Configuration File
Deno supports a configuration file that allows you to customize the built-in TypeScript compiler, formatter, and linter.
The configuration file supports .json
and .jsonc
extensions.
Since v1.18,
Deno will automatically detect a deno.json
or deno.jsonc
configuration file
if it's in your current working directory or parent directories. The --config
flag can be used to specify a different configuration file.
⚠️ Before Deno v1.23 you needed to supply an explicit
--config
flag.
⚠️ Starting with Deno v1.34 globs are supported in
include
andexclude
fields. You can use*
to match any number of characters,?
to match a single character, and**
to match any number of directories.
imports
and scopes
Since version 1.30, the deno.json
configuration file acts as an
import map for resolving bare specifiers.
{
"imports": {
"std/": "https://deno.land/std@0.201.0/"
},
"tasks": {
"dev": "deno run --watch main.ts"
}
}
See the import map section for more information on import maps.
Then your script can use the bare specifier std
:
import { assertEquals } from "std/assert/mod.ts";
assertEquals(1, 2);
The top-level deno.json
option importMap
along with the --importmap
flag
can be used to specify the import map in other files.
tasks
Similar to package.json
's script
field. Essentially shortcuts for command
line invocations.
{
"tasks": {
"start": "deno run -A --watch=static/,routes/,data/ dev.ts"
}
}
Using deno task start
will run the command. See also
deno task
.
lint
Configuration for deno lint
.
{
"lint": {
"include": ["src/"],
"exclude": ["src/testdata/", "data/fixtures/**/*.ts"],
"rules": {
"tags": ["recommended"],
"include": ["ban-untagged-todo"],
"exclude": ["no-unused-vars"]
}
}
}
fmt
Configuration for deno fmt
{
"fmt": {
"useTabs": true,
"lineWidth": 80,
"indentWidth": 4,
"semiColons": true,
"singleQuote": true,
"proseWrap": "preserve",
"include": ["src/"],
"exclude": ["src/testdata/", "data/fixtures/**/*.ts"]
}
}
lock
Used to specify a different file name for the lockfile. By default deno will use
deno.lock
and place it alongside the configuration file.
nodeModulesDir
Used to enable or disable the node_modules
directory when using npm packages.
compilerOptions
deno.json
can also act as a TypeScript configuration file and supports
most of the TS compiler options.
Deno encourages users to use the default TypeScript configuration to help sharing code.
See also Configuring TypeScript in Deno.
Full example
{
"compilerOptions": {
"allowJs": true,
"lib": ["deno.window"],
"strict": true
},
"lint": {
"include": ["src/"],
"exclude": ["src/testdata/", "data/fixtures/**/*.ts"],
"rules": {
"tags": ["recommended"],
"include": ["ban-untagged-todo"],
"exclude": ["no-unused-vars"]
}
},
"fmt": {
"useTabs": true,
"lineWidth": 80,
"indentWidth": 4,
"semiColons": false,
"singleQuote": true,
"proseWrap": "preserve",
"include": ["src/"],
"exclude": ["src/testdata/", "data/fixtures/**/*.ts"]
},
"lock": false,
"nodeModulesDir": true,
"test": {
"include": ["src/"],
"exclude": ["src/testdata/", "data/fixtures/**/*.ts"]
},
"tasks": {
"start": "deno run --allow-read main.ts"
},
"imports": {
"oak": "https://deno.land/x/oak@v12.4.0/mod.ts"
}
}
JSON schema
A JSON schema file is available for editors to provide autocompletion. The file is versioned and available at: https://deno.land/x/deno/cli/schemas/config-file.v1.json