/** @type {import('dependency-cruiser').IConfiguration} */ module.exports = { forbidden: [ { name: 'no-circular-at-runtime', severity: 'warn', comment: 'This dependency is part of a circular relationship. You might want to revise ' + 'your solution (i.e. use dependency inversion, make sure the modules have a single responsibility) ', from: {}, to: { circular: true, viaOnly: { dependencyTypesNot: [ 'type-only' ] } } }, { name: 'no-orphans', comment: "This is an orphan module - it's likely not used (anymore?). Either use it or " + "remove it. If it's logical this module is an orphan (i.e. it's a config file), " + "add an exception for it in your dependency-cruiser configuration. By default " + "this rule does not scrutinize dot-files (e.g. .eslintrc.js), TypeScript declaration " + "files (.d.ts), tsconfig.json and some of the babel and webpack configs.", severity: 'warn', from: { orphan: true, pathNot: [ '(^|/)[.][^/]+[.](?:js|cjs|mjs|ts|cts|mts|json)$', // dot files '[.]d[.]ts$', // TypeScript declaration files '(^|/)tsconfig[.]json$', // TypeScript config '(^|/)(?:babel|webpack)[.]config[.](?:js|cjs|mjs|ts|cts|mts|json)$' // other configs ] }, to: {}, }, { name: 'no-deprecated-core', comment: 'A module depends on a node core module that has been deprecated. Find an alternative - these are ' + "bound to exist - node doesn't deprecate lightly.", severity: 'warn', from: {}, to: { dependencyTypes: [ 'core' ], path: [ '^v8/tools/codemap$', '^v8/tools/consarray$', '^v8/tools/csvparser$', '^v8/tools/logreader$', '^v8/tools/profile_view$', '^v8/tools/profile$', '^v8/tools/SourceMap$', '^v8/tools/splaytree$', '^v8/tools/tickprocessor-driver$', '^v8/tools/tickprocessor$', '^node-inspect/lib/_inspect$', '^node-inspect/lib/internal/inspect_client$', '^node-inspect/lib/internal/inspect_repl$', '^async_hooks$', '^punycode$', '^domain$', '^constants$', '^sys$', '^_linklist$', '^_stream_wrap$' ], } }, { name: 'not-to-deprecated', comment: 'This module uses a (version of an) npm module that has been deprecated. Either upgrade to a later ' + 'version of that module, or find an alternative. Deprecated modules are a security risk.', severity: 'warn', from: {}, to: { dependencyTypes: [ 'deprecated' ] } }, { name: 'no-non-package-json', severity: 'error', comment: "This module depends on an npm package that isn't in the 'dependencies' section of your package.json. " + "That's problematic as the package either (1) won't be available on live (2 - worse) will be " + "available on live with an non-guaranteed version. Fix it by adding the package to the dependencies " + "in your package.json.", from: {}, to: { dependencyTypes: [ 'npm-no-pkg', 'npm-unknown' ] } }, { name: 'not-to-unresolvable', comment: "This module depends on a module that cannot be found ('resolved to disk'). If it's an npm " + 'module: add it to your package.json. In all other cases you likely already know what to do.', severity: 'error', from: {}, to: { couldNotResolve: true } }, { name: 'no-duplicate-dep-types', comment: "Likely this module depends on an external ('npm') package that occurs more than once " + "in your package.json i.e. bot as a devDependencies and in dependencies. This will cause " + "maintenance problems later on.", severity: 'warn', from: {}, to: { moreThanOneDependencyType: true, // as it's pretty common to have a type import be a type only import // _and_ (e.g.) a devDependency - don't consider type-only dependency // types for this rule dependencyTypesNot: ["type-only"] } }, /* rules you might want to tweak for your specific situation: */ { name: 'not-to-spec', comment: 'This module depends on a spec (test) file. The sole responsibility of a spec file is to test code. ' + "If there's something in a spec that's of use to other modules, it doesn't have that single " + 'responsibility anymore. Factor it out into (e.g.) a separate utility/ helper or a mock.', severity: 'error', from: {}, to: { path: '[.](?:spec|test)[.](?:js|mjs|cjs|jsx|ts|mts|cts|tsx)$' } }, { name: 'not-to-dev-dep', severity: 'error', comment: "This module depends on an npm package from the 'devDependencies' section of your " + 'package.json. It looks like something that ships to production, though. To prevent problems ' + "with npm packages that aren't there on production declare it (only!) in the 'dependencies'" + 'section of your package.json. If this module is development only - add it to the ' + 'from.pathNot re of the not-to-dev-dep rule in the dependency-cruiser configuration', from: { path: '^(src)', pathNot: [ '[.](?:spec|test|setup|script)[.](?:js|mjs|cjs|jsx|ts|mts|cts|tsx)$', 'src/test' ] }, to: { dependencyTypes: [ 'npm-dev', ], // type only dependencies are not a problem as they don't end up in the // production code or are ignored by the runtime. dependencyTypesNot: [ 'type-only' ], pathNot: [ 'node_modules/@types/' ] } }, { name: 'optional-deps-used', severity: 'info', comment: "This module depends on an npm package that is declared as an optional dependency " + "in your package.json. As this makes sense in limited situations only, it's flagged here. " + "If you're using an optional dependency here by design - add an exception to your" + "dependency-cruiser configuration.", from: {}, to: { dependencyTypes: [ 'npm-optional' ] } }, { name: 'peer-deps-used', comment: "This module depends on an npm package that is declared as a peer dependency " + "in your package.json. This makes sense if your package is e.g. a plugin, but in " + "other cases - maybe not so much. If the use of a peer dependency is intentional " + "add an exception to your dependency-cruiser configuration.", severity: 'warn', from: {}, to: { dependencyTypes: [ 'npm-peer' ] } } ], options: { /* Which modules not to follow further when encountered */ doNotFollow: { /* path: an array of regular expressions in strings to match against */ path: ['node_modules'] }, /* Which modules to exclude */ // exclude : { // /* path: an array of regular expressions in strings to match against */ // path: '', // }, /* Which modules to exclusively include (array of regular expressions in strings) dependency-cruiser will skip everything not matching this pattern */ // includeOnly : [''], /* List of module systems to cruise. When left out dependency-cruiser will fall back to the list of _all_ module systems it knows of. It's the default because it's the safe option It might come at a performance penalty, though. moduleSystems: ['amd', 'cjs', 'es6', 'tsd'] As in practice only commonjs ('cjs') and ecmascript modules ('es6') are widely used, you can limit the moduleSystems to those. */ // moduleSystems: ['cjs', 'es6'], /* prefix for links in html and svg output (e.g. 