore file in ESLint v8.x, such as using --ignore-path .gitignore
on the command line, you can include those patterns programmatically in your config file using the includeIgnoreFile()
function. For example:
import { includeIgnoreFile } from "@eslint/compat";
import path from "node:path";
import { fileURLToPath } from "node:url";
const __filename = fileURLToPath(import.meta.url);
const __dirname = path.dirname(__filename);
const gitignorePath = path.resolve(__dirname, ".gitignore");
export default [
includeIgnoreFile(gitignorePath),
{
},
];
Or in CommonJS:
const { includeIgnoreFile } = require("@eslint/compat");
const path = require("node:path");
const gitignorePath = path.resolve(__dirname, ".gitignore");
module.exports = [
includeIgnoreFile(gitignorePath),
{
},
];
Limitation: This works without modification when the ignore file is in the same directory as your config file. If the ignore file is in a different directory, you may need to modify the patterns manually.
License
Apache 2.0
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