@rushstack/eslint-plugin-packlets
Packlets provide a lightweight alternative to NPM packages for organizing source files within a single project. The formalism is validated using ESLint rules.
Motivation
When building a large application, it's a good idea to organize source files into modules, so that their dependencies can be managed. For example, suppose an application's source files can be grouped as follows:
src/logging/*.ts
- the logging systemsrc/data-model/*.ts
- the data modelsrc/reports/*.ts
- the report enginesrc/*.ts
- other arbitrary files such as startup code and the main application
Using file folders is helpful, but it's not very strict. Files under src/logging
can easily import files from /src/reports
, creating a confusing circular import. They can also import arbitrary application files. Also, there is no clear distinction between which files are the "public API" for src/logging
versus its private implementation details.
All these problems can be solved by reorganizing the project into NPM packages (or Rush projects). Something like this:
@my-app/logging
- the logging system@my-app/data-model
- the data model@my-app/reports
- the report engine@my-app/application
- other arbitrary files such as startup code and the main application
However, separating code in this way has some downsides. The projects need to build separately, which has some tooling costs (for example, "watch mode" now needs to consider multiple projects). In a large monorepo, the library may attract other consumers, before the API has been fully worked out.
Packlets provide a lightweight alternative that offers many of the same benefits of packages, but without the package.json
file. It's a great way to prototype your project organization before later graduating your packlets into proper NPM packages.
5 rules for packlets
With packlets, our folders would be reorganized as follows:
src/packlets/logging/*.ts
- the logging systemsrc/packlets/data-model/*.ts
- the data modelsrc/packlets/reports/*.ts
- the report enginesrc/*.ts
- other arbitrary files such as startup code and the main application
The packlets-tutorial sample project illustrates this layout in full detail.
The basic design can be summarized in 5 rules:
-
A "packlet" is defined to be a folder path ./src/packlets/<packlet-name>/index.ts
. The index.ts file will have the exported APIs. The <packlet-name>
name must consist of lower case words separated by hyphens, similar to an NPM package name.
Example file paths:
src/packlets/controls
src/packlets/logger
src/packlets/my-long-name
NOTE: The packlets
cannot be nested deeper in the tree. Like with NPM packages, src/packlets
is a flat namespace.
-
Files outside the packlet folder can only import the packlet root index.ts:
src/app/App.ts
import { MainReport } from '../packlets/reports';
import { MainReport } from '../packlets/reports/index';
import { MainReport } from '../packlets/reports/MainReport';
-
Files inside a packlet folder should import their siblings directly, not via their own index.ts (which might create a circular reference):
src/packlets/logging/Logger.ts
import { MessageType } from "./MessageType";
import { MessageType } from ".";
import { MessageType } from "./index";
-
Packlets may reference other packlets, but not in a way that would introduce a circular dependency:
src/packlets/data-model/DataModel.ts
import { Logger } from '../../packlets/logging';
src/packlets/logging/Logger.ts
import { DataModel } from '../../packlets/data-model';
-
Other source files are allowed outside the src/packlets folder. They may import a packlet, but packlets must only import from other packlets or NPM packages.
src/app/App.ts
import { MainReport } from '../packlets/reports';
src/packlets/data-model/ExampleModel.ts
import { App } from '../../app/App';
Getting Started
To enable packlet validation for a simple typescript-eslint
setup, reference the @rushstack/eslint-plugin-packlets
project like this:
<my-project>/.eslintrc.js
module.exports = {
root: true,
parser: '@typescript-eslint/parser',
plugins: ['@typescript-eslint'],
extends: [
'eslint:recommended',
'plugin:@typescript-eslint/recommended',
'plugin:@rushstack/eslint-plugin-packlets/recommended'
],
parserOptions: {
project: './tsconfig.json',
sourceType: 'module',
tsconfigRootDir: __dirname
}
};
Or, if you are using the @rushstack/eslint-config ruleset, add the "packlets"
mixin like this:
<my-project>/.eslintrc.js
require('@rushstack/eslint-config/patch/modern-module-resolution');
module.exports = {
extends: [
"@rushstack/eslint-config/profile/node",
"@rushstack/eslint-config/mixins/packlets"
],
parserOptions: { tsconfigRootDir: __dirname }
};
The @rushstack/eslint-plugin-packlets
plugin implements three separate rules:
@rushstack/packlets/mechanics
- validates most of the import path rules outlined above.@rushstack/packlets/circular-deps
- detects circular dependencies between packlets. This rule requires an ESLint configuration that enables full type information from the TypeScript compiler.@rushstack/packlets/readme
- requires each packlet to have a README.md file. This rule is disabled by default.
Requiring a README.md file
If you'd like to require a README.md file in each packlet folder, enable the optional @rushstack/packlets/readme
rule.
The minimumReadmeWords
option allows you to specify a minimum number of words of documentation in the README.md file. The default value is 10
words.
Example configuration with the @rushstack/packlets/readme
rule enabled:
<my-project>/.eslintrc.js
require('@rushstack/eslint-config/patch/modern-module-resolution');
module.exports = {
extends: [
"@rushstack/eslint-config/profile/node",
"@rushstack/eslint-config/mixins/packlets"
],
parserOptions: { tsconfigRootDir: __dirname },
overrides: [
{
files: ['*.ts', '*.tsx'],
rules: {
'@rushstack/packlets/readme': [
'warn',
{ minimumReadmeWords: 10 }
]
}
}
]
};
Links
@rushstack/eslint-plugin-packlets
is part of the Rush Stack family of projects.
The idea for packlets was originally proposed by @bartvandenende-wm
and @victor-wm.