is a very popular tool used by most of Node.js
projects. Let’s run eslint
using Deno in Node.js compatiblity mode. Assuming
that eslint
is already installed locally (either using npm install eslint
or
yarn install eslint
) we can do so like:
⚠️ Notice that ESLint is run with limited set of permissions. We only give it access to the read from the file system, write to current directory and access environmental variables. Programs run in compatility mode are subject to Deno’s permission model.
When using compatibility mode there Deno does a few things behind the scenes:
Node built-in modules are set up and made available to import statements and
require()
calls. Following calls will return appropriate Node modules polyfilled usingstd/node
:import fs from "fs";
import os from "node:os";
const path = require("path");
const http = require("node:http");
Deno will support Node resolution algorithm so importing packages using “bare” specifiers will work. For details on how module resolution works check Node documentation on and ES modules.
is implemented as in Node.js and there should be no observable differences.
ES module resolution is implemented on top of Deno’s regular ESM resolution, leading to a few additional properties compared to Node.js:
In addition to
file:
anddata:
URL schemes supported in Node.js; ,https:
andblob:
URL schemes will work in the same way if you used Deno without compatiblity mode.Deno respects field in
package.json
; in addition to conditions recognized by Node.js,"deno"
condition can be used. This property is useful to the package authors who want to provide separate entrypoint optimized for use with Deno. As an example, imagine that your package usesnode-fetch
. By providing a conditional"deno"
export, you can add an entrypoint that doesn’t depend onnode-fetch
and instead uses built-infetch
API in Deno.
Following built-in Node modules are currently supported:
assert
(partly)buffer
console
(partly)constants
crypto
(partly)child_process
(partly)dns
(partly)events
fs
(partly)fs/promises
(partly)http
(partly)module
net
(partly)- (partly)
path
perf_hooks
(partly)process
(partly)readline
(partly)stream
string_decoder
sys
(partly)timers
timers/promises
tty
(partly)url
(partly)util
(partly)worker_threads
(partly)
Following modules are not yet implemented:
cluster
dgram
http2
https
repl
tls
zlib
If you try to run Node code that requires any of the not implemented modules, please open an issue in https://github.com/denoland/deno_std/issues with example code.
Currently, the compability mode does not support TypeScript.
In the long term, we’d like to provide ability to consume TypeScript code authored for the Node.js runtime.