NPM scripts are designed to work this way on purpose, so that an exit code of 1 or 2, (anything other than 0
), will prevent post tasks from running, in the same way it would operate on your operating system.
Using the --silent
flag is an option, but can become an issue where there are other problems with the script, and you will wind up banging your head against a wall when your builds start failing without any lint/test errors.
The best thing to do here... is to configure your process so that it doesn't output an error exit code in situations where you don't want it to. In this case... you have some errors popping up legitimately based on your eslint config. This will cause an error exit code, and (rightfully so) prevent the next task from running. This is actually very useful when you're using npm scripts, because you can prevent testing/build steps to be run unecessarily when you know there are errors.
So, in this case, you want to add an .eslintrc
file to your project, and specify some rules that will both take care of the linting errors, as well as the npm errors.
I've posted a quick sample .eslintrc
file below. When running eslint
on the command line, it will automatically detect any .eslintrc
or .eslintignore
files, and abide by their configurations.
That sample below will clean up your linting erros, but keep in mind, it changes the exit code that would be thrown when eslint picks up that "trigger". When I change a rule to 0
, it means that it won't alert you when it recognizes that pattern.
You can read more about utilizing and configuring rule codes, or... check out a seed project I have created that uses npm as a build tool, and includes eslint usage: react-flux-npm-automation
// /path/to/project/.eslintrc
{
"parser": "babel-eslint",
"env":{
"browser":true,
"node":true,
"es6":true
},
"rules": {
"strict":0,
"quotes":0,
"no-unused-vars":0
}
}