Command Line Interface Reference
The ESLint Command Line Interface (CLI) lets you execute linting from the terminal. The CLI has a variety of options that you can pass to configure ESLint.
Run the CLI
ESLint requires Node.js for installation. Follow the instructions in the Getting Started Guide to install ESLint.
Most users use npx
to run ESLint on the command line like this:
npx eslint [options] [file|dir|glob]*
Such as:
# Run on two files
npx eslint file1.js file2.js
# Run on multiple files
npx eslint lib/**
Please note that when passing a glob as a parameter, it is expanded by your shell. The results of the expansion can vary depending on your shell, and its configuration. If you want to use node glob
syntax, you have to quote your parameter (using double quotes if you need it to run in Windows), as follows:
npx eslint "lib/**"
If you are using a flat configuration file (eslint.config.js
), you can also omit the file arguments and ESLint will use .
. For instance, these two lines perform the same operation:
npx eslint .
npx eslint
If you are not using a flat configuration file, running ESLint without file arguments results in an error.
Note: You can also use alternative package managers such as Yarn or pnpm to run ESLint. For pnpm use pnpm dlx eslint
and for Yarn use yarn dlx eslint
.
Pass Multiple Values to an Option
Options that accept multiple values can be specified by repeating the option or with a comma-delimited list (other than --ignore-pattern
, which does not allow the second style).
Examples of options that accept multiple values:
npx eslint --global describe --global it tests/
# OR
npx eslint --global describe,it tests/
Options
You can view all the CLI options by running npx eslint -h
.
eslint [options] file.js [file.js] [dir]
Basic configuration:
--no-config-lookup Disable look up for eslint.config.js
-c, --config path::String Use this configuration instead of eslint.config.js, eslint.config.mjs, or
eslint.config.cjs
--inspect-config Open the config inspector with the current configuration
--global [String] Define global variables
--parser String Specify the parser to be used
--parser-options Object Specify parser options
Specify Rules and Plugins:
--plugin [String] Specify plugins
--rule Object Specify rules
Fix Problems:
--fix Automatically fix problems
--fix-dry-run Automatically fix problems without saving the changes to the file system
--fix-type Array Specify the types of fixes to apply (directive, problem, suggestion, layout)
Ignore Files:
--no-ignore Disable use of ignore files and patterns
--ignore-pattern [String] Patterns of files to ignore
Use stdin:
--stdin Lint code provided on <STDIN> - default: false
--stdin-filename String Specify filename to process STDIN as
Handle Warnings:
--quiet Report errors only - default: false
--max-warnings Int Number of warnings to trigger nonzero exit code - default: -1
Output:
-o, --output-file path::String Specify file to write report to
-f, --format String Use a specific output format - default: stylish
--color, --no-color Force enabling/disabling of color
Inline configuration comments:
--no-inline-config Prevent comments from changing config or rules
--report-unused-disable-directives Adds reported errors for unused eslint-disable and eslint-enable directives
--report-unused-disable-directives-severity String Chooses severity level for reporting unused eslint-disable and
eslint-enable directives - either: off, warn, error, 0, 1, or 2
Caching:
--cache Only check changed files - default: false
--cache-file path::String Path to the cache file. Deprecated: use --cache-location - default: .eslintcache
--cache-location path::String Path to the cache file or directory
--cache-strategy String Strategy to use for detecting changed files in the cache - either: metadata or
content - default: metadata
Miscellaneous:
--init Run config initialization wizard - default: false
--env-info Output execution environment information - default: false
--no-error-on-unmatched-pattern Prevent errors when pattern is unmatched
--exit-on-fatal-error Exit with exit code 2 in case of fatal error - default: false
--no-warn-ignored Suppress warnings when the file list includes ignored files
--pass-on-no-patterns Exit with exit code 0 in case no file patterns are passed
--debug Output debugging information
-h, --help Show help
-v, --version Output the version number
--print-config path::String Print the configuration for the given file
--stats Add statistics to the lint report - default: false
--flag [String] Enable a feature flag
Basic Configuration
--no-eslintrc
eslintrc Mode Only. Disables use of configuration from .eslintrc.*
and package.json
files. For flat config mode, use --no-config-lookup
instead.
- Argument Type: No argument.
--no-eslintrc
example
npx eslint --no-eslintrc file.js
-c
, --config
This option allows you to specify an additional configuration file for ESLint (see Configure ESLint for more).
- Argument Type: String. Path to file.
- Multiple Arguments: No
-c
, --config
example
npx eslint -c ~/my.eslint.config.js file.js
This example uses the configuration file at ~/my.eslint.config.js
, which is used instead of searching for an eslint.config.js
file.
