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  • License MIT

Marks all side-effects in module initialization that will interfere with tree-shaking

Package Exports

  • eslint-plugin-tree-shaking

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-tree-shaking) 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-tree-shaking

Marks all side-effects in module initialization that will interfere with tree-shaking

npm JavaScript Style Guide Greenkeeper badge semantic-release

Usage

This plugin is intended as a means for library developers to identify patterns that will interfere with the tree-shaking algorithm of their module bundler (i.e. rollup or webpack).

JavaScript:

myGlobal = 17
const x = {[globalFunction()]: 'myString'}

export default 42

Rollup output:

myGlobal = 17;
const x = {[globalFunction()]: 'myString'};

var index = 42;

export default index;

ESLint output:

1:1   error  Cannot determine side-effects of assignment to global variable
2:13  error  Cannot determine side-effects of calling global function

This plugin is most useful when you integrate ESLint with your editor.

Installation and Setup

You'll first need to install ESLint:

$ npm i eslint --save-dev

Next, install eslint-plugin-tree-shaking:

$ npm install eslint-plugin-tree-shaking --save-dev

Note: If you installed ESLint globally (using the -g flag) then you must also install eslint-plugin-tree-shaking globally.

Add tree-shaking to the plugins section of your .eslintrc configuration file. You can omit the eslint-plugin- prefix:

{
    "plugins": [
        "tree-shaking"
    ]
}

Then add the rule no-side-effects-in-initialization to the rules section:

{
    "rules": {
        "tree-shaking/no-side-effects-in-initialization": 2
    }
}

Magic Comments

ESLint only ever analyzes one file at a time and by default, this plugin assumes that all imported functions have side-effects. If this is not the case, this plugin supports magic comments you can add before identifiers in imports and exports to specify that you assume an import or export to be a pure function. Examples:

  • By default, imported functions are assumed to have side-effects:

    JavaScript:

    import {x} from "./some-file";
    x()

    ESLint output:

    1:9  error  Cannot determine side-effects of calling imported function
  • You can mark a side-effect free import with a magic comment:

    JavaScript:

    import {/* tree-shaking no-side-effects-when-called */ x} from "./some-file";
    x()

    No ESLint errors

  • By default, exported functions are not checked for side-effects:

    JavaScript:

    export const x = globalFunction

    No ESLint errors

  • You can check exports for side-effects with a magic comment:

    JavaScript:

    export const /* tree-shaking no-side-effects-when-called */ x = globalFunction

    ESLint output:

    1:65  error  Cannot determine side-effects of calling global function

Background and Planned Development

This plugin is in development. If you want to contribute, please read CONTRIBUTING.md.

This plugin implements a side-effect detection algorithm similar to what rollup uses to determine if code can be removed safely. However, there is no one-to-one correspondence. If you find that you have code that

  • is not removed by rollup (even though tree-shaking is enabled) but
  • has no ESLint issues

please--if no-one else has done so yet--check the guidelines and file an issue!