'https://github.com/you/yourrepo/blob/main/' to open it on your online repo or `vscode://file/${process.cwd()}/` to open it in visual studio code), */ // prefix: `vscode://file/${process.cwd()}/`, /* false (the default): ignore dependencies that only exist before typescript-to-javascript compilation true: also detect dependencies that only exist before typescript-to-javascript compilation "specify": for each dependency identify whether it only exists before compilation or also after */ // tsPreCompilationDeps: false, /* list of extensions to scan that aren't javascript or compile-to-javascript. Empty by default. Only put extensions in here that you want to take into account that are _not_ parsable. */ // extraExtensionsToScan: [".json", ".jpg", ".png", ".svg", ".webp"], /* if true combines the package.jsons found from the module up to the base folder the cruise is initiated from. Useful for how (some) mono-repos manage dependencies & dependency definitions. */ // combinedDependencies: false, /* if true leave symlinks untouched, otherwise use the realpath */ // preserveSymlinks: false, /* TypeScript project file ('tsconfig.json') to use for (1) compilation and (2) resolution (e.g. with the paths property) The (optional) fileName attribute specifies which file to take (relative to dependency-cruiser's current working directory). When not provided defaults to './tsconfig.json'. */ tsConfig: { fileName: 'tsconfig.json' }, /* Webpack configuration to use to get resolve options from. The (optional) fileName attribute specifies which file to take (relative to dependency-cruiser's current working directory. When not provided defaults to './webpack.conf.js'. The (optional) `env` and `arguments` attributes contain the parameters to be passed if your webpack config is a function and takes them (see webpack documentation for details) */ // webpackConfig: { // fileName: 'webpack.config.js', // env: {}, // arguments: {} // }, /* Babel config ('.babelrc', '.babelrc.json', '.babelrc.json5', ...) to use for compilation */ // babelConfig: { // fileName: '.babelrc', // }, /* List of strings you have in use in addition to cjs/ es6 requires & imports to declare module dependencies. Use this e.g. if you've re-declared require, use a require-wrapper or use window.require as a hack. */ // exoticRequireStrings: [], /* options to pass on to enhanced-resolve, the package dependency-cruiser uses to resolve module references to disk. The values below should be suitable for most situations If you use webpack: you can also set these in webpack.conf.js. The set there will override the ones specified here. */ enhancedResolveOptions: { /* What to consider as an 'exports' field in package.jsons */ exportsFields: ["exports"], /* List of conditions to check for in the exports field. Only works when the 'exportsFields' array is non-empty. */ conditionNames: ["import", "require", "node", "default", "types"], /* The extensions, by default are the same as the ones dependency-cruiser can access (run `npx depcruise --info` to see which ones that are in _your_ environment). If that list is larger than you need you can pass the extensions you actually use (e.g. [".js", ".jsx"]). This can speed up module resolution, which is the most expensive step. */ // extensions: [".js", ".jsx", ".ts", ".tsx", ".d.ts"], /* What to consider a 'main' field in package.json */ mainFields: ["module", "main", "types", "typings"], /* A list of alias fields in package.jsons See [this specification](https://github.com/defunctzombie/package-browser-field-spec) and the webpack [resolve.alias](https://webpack.js.org/configuration/resolve/#resolvealiasfields) documentation Defaults to an empty array (= don't use alias fields). */ // aliasFields: ["browser"], }, reporterOptions: { dot: { /* pattern of modules that can be consolidated in the detailed graphical dependency graph. The default pattern in this configuration collapses everything in node_modules to one folder deep so you see the external modules, but their innards. */ collapsePattern: 'node_modules/(?:@[^/]+/[^/]+|[^/]+)', /* Options to tweak the appearance of your graph.See https://github.com/sverweij/dependency-cruiser/blob/main/doc/options-reference.md#reporteroptions for details and some examples. If you don't specify a theme dependency-cruiser falls back to a built-in one. */ // theme: { // graph: { // /* splines: "ortho" gives straight lines, but is slow on big graphs // splines: "true" gives bezier curves (fast, not as nice as ortho) // */ // splines: "true" // }, // } }, archi: { /* pattern of modules that can be consolidated in the high level graphical dependency graph. If you use the high level graphical dependency graph reporter (`archi`) you probably want to tweak this collapsePattern to your situation. */ collapsePattern: '^(?:packages|src|lib(s?)|app(s?)|bin|test(s?)|spec(s?))/[^/]+|node_modules/(?:@[^/]+/[^/]+|[^/]+)', /* Options to tweak the appearance of your graph. If you don't specify a theme for 'archi' dependency-cruiser will use the one specified in the dot section above and otherwise use the default one. */ // theme: { }, }, "text": { "highlightFocused": true }, } } }; // generated: dependency-cruiser@16.3.3 on 2024-06-13T23:26:36.169Z