--inspect-config
Flat Config Mode Only. This option runs npx @eslint/config-inspector@latest
to start the config inspector. You can use the config inspector to better understand what your configuration is doing and which files it applies to. When you use this flag, the CLI does not perform linting.
- Argument Type: No argument.
--inspect-config
example
npx eslint --inspect-config
--env
eslintrc Mode Only. This option enables specific environments.
- Argument Type: String. One of the available environments.
- Multiple Arguments: Yes
Details about the global variables defined by each environment are available in the Specifying Environments documentation. This option only enables environments. It does not disable environments set in other configuration files. To specify multiple environments, separate them using commas, or use the option multiple times.
--env
example
npx eslint --env browser,node file.js
npx eslint --env browser --env node file.js
--ext
eslintrc Mode Only. If you are using flat config (eslint.config.js
), please see migration guide.
This option allows you to specify which file extensions ESLint uses when searching for target files in the directories you specify.
- Argument Type: String. File extension.
- Multiple Arguments: Yes
- Default Value:
.js
and the files that match theoverrides
entries of your configuration.
--ext
is only used when the patterns to lint are directories. If you use glob patterns or file names, then --ext
is ignored. For example, npx eslint "lib/*" --ext .js
matches all files within the lib/
directory, regardless of extension.
--ext
example
# Use only .ts extension
npx eslint . --ext .ts
# Use both .js and .ts
npx eslint . --ext .js --ext .ts
# Also use both .js and .ts
npx eslint . --ext .js,.ts
--global
This option defines global variables so that they are not flagged as undefined by the no-undef
rule.
- Argument Type: String. Name of the global variable. Any specified global variables are assumed to be read-only by default, but appending
:true
to a variable’s name ensures thatno-undef
also allows writes. - Multiple Arguments: Yes
--global
example
npx eslint --global require,exports:true file.js
npx eslint --global require --global exports:true
--parser
This option allows you to specify a parser to be used by ESLint.
- Argument Type: String. Parser to be used by ESLint.
- Multiple Arguments: No
- Default Value:
espree
--parser
example
# Use TypeScript ESLint parser
npx eslint --parser @typescript-eslint/parser file.ts
--parser-options
This option allows you to specify parser options to be used by ESLint. The available parser options are determined by the parser being used.
- Argument Type: Key/value pair separated by colon (
:
). - Multiple Arguments: Yes
--parser-options
example
echo '3 ** 4' | npx eslint --stdin --parser-options ecmaVersion:6 # fails with a parsing error
echo '3 ** 4' | npx eslint --stdin --parser-options ecmaVersion:7 # succeeds, yay!
--resolve-plugins-relative-to
eslintrc Mode Only. Changes the directory where plugins are resolved from.
- Argument Type: String. Path to directory.
- Multiple Arguments: No
- Default Value: By default, plugins are resolved from the directory in which your configuration file is found.
This option should be used when plugins were installed by someone other than the end user. It should be set to the project directory of the project that has a dependency on the necessary plugins.
For example:
- When using a config file that is located outside of the current project (with the
--config
flag), if the config uses plugins which are installed locally to itself,--resolve-plugins-relative-to
should be set to the directory containing the config file. - If an integration has dependencies on ESLint and a set of plugins, and the tool invokes ESLint on behalf of the user with a preset configuration, the tool should set
--resolve-plugins-relative-to
to the top-level directory of the tool.
--resolve-plugins-relative-to
example
npx eslint --config ~/personal-eslintrc.js \
--resolve-plugins-relative-to /usr/local/lib/
Specify Rules and Plugins
--plugin
This option specifies a plugin to load.
- Argument Type: String. Plugin name. You can optionally omit the prefix
eslint-plugin-
from the plugin name. - Multiple Arguments: Yes
Before using the plugin, you have to install it using npm.
--plugin
example
npx eslint --plugin jquery file.js
npx eslint --plugin eslint-plugin-mocha file.js
--rule
This option specifies the rules to be used.
- Argument Type: Rules and their configuration specified with levn format.
- Multiple Arguments: Yes
These rules are merged with any rules specified with configuration files. If the rule is defined in a plugin, you have to prefix the rule ID with the plugin name and a /
.
To ignore rules in .eslintrc
configuration files and only run rules specified in the command line, use the --rule
flag in combination with the --no-eslintrc
flag.
