GitHub Action
Setup Sherif
Sherif: Opinionated, zero-config linter for JavaScript monorepos
Sherif is an opinionated, zero-config linter for JavaScript monorepos. It runs fast in any monorepo and enforces rules to provide a better, standardized DX.
- ✨ PNPM, NPM, Yarn...: sherif works with all package managers
- 🔎 Zero-config: it just works and prevents regressions
- ⚡ Fast: doesn't need
node_modules
installed, written in 🦀 Rust
Run sherif
in the root of your monorepo to list the found issues. Any error will cause Sherif to exit with a code 1:
# PNPM
pnpm dlx sherif@latest
# NPM
npx sherif@latest
We recommend running Sherif in your CI once all errors are fixed. Run it by specifying a version instead of latest. This is useful to prevent regressions (e.g. when adding a library to a package but forgetting to update the version in other packages of the monorepo).
GitHub Actions example
# Using the `QuiiBz/sherif` action
name: Sherif
on:
pull_request:
jobs:
check:
name: Run Sherif
runs-on: ubuntu-22.04
steps:
- uses: actions/checkout@v4
- uses: QuiiBz/sherif@v1
# Optionally, you can specify a version and arguments to run Sherif with:
# with:
# version: 'v1.0.2'
# args: '--ignore-rule root-package-manager-field'
# Using `npx` to run Sherif
name: Sherif
on:
pull_request:
jobs:
check:
name: Run Sherif
runs-on: ubuntu-22.04
steps:
- uses: actions/checkout@v4
- uses: actions/setup-node@v3
with:
node-version: 20
- run: npx [email protected]
Most issues can be automatically fixed by using the --fix
(or -f
) flag. Sherif will automatically run your package manager's install
command (see No-install mode to disable this behavior) to update the lockfile. Note that autofix is disabled in CI environments (when $CI
is set):
sherif --fix
If you don't want Sherif to run your packager manager's install
command after running autofix, you can use the --no-install
flag:
sherif --fix --no-install
You can ignore a specific rule by using --ignore-rule <name>
(or -r <name>
):
# Ignore both rules
sherif -r packages-without-package-json -r root-package-manager-field
You can ignore all issues in a package by using --ignore-package <pathOrName>
(or -p <pathOrName>
):
# Ignore all issues in the `@repo/tools` package
sherif -p @repo/tools
# Ignore all issues for packages inside `./integrations/*`
sherif -p "./integrations/*"
Note Sherif doesn't have many rules for now, but will likely have more in the future (along with more features).
package.json
files should not have empty dependencies fields.
A given dependency should use the same version across the monorepo.
You can ignore this rule for a specific dependency and version or all versions of a dependency if it's expected in your monorepo by using --ignore-dependency <name@version>
/ --ignore-dependency <name>
(or -i <name@version>
/ -i <name>
):
# Ignore only the specific dependency version mismatch
sherif -i [email protected] -i [email protected]
# Completely ignore all versions mismatch of these dependencies
sherif -i react -i next
All paths defined in the workspace (the root package.json
' workspaces
field or pnpm-workspace.yaml
) should match at least one package.
All packages matching the workspace (the root package.json
' workspaces
field or pnpm-workspace.yaml
) should have a package.json
file.
The root package.json
is private, so making a distinction between dependencies
and devDependencies
is useless - only use devDependencies
.
The root package.json
should specify the package manager and version to use. Useful for tools like corepack.
The root package.json
should be private to prevent accidentaly publishing it to a registry.
Private packages shouldn't have @types/*
in dependencies
, since they don't need it at runtime. Move them to devDependencies
.
Dependencies should be ordered alphabetically to prevent complex diffs when installing a new dependency via a package manager.
- dedubcheck that given me the idea for Sherif
- Manypkg for some of their rules
- This article for the Rust releases on NPM