Find unused source files in javascript / typescript projects.
While adding new code to our projects, we might forget to remove the old code. Linters warn us for unused code in a module, but they fail to report unused files.
unimported
analyzes your code by following the require/import statements starting from your entry file.
The result is a report showing which files are unimported, which dependencies are missing from your package.json
, and which dependencies can be removed from your package.json
.
Run the following command in the root of your project (next to package.json
). The result will be as shown under example
npx unimported
When running unimported from a directory that doesn't contain a package.json
, it will run from the first parent directory that does. To override this behavior, and run from an alternative work directory, use the [cwd]
positional argument:
npx unimported ~/dev/leaflet-geosearch
By providing the path as argument, unimported will start looking for the project root, starting at that location.
Output all options in your terminal:
npx unimported --help
This option will write the default ignore patterns to the .unimportedrc.json
settings files. This will enable you to easily adjust them to your needs.
npx unimported --init
Update, will write the current results to the ignore lists in .unimportedrc.json
. You want to use this option after running and verifying a full scan. Ignore lists are used to ignore certain false positives that could not be resolved properly. This is especially useful when running unimported
on a regular basis, or for example as part of a CI pipeline.
npx unimported --update
Running with the --fix
argument will automatically remove unimported files from your project. This is a destructive action, so make sure that any changes you find important, are committed to your repo.
npx unimported --fix
By default, flow types are stripped from files containing the @flow
pragma. When the --flow
argument is provided, types will be stripped from all files, regardless of the pragma. This flag defaults to false, but when flow-bin
is detected in one of the dependency lists in package.json
.
npx unimported --flow
You can drop in npx unimported
into your CI. It will fail if it finds any unimported files that are not explicitly set up in the unimported
config file.
Unimported uses a caching system to speed up recurring checks. This cache can be disabled using --no-cache
. Note that the cache should only be disabled if you are experiencing caching related problems.
npx unimported --no-cache
If you need to clear the cache, use --clear-cache
.
Delete the cache file and then exits without running. Note that clearing the cache will reduce performance.
npx unimported --clear-cache
Show the runtime config and then exists without running. The config displayed is a working copy created by merging arguments, your config file, and the applied preset.
npx unimported --show-config
Show the preset being used and then exists without running. Note that presets are dynamic and based on your project structure. The same preset can show a different setup for different projects based on the installed packages and available files.
npx unimported --show-preset react
Omit the preset name to get a list of available presets.
npx unimported --show-preset
Save the file as .unimportedrc.json
in the root of your project (next to package.json
)
{
"entry": ["src/main.ts", "src/pages/**/*.{js,ts}"],
"extensions": [".ts", ".js"],
"ignorePatterns": ["**/node_modules/**", "private/**"],
"ignoreUnresolved": ["some-npm-dependency"],
"ignoreUnimported": ["src/i18n/locales/en.ts", "src/i18n/locales/nl.ts"],
"ignoreUnused": ["bcrypt", "create-emotion"]
}
Custom module directory
You can also add an optional moduleDirectory
option to your configuration file to resolve dependencies from other directories than node_modules
. This setting defaults to node_modules
.
{
"moduleDirectory": ["node_modules", "src/app"]
}
Custom aliases
If you wish to use aliases to import your modules & these can't be imported
directly (e.g. tsconfig.json
in the case of Typescript or jsconfig.json
if you have one), there is an option aliases
to provide the correct path mapping:
{
"aliases": {
"@components/*": ["./components", "./components/*"]
}
}
Note: you may wish to also add the rootDir
option to specify the base path to
start looking for the aliases from:
{
"rootDir": "./src"
}
Path transformations
If you wish to transform paths before module resolution, there is an option pathTransforms
to specify regex search patterns and corresponding replacement values. Search patterns will be applied with the global flag and should not be enclosed by /
characters. Replacement values support all special replacement patterns supported by String.prototype.replaceAll().
Here is an example for transforming the extension for relative imports from ".js" to ".ts" (this is useful for TypeScript projects configured to output pure ESM).
{
"pathTransforms": {
"(\\..+)\\.js$": "$1.ts"
}
}
The report will look something like below. When a particular check didn't have any positive results, it's section will be excluded from the output.