--rule
example
# Apply single rule
npx eslint --rule 'quotes: [error, double]'
# Apply multiple rules
npx eslint --rule 'guard-for-in: error' --rule 'brace-style: [error, 1tbs]'
# Apply rule from jquery plugin
npx eslint --rule 'jquery/dollar-sign: error'
# Only apply rule from the command line
npx eslint --rule 'quotes: [error, double]' --no-eslintrc
--rulesdir
Deprecated: Use rules from plugins instead.
eslintrc Mode Only. This option allows you to specify another 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.
- Argument Type: String. Path to directory. The rules in your custom rules directory must follow the same format as bundled rules to work properly.
- Multiple Arguments: Yes.
Note that, as with core rules and plugin rules, you still need to enable the rules in configuration or via the --rule
CLI option in order to actually run those rules during linting. Specifying a rules directory with --rulesdir
does not automatically enable the rules within that directory.
--rulesdir
example
npx eslint --rulesdir my-rules/ file.js
npx eslint --rulesdir my-rules/ --rulesdir my-other-rules/ file.js
Fix Problems
--fix
This option instructs ESLint to try to fix as many issues as possible. The fixes are made to the actual files themselves and only the remaining unfixed issues are output.
- Argument Type: No argument.
Not all problems are fixable using this option, and the option does not work in these situations:
- This option throws an error when code is piped to ESLint.
- This option has no effect on code that uses a processor, unless the processor opts into allowing autofixes.
If you want to fix code from stdin
or otherwise want to get the fixes without actually writing them to the file, use the --fix-dry-run
option.
--fix
example
npx eslint --fix file.js
--fix-dry-run
This option has the same effect as --fix
with the difference that the fixes are not saved to the file system. Because the default formatter does not output the fixed code, you’ll have to use another formatter (e.g. --format json
) to get the fixes.
- Argument Type: No argument.
This makes it possible to fix code from stdin
when used with the --stdin
flag.
This flag can be useful for integrations (e.g. editor plugins) which need to autofix text from the command line without saving it to the filesystem.
--fix-dry-run
example
getSomeText | npx eslint --stdin --fix-dry-run --format json
--fix-type
This option allows you to specify the type of fixes to apply when using either --fix
or --fix-dry-run
.
- Argument Type: String. One of the following fix types:
problem
- fix potential errors in the codesuggestion
- apply fixes to the code that improve itlayout
- apply fixes that do not change the program structure (AST)directive
- apply fixes to inline directives such as// eslint-disable
- Multiple Arguments: Yes
This option is helpful if you are using another program to format your code, but you would still like ESLint to apply other types of fixes.
--fix-type
example
npx eslint --fix --fix-type suggestion .
npx eslint --fix --fix-type suggestion --fix-type problem .
npx eslint --fix --fix-type suggestion,layout .
Ignore Files
--ignore-path
eslintrc Mode Only. This option allows you to specify the file to use as your .eslintignore
.
- Argument Type: String. Path to file.
- Multiple Arguments: No
- Default Value: By default, ESLint looks for
.eslintignore
in the current working directory.
Note: --ignore-path
is only supported when using deprecated configuration. If you want to include patterns from a .gitignore
file in your eslint.config.js
file, please see including .gitignore
files.
--ignore-path
example
npx eslint --ignore-path tmp/.eslintignore file.js
npx eslint --ignore-path .gitignore file.js
--no-ignore
Disables excluding of files from .eslintignore
files, --ignore-path
flags, --ignore-pattern
flags, and the ignorePatterns
property in config files.
- Argument Type: No argument.
--no-ignore
example
npx eslint --no-ignore file.js
--ignore-pattern
This option allows you to specify patterns of files to ignore. In eslintrc mode, these are in addition to .eslintignore
.
- Argument Type: String. The supported syntax is the same as for
.eslintignore
files, which use the same patterns as the.gitignore
specification. You should quote your patterns in order to avoid shell interpretation of glob patterns. - Multiple Arguments: Yes
--ignore-pattern
example
npx eslint --ignore-pattern "/lib/" --ignore-pattern "/src/vendor/*" .
Use stdin
--stdin
This option tells ESLint to read and lint source code from STDIN instead of from files. You can use this to pipe code to ESLint.
- Argument Type: No argument.
--stdin
example
cat myfile.js | npx eslint --stdin
--stdin-filename
This option allows you to specify a filename to process STDIN as.
- Argument Type: String. Path to file.
- Multiple Arguments: No
This is useful when processing files from STDIN and you have rules which depend on the filename.
--stdin-filename
example
cat myfile.js | npx eslint --stdin --stdin-filename myfile.js
Handle Warnings
--quiet
This option allows you to disable reporting on warnings and running of rules set to warn. If you enable this option, only errors are reported by ESLint and only rules set to error will be run.
- Argument Type: No argument.
