I was setting up flymake-mode with JSLint, and thinking it was pretty great, but that rhino start-up cost is pretty big for a flymake application. If we just kept JSLint running, wouldn't that be a lot faster?
Then I caught a talk on the node.js server, and saw a way.
In my environment, this cuts jslint invocation time in half.
This project also depends on the Express framework, with the underscore and haml packages. I recommend installation with npm to manage these dependencies.
The jslint.curl
script depends on curl, but you can easily
reproduce it with any other http client.
$ node lintnode/app.js --port 3003 & Express started at http://localhost:3003/ in development mode $ lintnode/jslint.curl myfilthycode.js
The exit code of jslint.curl
is currently not nearly as relevant
as the output on standard out. The output should be fully compatible
with JSLint's Rhino version.
See the included flymake-jslint.el.
jslint_port may be passed on the node command line with the
--port
parameter. It defaults to 3003.
jstlint_options can be configured by passing the --exclude option to app.js
.
e.g.
$ node app.js --exclude nomen,undef
or
$ node app.js --set maxlen:80,node
Alternatively they can be configured within emacs by setting the variable lintnode-jslint-excludes
For documentation on JSLint's options, see JSLint options.
This project is hosted at github, which has a wiki and an issue tracker:
http://github.com/davidmiller/lintnode
This software is distributed under the same license as JSLint, which looks like the MIT License with one additional clause:
The Software shall be used for Good, not Evil.