Summary displays a quick overview of the results, showing the entry points that were used, and some statistics about the outcome.
These import statements could not be resolved. This can either be a reference to a local file. Or to a node_module
. In case of a node module, it can be that nothing is wrong. Maybe you're importing only types from a DefinitelyTyped
package. But as unimported
only compares against dependencies
, it can also be that you've added your module to the devDependencies
, and that's a problem.
To ignore specific results, add them to .unimportedrc.json#ignoreUnresolved
.
Some dependencies that are declared in your package.json, were not imported by your code. It should be possible to remove those packages from your project.
But, please double check. Maybe you need to move some dependencies to devDependencies
, or maybe it's a peer-dependency from another package. These are hints that something might be wrong. It's no guarantee.
To ignore specific results, add them to .unimportedrc.json#ignoreUnused
.
The files listed under unimported files
, are the files that exist in your code base, but are not part of your final bundle. It should be safe to delete those files.
For your convenience, some files are not shown, as we treat those as 'dev only' files which you might need. More about that below.
To ignore specific results, add them to .unimportedrc.json#ignoreUnimported
.
summary
────────────────────────────────────────────────
entry file 1 : src/client/main.js
entry file 2 : src/server/main.js
unresolved imports : 2
unused dependencies : 29
unimported files : 86
─────┬──────────────────────────────────────────
│ 2 unresolved imports
─────┼──────────────────────────────────────────
1 │ geojson
2 │ csstype
─────┴──────────────────────────────────────────
─────┬──────────────────────────────────────────
│ 29 unused dependencies
─────┼──────────────────────────────────────────
1 │ @babel/polyfill
2 │ @babel/runtime
.. │ ...
─────┴──────────────────────────────────────────
─────┬──────────────────────────────────────────
│ 7 unimported files
─────┼──────────────────────────────────────────
1 │ src/common/components/Button/messages.ts
2 │ src/common/configs/sentry/graphql.js
.. │ ...
─────┴──────────────────────────────────────────
Unimported
follows your import statements starting from one or more entry files. For nextjs projects, the entry files default to pages/**
. For Meteor projects, the entry files are read from the package.json#meteor.mainModule
key. Meteors eager loading is not supported, as that mode will load all files within your directory, regardless of import statements.
For all other project types, the entry point is looked up in the following order:
./package.json#source
./src/index
./src/main
./index
./main
./package.json#main
The last option is most likely never what you want, as the main field often points to a dist
folder. Analyzing a bundled asset is likely to result in false positives.
To specify custom entry points, add them to .unimportedrc.json#entry
.
extensions
The resolver scans for files with the following extensions, in this specific order:
.js
.jsx
.ts
.tsx
All other files are ignored.
To specify custom extensions, add your own list to .unimportedrc.json#extensions. Note that
unimported` won't merge settings! The custom list needs to be the full list of extension that you want to support.
ignored
Also ignored are files with paths matching the following patterns:
**/node_modules/**
**/*.tests.{js,jsx,ts,tsx}
**/*.spec.{js,jsx,ts,tsx}
In case unimported
is running in a Meteor
project, the following paths are being ignored as well:
packages/**
public/**
private/**
tests/**
To specify custom ignore paths, add your own patterns to .unimportedrc.json#ignorePatterns
. Note that unimported
won't merge settings! The custom list needs to be the full list of patterns that you want to ignore.
Common issues or known limitations of unimported.
At this moment, we don't support the export default from './x'
export syntax. Parsing files that contain those exports, will result in an error with a message like '\';\' expected
. If you make use of that part of the export default from proposal, you can consider a find/replace before running unimported
.
Please search for:
export default from
and replace it with
export { default } from
Please try clearing the cache if you have unexpected results, or keep getting the same results after changing the config file.
npx unimported --clear-cache
If you import declaration (.d.ts
) files in a TypeScript project you will need to add it as an extension to .unimportedrc.json
. Otherwise you will get "unresolved imports" warnings for imported declaration files.
{
"extensions": [".ts", ".d.ts"]
}
Thanks goes to these wonderful people (emoji key):
This project follows the all-contributors specification. Contributions of any kind welcome!