--quiet
example
npx eslint --quiet file.js
--max-warnings
This option allows you to specify a warning threshold, which can be used to force ESLint to exit with an error status if there are too many warning-level rule violations in your project.
- Argument Type: Integer. The maximum number of warnings to allow. To prevent this behavior, do not use this option or specify
-1
as the argument. - Multiple Arguments: No
Normally, if ESLint runs and finds no errors (only warnings), it exits with a success exit status. However, if --max-warnings
is specified and the total warning count is greater than the specified threshold, ESLint exits with an error status.
--max-warnings
example
npx eslint --max-warnings 10 file.js
Output
-o
, --output-file
Write the output of linting results to a specified file.
- Argument Type: String. Path to file.
- Multiple Arguments: No
-o
, --output-file
example
npx eslint -o ./test/test.html
-f
, --format
This option specifies the output format for the console.
- Argument Type: String. One of the built-in formatters or a custom formatter.
- Multiple Arguments: No
- Default Value:
stylish
If you are using a custom formatter defined in a local file, you can specify the path to the custom formatter file.
An npm-installed formatter is resolved with or without eslint-formatter-
prefix.
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:
# Saves the output into the `results.json` file.
npx eslint -f json file.js > results.json
-f
, --format
example
Use the built-in json
formatter:
npx eslint --format json file.js
Use a local custom formatter:
npx eslint -f ./customformat.js file.js
Use an npm-installed formatter:
npm install eslint-formatter-pretty
# Then run one of the following commands
npx eslint -f pretty file.js
# or alternatively
npx eslint -f eslint-formatter-pretty file.js
--color
and --no-color
These options force the enabling/disabling of colorized output.
- Argument Type: No argument.
You can use these options to override the default behavior, which is to enable colorized output unless no TTY is detected, such as when piping eslint
through cat
or less
.
--color
and --no-color
example
npx eslint --color file.js | cat
npx eslint --no-color file.js
Inline Configuration Comments
--no-inline-config
This option prevents inline comments like /*eslint-disable*/
or
/*global foo*/
from having any effect.
- Argument Type: No argument.
This allows you to set an ESLint config without files modifying it. All inline config comments are ignored, such as:
/*eslint-disable*/
/*eslint-enable*/
/*global*/
/*eslint*/
/*eslint-env*/
// eslint-disable-line
// eslint-disable-next-line
--no-inline-config
example
npx eslint --no-inline-config file.js
--report-unused-disable-directives
This option causes ESLint to report directive comments like // eslint-disable-line
when no errors would have been reported on that line anyway.
- Argument Type: No argument.
This can be useful to prevent future errors from unexpectedly being suppressed, by cleaning up old eslint-disable
and eslint-enable
comments which are no longer applicable.
--report-unused-disable-directives
example
npx eslint --report-unused-disable-directives file.js
--report-unused-disable-directives-severity
Same as --report-unused-disable-directives
, but allows you to specify the severity level (error
, warn
, off
) of the reported errors. Only one of these two options can be used at a time.
- Argument Type: String. One of the following values:
off
(or0
)warn
(or1
)error
(or2
)
- Multiple Arguments: No
- Default Value: By default,
linterOptions.reportUnusedDisableDirectives
configuration setting is used (which defaults to"warn"
).
--report-unused-disable-directives-severity
example
npx eslint --report-unused-disable-directives-severity warn file.js
Caching
--cache
Store the info about processed files in order to only operate on the changed ones. Enabling this option can dramatically improve ESLint’s run time performance by ensuring that only changed files are linted.
The cache is stored in .eslintcache
by default.
- Argument Type: No argument.
If you run ESLint with --cache
and then run ESLint without --cache
, the .eslintcache
file will be deleted. This is necessary because the results of the lint might change and make .eslintcache
invalid. If you want to control when the cache file is deleted, then use --cache-location
to specify an alternate location for the cache file.
Autofixed files are not placed in the cache. Subsequent linting that does not trigger an autofix will place it in the cache.
--cache
example
npx eslint --cache file.js
--cache-file
Deprecated: Use --cache-location
instead.
Path to the cache file. If none specified .eslintcache
is used. The file is created in the directory where the eslint
command is executed.
--cache-location
Specify the path to the cache location. Can be a file or a directory.
- Argument Type: String. Path to file or directory. If a directory is specified, a cache file is created inside the specified folder. The name of the file is based on the hash of the current working directory, e.g.:
.cache_hashOfCWD
. - Multiple Arguments: No
- Default Value: If no location is specified,
.eslintcache
is used. The file is created in the directory where theeslint
command is executed.
