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Oxlint v0.10 Migration Guide

  • Don

    DonOxlint Product Owner

Oxlint v0.10.0 is here! This release includes several exciting features, including many improvements to configuration files.

New Features ​

New Rules ​

This release includes the following new rules:

  • promise/no-callback-in-promise
  • react/iframe-missing-sandbox
  • node/no-new-require

And adds auto fixes/suggestions for:

  • eslint/no-plusplus

Enable/Disable Rules by Category ​

You can now enable or disable entire categories of rules with the categories field inside of your configuration file.

Now, instead of running this command:

sh
oxlint -D correctness -W suspicious -c oxlint.json

You can add a categories field to your oxlint.json:

jsonc
{
  "categories": {          
    "correctness": "deny", 
    "suspicious": "warn",  
  },                       
  "rules": {
    "no-const-assign": "error",
    "import/no-cycle": "error",
  },
}

and drop the -D and -W flags.

plugins Are Now Supported in Configuration Files ​

Configuration files now support the plugins array from ESLint v8 configs. This allows you to enable plugins without CLI arguments, making it possible to use plugins in VSCode.

jsonc
{
  "plugins": ["import"], 
  "categories": {
    "correctness": "deny",
    "suspicious": "warn",
  },
  "rules": {
    "react/jsx-uses-react": "off",
    "react/react-in-jsx-scope": "off",
  },
}

This plays nicely with categories, as enabled/disabled categories affect plugins as well.

jsonc
{
  "plugins": ["import"],
  // `categories` affects all enabled plugins
  "categories": {
    "correctness": "allow",
    "suspicious": "warn",
  },
  "rules": {
    "no-const-assign": "error",
    "import/no-cycle": "error",
  },
}

Breaking Changes and Migration Guide ​

CLI vs Config File Rule Priority ​

Before, config files would override rules set in CLI arguments. For example, running this command:

sh
oxlint -A correctness -c oxlintrc.json

With this config file

jsonc
{
  "rules": {
    "no-const-assign": "error",
  },
}

Would result in a single rule, no-const-assign being turned on at an error level with all other rules disabled (i.e. set to "allow").

Now, CLI arguments will override config files. That same command with the same config file will result with all rules being disabled. To get the same behavior as before, enable and disable categories in your config file instead of with CLI arguments.

sh
oxlint -c oxlint.json
jsonc
{
  "categories": {           
    "correctness": "allow", 
  },                        
  "rules": {
    "no-const-assign": "error",
  },
}

Released under the MIT License.