Package Exports
- eslint-plugin-go-internal
- eslint-plugin-go-internal/index.js
This package does not declare an exports field, so the exports above have been automatically detected and optimized by JSPM instead. If any package subpath is missing, it is recommended to post an issue to the original package (eslint-plugin-go-internal) to support the "exports" field. If that is not possible, create a JSPM override to customize the exports field for this package.
Readme
eslint-plugin-go-internal
An ESLint plugin that enforces Go-style internal/ import boundaries to maintain clean module architecture.
Overview
This plugin implements the Go programming language's "internal" package convention for JavaScript/TypeScript projects. It prevents modules from importing from other modules' internal/
directories, ensuring that internal implementation details remain private to their containing module.
Installation
npm install --save-dev eslint-plugin-go-internal
Usage
Add go-internal
to the plugins section of your .eslintrc
configuration file:
{
"plugins": ["go-internal"]
}
Then configure the rule under the rules section:
{
"rules": {
"go-internal/no-cross-internal-imports": "error"
}
}
Or use the recommended configuration:
{
"extends": ["plugin:go-internal/recommended"]
}
How It Works
The rule follows this algorithm:
- Only checks relative imports starting with
.
(not npm packages) - Finds the last 'internal' folder in the import path
- Determines the module root (parent directory of the internal/ folder)
- Checks if the importing file is within the same module root
- Reports an error if the importer is outside the module root
Example Project Structure
project/
├── auth/
│ ├── handlers/
│ │ └── login.js ✅ Can import from auth/internal/
│ ├── internal/
│ │ ├── crypto.js
│ │ └── session.js
│ └── middleware.js ✅ Can import from auth/internal/
├── payment/
│ ├── handlers/
│ │ └── checkout.js ❌ Cannot import from auth/internal/
│ ├── internal/
│ │ └── stripe.js
│ └── processor.js ❌ Cannot import from auth/internal/
└── shared/
├── utils.js ❌ Cannot import from auth/internal/
└── constants.js ❌ Cannot import from payment/internal/
Valid Examples
// ✅ auth/handlers/login.js
import { encrypt } from '../internal/crypto';
import { createSession } from '../internal/session';
// ✅ auth/middleware.js
import { validateToken } from './internal/crypto';
// ✅ payment/processor.js
import { formatAmount } from './internal/stripe';
// ✅ Non-internal imports are always allowed
import { helper } from '../shared/utils';
import { lodash } from 'lodash';
Invalid Examples
// ❌ payment/handlers/checkout.js
import { encrypt } from '../../auth/internal/crypto';
// ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
// Error: Do not import internal modules from outside their module root.
// ❌ shared/utils.js
import { stripe } from '../payment/internal/stripe';
// ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
// Error: Do not import internal modules from outside their module root.
// ❌ auth/handlers/login.js
const validator = require('../../payment/internal/validator');
// ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
// Error: Do not import internal modules from outside their module root.
Complex Scenarios
Nested Internal Directories
project/
├── core/
│ ├── database/
│ │ ├── internal/
│ │ │ └── connection.js
│ │ └── models.js ✅ Can import from database/internal/
│ └── auth/
│ └── service.js ❌ Cannot import from database/internal/
Multiple Internal Folders
If a path contains multiple internal
folders, the rule uses the last occurrence:
// mymodule/src/component.js
import { util } from '../other/helpers/internal/shared/internal/util';
// ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
// The internal root is: ../other/helpers/internal/shared/
// Rule checks if mymodule/ is within that root (it's not, so this fails)
Supported File Types
The rule works with:
- JavaScript files (
.js
,.jsx
) - TypeScript files (
.ts
,.tsx
) - Both ES6 imports and CommonJS require statements
Rule Configuration
This rule has no configuration options. It's designed to work out of the box with the Go-style internal convention.
Benefits
- Enforces encapsulation - Internal modules stay internal
- Prevents tight coupling - Modules can't depend on other modules' internals
- Improves maintainability - Clear boundaries between public and private APIs
- Enables safe refactoring - Internal changes won't break external modules
- Promotes good architecture - Encourages well-defined module interfaces
Contributing
Issues and pull requests are welcome! Please make sure to run the tests:
npm test
License
MIT