If the directory for the cache does not exist make sure you add a trailing /
on *nix systems or \
on Windows. Otherwise, the path is assumed to be a file.
--cache-location
example
npx eslint "src/**/*.js" --cache --cache-location "/Users/user/.eslintcache/"
--cache-strategy
Strategy for the cache to use for detecting changed files.
- Argument Type: String. One of the following values:
metadata
content
- Multiple Arguments: No
- Default Value:
metadata
The content
strategy can be useful in cases where the modification time of your files changes even if their contents have not. For example, this can happen during git operations like git clone
because git does not track file modification time.
--cache-strategy
example
npx eslint "src/**/*.js" --cache --cache-strategy content
Miscellaneous
--init
This option runs npm init @eslint/config
to start the config initialization wizard. It’s designed to help new users quickly create an .eslintrc
file by answering a few questions. When you use this flag, the CLI does not perform linting.
- Argument Type: No argument.
The resulting configuration file is created in the current directory.
--init
example
npx eslint --init
--env-info
This option outputs information about the execution environment, including the version of Node.js, npm, and local and global installations of ESLint.
- Argument Type: No argument.
The ESLint team may ask for this information to help solve bugs. When you use this flag, the CLI does not perform linting.
--env-info
example
npx eslint --env-info
--no-error-on-unmatched-pattern
This option prevents errors when a quoted glob pattern or --ext
is unmatched. This does not prevent errors when your shell can’t match a glob.
- Argument Type: No argument.
--no-error-on-unmatched-pattern
example
npx eslint --no-error-on-unmatched-pattern --ext .ts "lib/*"
--exit-on-fatal-error
This option causes ESLint to exit with exit code 2 if one or more fatal parsing errors occur. Without this option, ESLint reports fatal parsing errors as rule violations.
- Argument Type: No argument.
--exit-on-fatal-error
example
npx eslint --exit-on-fatal-error file.js
--no-warn-ignored
Flat Config Mode Only. This option suppresses both File ignored by default
and File ignored because of a matching ignore pattern
warnings when an ignored filename is passed explicitly. It is useful when paired with --max-warnings 0
as it will prevent exit code 1 due to the aforementioned warning.
- Argument Type: No argument.
--no-warn-ignored
example
npx eslint --no-warn-ignored --max-warnings 0 ignored-file.js
--pass-on-no-patterns
This option allows ESLint to exit with code 0 when no file or directory patterns are passed. Without this option, ESLint assumes you want to use .
as the pattern. (When running in legacy eslintrc mode, ESLint will exit with code 1.)
- Argument Type: No argument.
--pass-on-no-patterns
example
npx eslint --pass-on-no-patterns
--debug
This option outputs debugging information to the console. Add this flag to an ESLint command line invocation in order to get extra debugging information while the command runs.
- Argument Type: No argument.
This information is useful when you’re seeing a problem and having a hard time pinpointing it. The ESLint team may ask for this debugging information to help solve bugs.
--debug
example
npx eslint --debug test.js
-h
, --help
This option outputs the help menu, displaying all of the available options. All other options are ignored when this is present. When you use this flag, the CLI does not perform linting.
- Argument Type: No argument.
-h
, --help
example
npx eslint --help
-v
, --version
This option outputs the current ESLint version onto the console. All other options are ignored when this is present. When you use this flag, the CLI does not perform linting.
- Argument Type: No argument.
-v
, --version
example
npx eslint --version
--print-config
This option outputs the configuration to be used for the file passed. When present, no linting is performed and only config-related options are valid. When you use this flag, the CLI does not perform linting.
- Argument Type: String. Path to file.
- Multiple Arguments: No
--print-config
example
npx eslint --print-config file.js
--stats
This option adds a series of detailed performance statistics (see Stats type) such as the parse-, fix- and lint-times (time per rule) to result
objects that are passed to the formatter (see Stats CLI usage).
- Argument Type: No argument.
This option is intended for use with custom formatters that display statistics. It can also be used with the built-in json
formatter.
--stats
example
npx eslint --stats --format json file.js
--flag
This option enables one or more feature flags for ESLint.
- Argument Type: String. A feature identifier.
- Multiple Arguments: Yes
--flag
example
npx eslint --flag x_feature file.js
Exit Codes
When linting files, ESLint exits with one of the following exit codes:
0
: Linting was successful and there are no linting errors. If the--max-warnings
flag is set ton
, the number of linting warnings is at mostn
.1
: Linting was successful and there is at least one linting error, or there are more linting warnings than allowed by the--max-warnings
option.2
: Linting was unsuccessful due to a configuration problem or an internal error.