Eslint Teamcity Save Abandoned

A (now deprecated) ESLint formatter plugin for TeamCity. Use eslint-formatter-teamcity instead

Project README

Warning

Please migrate to eslint-formatter-teamcity. This package was renamed to make use of custom ESLint formatters.The eslint-teamcity package has been deprecated and will no longer be maintained. Migration guide available under the eslint-formatter-teamcity release page

eslint-teamcity

npm version Build Status Coverage Status npm downloads

A small eslint formatter plugin. ESLint violations are output nicely in the TeamCity build error format. Tested with TeamCity 9.1.x/10.0.x/2017+ and ESLint 1+

Installation

As of v4.0, Node v12+ is required. If you use an older version of Node, please stick with either v2.x or v3.x

Prerequisite: You must have either npm or Yarn installed.

npm install eslint-teamcity --save-dev

Usage

There are 3 ways to use eslint-teamcity:

1. As a regular ESLint formatter plugin:

eslint --format ./node_modules/eslint-teamcity/index.js myfiletolint.js

2. Running against a generated ESLint JSON report:

Generate an ESLint JSON report:

eslint -f json -o result.json app/myjavascriptdirectory

Run eslint-teamcity against your new report:

node ./node_modules/eslint-teamcity/index.js result.json

3. Requiring and running directly from inside your JavaScript code:

const eslintTeamcity = require('eslint-teamcity');
console.log(eslintTeamcity(eslintOutput));

Configuration

As of version 2.0, there are two different formatters you can use to report with. They have no material impact on the output - they're just different ways of viewing the same data. The "Code Inspection" tab will only appear if you have configured eslint-teamcity to use the inspections reporter.

Errors (default) Inspections
Example Errors Report Example Inspections Report

There are several ways that you can configure eslint-teamcity. You don't have to configure anything by default, you just have the option to if you would like. Settings are looked for in the following priority:

1. As a second argument

If you run eslint-teamcity by requiring it in JavaScript, you can pass a second argument to the function:

const eslintTeamcity = require('eslint-teamcity');
const options = {
  reporter: 'inspections', // default: 'errors'
  reportName: 'My ESLint Violations', // default: 'ESLint Violations'
  errorStatisticsName: 'My ESLint Error Count', // default: 'ESLint Error Count'
  warningStatisticsName: 'My ESLint Warning Count', // default: 'ESLint Warning Count'
};
console.log(eslintTeamcity(eslintOutput, options));

2. From your package.json

If you have a package.json file in the current directory, you can add an extra "eslint-teamcity" property to it:

...,
"eslint-teamcity": {
  "reporter": "inspections",
  "report-name": "My ESLint Violations",
  "error-statistics-name": "My ESLint Error Count",
  "warning-statistics-name": "My ESLint Warning Count"
},
...

3. ENV variables

export ESLINT_TEAMCITY_REPORTER=inspections
export ESLINT_TEAMCITY_REPORT_NAME="My Formatting Problems"
export ESLINT_TEAMCITY_ERROR_STATISTICS_NAME="My Error Count"
export ESLINT_TEAMCITY_WARNING_STATISTICS_NAME="My Warning Count"

You can also output your current settings to the log if you set:

export ESLINT_TEAMCITY_DISPLAY_CONFIG=true

gulp-eslint integration

const gulp = require('gulp');
const eslint = require('gulp-eslint');
const teamcity = require('eslint-teamcity');

gulp.task('lint', function () {
  return gulp.src(['js/**/*.js'])
    .pipe(eslint())
    .pipe(eslint.format(teamcity))
    .pipe(eslint.failAfterError());
});

See the gulp-eslint docs for more info on setting up a linting task.

TeamCity Usage

The simplest way to run eslint-teamcity is from an npm script in a build step. You could setup a script similar to this:

"scripts": {
  "lint:teamcity": "eslint app/src --format './node_modules/eslint-teamcity/index.js'"
}

You could also run it as a gulp task (if you use gulp and gulp-eslint):

Example TeamCity Setup Kick off a new build, by deploying again, and you should see your build errors - assuming you have any!

Extras

eslint-teamcity will also output statistic values which you can use in TeamCity to track your progress in resolving errors!

Graphs can be setup from the Build -> Statistics tab. Example Statistics Output

Development

The quickest way to get a TeamCity server setup is to use Docker and ngrok:

  1. Run ngrok
ngrok http 8111
  1. Start TeamCity server and an agent
docker run -itd --name teamcity-server  \
    -v <path to data directory>:/data/teamcity_server/datadir \
    -v <path to logs directory>:/opt/teamcity/logs  \
    -p 8111:8111 \
    jetbrains/teamcity-server

docker run -itd --name teamcity-agent-1  \
    -e SERVER_URL="http://<ngrok id>.ngrok.io"  \
    -v <path to agent data>:/data/teamcity_agent/conf  \
    jetbrains/teamcity-agent

NOTE: You can't use localhost in SERVER_URL as it will refer to the container.

If you fork the repo and are testing on your local TeamCity instance, it may help to run rm -rf node_modules in a build step as TeamCity seems to cache versions between commits.

Issues

I will try keep this project up to date, but please log any issues here. Any pull requests are also welcome!

Open Source Agenda is not affiliated with "Eslint Teamcity" Project. README Source: andreogle/eslint-teamcity
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