Feature Flags
ESLint ships experimental and future breaking changes behind feature flags to let users opt-in to behavior they want. Flags are used in these situations:
- When a feature is experimental and not ready to be enabled for everyone.
- When a feature is a breaking change that will be formally merged in the next major release, but users may opt-in to that behavior prior to the next major release.
Flag Prefixes
The prefix of a flag indicates its status:
unstable_indicates that the feature is experimental and the implementation may change before the feature is stabilized. This is a “use at your own risk” feature.v##_indicates that the feature is stabilized and will be available in the next major release. For example,v10_some_featureindicates that this is a breaking change that will be formally released in ESLint v10.0.0. These flags are removed each major release.
A feature may move from unstable to stable without a major release if it is a non-breaking change.
Active Flags
The following flags are currently available for use in ESLint.
| Flag | Description |
|---|---|
test_only | Used only for testing. |
unstable_ts_config | Enable TypeScript configuration files. |
Inactive Flags
The following flags were once used but are no longer active.
| Flag | Description |
|---|---|
test_only_old | Used only for testing. |
How to Use Feature Flags
Because feature flags are strictly opt-in, you need to manually enable the flags that you want.
Enable Feature Flags with the CLI
On the command line, you can specify feature flags using the --flag option. You can specify as many flags as you’d like:
npx eslint --flag flag_one --flag flag_two file.js
Enable Feature Flags with the API
When using the API, you can pass a flags array to both the ESLint and Linter classes:
const { ESLint, Linter } = require("eslint");
const eslint = new ESLint({
flags: ["flag_one", "flag_two"]
});
const linter = new Linter({
flags: ["flag_one", "flag_two"]
});
Enable Feature Flags in VS Code
To enable flags in the VS Code ESLint Extension for the editor, specify the flags you’d like in the eslint.options setting in your settings.json file:
{
"eslint.options": { "flags": ["flag_one", "flag_two"] }
}
To enable flags in the VS Code ESLint Extension for a lint task, specify the eslint.lintTask.options settings:
{
"eslint.lintTask.options": "--flag flag_one --flag flag_two ."
}