Command line Interface

To run ESLint on Node.js, you must have npm installed. If npm is not installed, follow the instructions here: http://npmjs.org/

Once npm is installed, run the following

npm i -g eslint

This installs the ESLint CLI from the npm repository. To run ESLint, use the following format:

eslint [options] [file|dir]*

Such as:

eslint file1.js file2.js

Options

The command line utility has several options. You can view the options by running eslint -h.

eslint [options] file.js [file.js] [dir]

Options:
  -h, --help                  Show help
  -c, --config path::String   Use configuration from this file
  --rulesdir [path::String]   Use additional rules from this directory
  -f, --format String         Use a specific output format - default: stylish
  -v, --version               Outputs the version number
  --no-eslintrc               Disable use of configuration from .eslintrc
  --env [String]              Specify environments
  --ext [String]              Specify JavaScript file extensions - default: .js
  --plugin [String]           Specify plugins
  --global [String]           Define global variables
  --rule Object               Specify rules
  --ignore-path path::String  Specify path of ignore file
  --ignore-pattern String     Specify pattern of files to ignore (in addition to .eslintignore)
  --no-ignore                 Disable use of .eslintignore
  --no-color                  Disable color in piped output
  -o, --output-file path::String  Specify file to write report to
  --quiet                     Report errors only - default: false
  --stdin                     Lint code provided on <STDIN> - default: false
  --stdin-filename            Specify filename to process STDIN as
  --init                      Run config initialization wizard

-c, --config

This option allows you to specify an additional configuration file for ESLint (see Configuring ESLint for more).

Example:

eslint -c ~/my-eslint.json file.js

This example uses the configuration file at ~/my-eslint.json.

--env

This option enables specific environments. Details about the global variables defined by each environment are available on the configuration documentation. This flag only enables environments; it does not disable environments set in other configuration files. To specify multiple environments, separate them using commas, or use the flag multiple times.

Examples:

eslint --env browser,node file.js
eslint --env browser --env node file.js

--ext

This option allows you to specify which file extensions ESLint will use when searching for JavaScript files. By default, it uses .js as the only file extension.

Examples:

# Use only .js2 extension
eslint --ext .js2

# Use both .js and .js2
eslint --ext .js --ext .js2

# Also use both .js and .js2
eslint --ext .js,.js2

-f, --format

This option specifies the output format for the console. Possible formats are “stylish” (the default), “compact”, “checkstyle”, “jslint-xml”, “junit” and “tap”.

Example:

eslint -f compact file.js

You can also use a custom formatter from the command line by specifying a path to the custom formatter file.

Example:

eslint -f ./customformat.js file.js

When specified, the given format is output to the console. If you’d like to save that output into a file, you can do so on the command line like so:

eslint -f compact file.js > results.txt

This saves the output into the results.txt file.

--global

This option defines global variables so that they will not be flagged as undefined by the no-undef rule. Global variables are read-only by default, but appending :true to a variable’s name makes it writable. To define multiple variables, separate them using commas, or use the flag multiple times.

Examples:

eslint --global require,exports:true file.js
eslint --global require --global exports:true

-h, --help

This option outputs the help menu, displaying all of the available options. All other flags are ignored when this is present.

--ignore-path

This option allows you to specify the file to use as your .eslintignore. By default, ESLint looks in the current working directory for .eslintignore. You can override this behavior by providing a path to a different file.

Example:

eslint --ignore-path tmp/.eslintignore file.js

--no-color

Disable color in piped output.

Example:

eslint --no-color file.js

--no-eslintrc

Disables use of configuration from .eslintrc and package.json files.

Example:

eslint --no-eslintrc file.js

--no-ignore

Disables excluding of files from .eslintignore and --ignore-path files.

Example:

eslint --no-ignore file.js

-o, --output-file

Enable report to be written to a file.

Example:

eslint -o ./test/test.html

When specified, the given format is output into the provided file name.

--plugin

This option specifies a plugin to load. You can omit the prefix eslint-plugin- from the plugin name. Before using the plugin you have to install it using npm.

Examples:

eslint --plugin jquery file.js
eslint --plugin eslint-plugin-mocha file.js

--quiet

This option allows you to disable reporting on warnings. If you enable this option only errors are reported by ESLint.

Example:

eslint --quiet file.js

--rule

This option specifies rules to be used. These rules will be merged with any rules specified with configuration files. (You can use --no-eslintrc to change that behavior.) To define multiple rules, separate them using commas, or use the flag multiple times. The levn format is used for specifying the rules.

If the rule is defined within a plugin you have to prefix the rule ID with the plugin name and a /.

Examples:

eslint --rule 'quotes: [2, double]'
eslint --rule 'guard-for-in: 2' --rule 'brace-style: [2, 1tbs]'
eslint --rule 'jquery/dollar-sign: 2'

--rulesdir

This option allows you to specify a second directory from which to load rules files. This allows you to dynamically load new rules at run time. This is useful when you have custom rules that aren’t suitable for being bundled with ESLint.

Example:

eslint --rulesdir my-rules/ file.js

The rules in your custom rules directory must follow the same format as bundled rules to work properly. You can also specify multiple locations for custom rules by including multiple --rulesdir flags:

eslint --rulesdir my-rules/ --rulesdir my-other-rules/ file.js

--stdin

This option tells ESLint to read and lint source code from STDIN instead files. You can use this to pipe code to ESLint.

Example

cat myfile.js | eslint --stdin

--stdin-filename

This option allows you to specify a filename to process STDIN as. This is useful when processing files from STDIN and you have rules which depend on the filename.

Example

cat myfile.js | eslint --stdin --stdin-filename=myfile.js

-v, --version

This option outputs the current ESLint version onto the console. All other options are ignored when present.

Example:

eslint -v

’–init’

This option will start config initialization wizard. It’s designed to help new users quickly create .eslintrc file by answering a few questions. File will be created in current directory.

Ignoring files from linting

ESLint supports .eslintignore files to exclude files from the linting process when ESLint operates on a directory. Files given as individual CLI arguments will be exempt from exclusion. The .eslintignore file is a plain text file containing one pattern per line. It can be located in any of the target directory’s ancestors; it will affect files in its containing directory as well as all sub-directories. Here’s a simple example of a .eslintignore file:

node_modules/*
**/vendor/*.js