Custom Parsers
ESLint custom parsers let you extend ESLint to support linting new non-standard JavaScript language features or custom syntax in your code. A parser is responsible for taking your code and transforming it into an abstract syntax tree (AST) that ESLint can then analyze and lint.
Creating a Custom Parser
Methods in Custom Parsers
A custom parser is a JavaScript object with either a parse
or parseForESLint
method. The parse
method only returns the AST, whereas parseForESLint
also returns additional values that let the parser customize the behavior of ESLint even more.
Both methods should take in the source code as the first argument, and an optional configuration object as the second argument, which is provided as parserOptions
in a configuration file.
// customParser.js
const espree = require("espree");
// Logs the duration it takes to parse each file.
function parse(code, options) {
const label = `Parsing file "${options.filePath}"`;
console.time(label);
const ast = espree.parse(code, options);
console.timeEnd(label);
return ast; // Only the AST is returned.
};
module.exports = { parse };
parse
Return Object
The parse
method should simply return the AST object.
parseForESLint
Return Object
The parseForESLint
method should return an object that contains the required property ast
and optional properties services
, scopeManager
, and visitorKeys
.
ast
should contain the AST object.services
can contain any parser-dependent services (such as type checkers for nodes). The value of theservices
property is available to rules ascontext.sourceCode.parserServices
. Default is an empty object.scopeManager
can be a ScopeManager object. Custom parsers can use customized scope analysis for experimental/enhancement syntaxes. The default is theScopeManager
object which is created by eslint-scope.- Support for
scopeManager
was added in ESLint v4.14.0. ESLint versions that supportscopeManager
will provide aneslintScopeManager: true
property inparserOptions
, which can be used for feature detection.
- Support for
visitorKeys
can be an object to customize AST traversal. The keys of the object are the type of AST nodes. Each value is an array of the property names which should be traversed. The default is KEYS ofeslint-visitor-keys
.- Support for
visitorKeys
was added in ESLint v4.14.0. ESLint versions that supportvisitorKeys
will provide aneslintVisitorKeys: true
property inparserOptions
, which can be used for feature detection.
- Support for
Meta Data in Custom Parsers
For easier debugging and more effective caching of custom parsers, it’s recommended to provide a name and version in a meta
object at the root of your custom parsers, like this:
// preferred location of name and version
module.exports = {
meta: {
name: "eslint-parser-custom",
version: "1.2.3"
}
};
The meta.name
property should match the npm package name for your custom parser and the meta.version
property should match the npm package version for your custom parser. The easiest way to accomplish this is by reading this information from your package.json
.
AST Specification
The AST that custom parsers should create is based on ESTree. The AST requires some additional properties about detail information of the source code.
All Nodes
All nodes must have range
property.
range
(number[]
) is an array of two numbers. Both numbers are a 0-based index which is the position in the array of source code characters. The first is the start position of the node, the second is the end position of the node.code.slice(node.range[0], node.range[1])
must be the text of the node. This range does not include spaces/parentheses which are around the node.loc
(SourceLocation
) must not benull
. Theloc
property is defined as nullable by ESTree, but ESLint requires this property. TheSourceLocation#source
property can beundefined
. ESLint does not use theSourceLocation#source
property.
The parent
property of all nodes must be rewritable. Before any rules have access to the AST, ESLint sets each node’s parent
property to its parent node while traversing.
The Program
Node
The Program
node must have tokens
and comments
properties. Both properties are an array of the below Token
interface.
interface Token {
type: string;
loc: SourceLocation;
// See the "All Nodes" section for details of the `range` property.
range: [number, number];
value: string;
}
tokens
(Token[]
) is the array of tokens which affect the behavior of programs. Arbitrary spaces can exist between tokens, so rules check theToken#range
to detect spaces between tokens. This must be sorted byToken#range[0]
.comments
(Token[]
) is the array of comment tokens. This must be sorted byToken#range[0]
.
The range indexes of all tokens and comments must not overlap with the range of other tokens and comments.
The Literal
Node
The Literal
node must have raw
property.
raw
(string
) is the source code of this literal. This is the same ascode.slice(node.range[0], node.range[1])
.
Packaging a Custom Parser
To publish your custom parser to npm, perform the following:
- Create a custom parser following the Creating a Custom Parser section above.
- Create an npm package for the custom parser.
- In your
package.json
file, set themain
field as the file that exports your custom parser. - Publish the npm package.
For more information on publishing an npm package, refer to the npm documentation.
Once you’ve published the npm package, you can use it by adding the package to your project. For example:
npm install eslint-parser-myparser --save-dev
Then add the custom parser to your ESLint configuration file with the parser
property. For example:
// .eslintrc.js
module.exports = {
parser: 'eslint-parser-myparser',
// ... rest of configuration
};
To learn more about using ESLint parsers in your project, refer to Configure a Parser.
Example
For a complex example of a custom parser, refer to the @typescript-eslint/parser
source code.
A simple custom parser that provides a context.sourceCode.parserServices.foo()
method to rules.
// awesome-custom-parser.js
var espree = require("espree");
function parseForESLint(code, options) {
return {
ast: espree.parse(code, options),
services: {
foo: function() {
console.log("foo");
}
},
scopeManager: null,
visitorKeys: null
};
};
module.exports = { parseForESLint };
Include the custom parser in an ESLint configuration file:
// .eslintrc.json
{
"parser": "./path/to/awesome-custom-parser.js"
}