A simple way to run ESLint in your Mocha tests without a task runner like Grunt or Gulp.
Inspired by mocha-jshint from Allan Ebdrup.
You can install into your Node.js project as a development dependency with:
npm install --save-dev mocha-eslint
mocha-eslint
will install ESLint for itself, so you don't need to worry about
adding it to your consuming module.
The same is not true for Mocha. You should already have Mocha installed in your consuming module.
After mocha-eslint is installed, you can use it by creating a test file for
Mocha and requiring mocha-eslint
like so:
var lint = require('mocha-eslint');
This will return a function with the signature:
lint(paths, options)
where paths
is an array of paths from your project's top level directory (as
of v0.1.2, you can also include
glob patterns) and options
has a single property formatter
that can be assigned to the name of any of the
ESLint formatters
(stylish
(the default), compact
, checkstyle
, jslint-xml
, junit
and
tap
) or the full path to a JavaScript file containing a custom formatter. If
options
is not included, the default "stylish" formatter will be used.
So, a full test file to run in Mocha might look like:
var lint = require('mocha-eslint');
// Array of paths to lint
// Note: a seperate Mocha test will be run for each path and each file which
// matches a glob pattern
var paths = [
'bin',
'lib',
'tests/**/*Test.js',
'!tests/NotATest.js', // negation also works
];
var options = {
// Specify style of output
formatter: 'compact', // Defaults to `stylish`
// Only display warnings if a test is failing
alwaysWarn: false, // Defaults to `true`, always show warnings
// Increase the timeout of the test if linting takes to long
timeout: 5000, // Defaults to the global mocha `timeout` option
// Increase the time until a test is marked as slow
slow: 1000, // Defaults to the global mocha `slow` option
// Consider linting warnings as errors and return failure
strict: true, // Defaults to `false`, only notify the warnings
// Specify the mocha context in which to run tests
contextName: 'eslint', // Defaults to `eslint`, but can be any string
};
// Run the tests
lint(paths, options);
This module does not make any decisions about which ESLint rules to run. Make
sure your project has a .eslintrc
file if you want ESLint to do anything.