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import/no-commonjs

Reports require([string]) function calls. Will not report if >1 argument, or single argument is not a literal string.

Reports module.exports or exports.*, also.

Intended for temporary use when migrating to pure ES6 modules.

Rule Details

This will be reported:

var mod = require('./mod')
  , common = require('./common')
  , fs = require('fs')
  , whateverModule = require('./not-found')

module.exports = { a: "b" }
exports.c = "d"

Allow require

If allowRequire option is set to true, require calls are valid:

/*eslint no-commonjs: [2, { allowRequire: true }]*/

if (typeof window !== "undefined") {
  require('that-ugly-thing');
}

but module.exports is reported as usual.

This is useful for conditional requires. If you don't rely on synchronous module loading, check out dynamic import.

Allow primitive modules

If allowPrimitiveModules option is set to true, the following is valid:

/*eslint no-commonjs: [2, { allowPrimitiveModules: true }]*/

module.exports = "foo"
module.exports = function rule(context) { return { /* ... */ } }

but this is still reported:

/*eslint no-commonjs: [2, { allowPrimitiveModules: true }]*/

module.exports = { x: "y" }
exports.z = function boop() { /* ... */ }

This is useful for things like ESLint rule modules, which must export a function as the module.

When Not To Use It

If you don't mind mixing module systems (sometimes this is useful), you probably don't want this rule.

It is also fairly noisy if you have a larger codebase that is being transitioned from CommonJS to ES6 modules.

Contributors

Special thanks to @xjamundx for donating the module.exports and exports.* bits.

Further Reading