IHTSDO/component-identifier-service

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blogic/BulkIdCreation.js

Summary

Maintainability
D
1 day
Test Coverage

File BulkIdCreation.js has 258 lines of code (exceeds 250 allowed). Consider refactoring.
Open

/**
 * Created by ar on 3/8/17.
 */


Severity: Minor
Found in blogic/BulkIdCreation.js - About 2 hrs to fix

    Function relationshipIdBulkCreation has 53 lines of code (exceeds 25 allowed). Consider refactoring.
    Open

    var relationshipIdBulkCreation = function (namespace, partitionId, idsTotal, request, callback) {
    
    
        //console.log("step relationshipIdBulkCreation");
    
    
    Severity: Major
    Found in blogic/BulkIdCreation.js - About 2 hrs to fix

      Function conceptIdBulkCreation has 53 lines of code (exceeds 25 allowed). Consider refactoring.
      Open

      var conceptIdBulkCreation = function (namespace, partitionId, idsTotal, request, callback) {
      
      
          //console.log("step conceptIdBulkCreation");
      
      
      Severity: Major
      Found in blogic/BulkIdCreation.js - About 2 hrs to fix

        Function descriptionIdBulkCreation has 53 lines of code (exceeds 25 allowed). Consider refactoring.
        Open

        var descriptionIdBulkCreation = function (namespace, partitionId, idsTotal, request, callback) {
        
        
            //console.log("step descriptionIdBulkCreation");
        
        
        Severity: Major
        Found in blogic/BulkIdCreation.js - About 2 hrs to fix

          Function idsRetrieve has a Cognitive Complexity of 15 (exceeds 5 allowed). Consider refactoring.
          Open

          var idsRetrieve = function (request, callback) {
          
              if (request.partitionId.substr(1,1)=="0") {
                  conceptIdBulkCreation( request.namespace, request.partitionId, request.quantity, request, function(err, result){
          
          
          Severity: Minor
          Found in blogic/BulkIdCreation.js - About 1 hr to fix

          Cognitive Complexity

          Cognitive Complexity is a measure of how difficult a unit of code is to intuitively understand. Unlike Cyclomatic Complexity, which determines how difficult your code will be to test, Cognitive Complexity tells you how difficult your code will be to read and comprehend.

          A method's cognitive complexity is based on a few simple rules:

          • Code is not considered more complex when it uses shorthand that the language provides for collapsing multiple statements into one
          • Code is considered more complex for each "break in the linear flow of the code"
          • Code is considered more complex when "flow breaking structures are nested"

          Further reading

          Avoid deeply nested control flow statements.
          Open

                                                      if (err) {
                                                          var str = "[ERROR] " + (new Date()).getTime() + ": namespace=" + namespace + ", partition=" + partitionId + ". " + err;
                                                          console.log(str);
                                                      }
          Severity: Major
          Found in blogic/BulkIdCreation.js - About 45 mins to fix

            Avoid deeply nested control flow statements.
            Open

                                                            if (err) {
                                                                var str = "[ERROR] " + (new Date()).getTime() + ": namespace=" + namespace + ", partition=" + partitionId + ". " + err;
                                                                console.log(str);
                                                            }
            Severity: Major
            Found in blogic/BulkIdCreation.js - About 45 mins to fix

              Avoid deeply nested control flow statements.
              Open

                                                              if (err) {
                                                                  var str = "[ERROR] " + (new Date()).getTime() + ": namespace=" + namespace + ", partition=" + partitionId + ". " + err;
                                                                  console.log(str);
                                                              }
              Severity: Major
              Found in blogic/BulkIdCreation.js - About 45 mins to fix

                Function conceptIdBulkCreation has 5 arguments (exceeds 4 allowed). Consider refactoring.
                Open

                var conceptIdBulkCreation = function (namespace, partitionId, idsTotal, request, callback) {
                Severity: Minor
                Found in blogic/BulkIdCreation.js - About 35 mins to fix

                  Function testQuantity has 5 arguments (exceeds 4 allowed). Consider refactoring.
                  Open

                  var testQuantity = function (auxTable, namespace, partitionId, idsTotal, callback) {
                  Severity: Minor
                  Found in blogic/BulkIdCreation.js - About 35 mins to fix

                    Function createIds has 5 arguments (exceeds 4 allowed). Consider refactoring.
                    Open

                    var createIds = function (auxTable, namespace, partitionId, idsTotal, callback) {
                    Severity: Minor
                    Found in blogic/BulkIdCreation.js - About 35 mins to fix

                      Function relationshipIdBulkCreation has 5 arguments (exceeds 4 allowed). Consider refactoring.
                      Open

                      var relationshipIdBulkCreation = function (namespace, partitionId, idsTotal, request, callback) {
                      Severity: Minor
                      Found in blogic/BulkIdCreation.js - About 35 mins to fix

                        Function descriptionIdBulkCreation has 5 arguments (exceeds 4 allowed). Consider refactoring.
                        Open

                        var descriptionIdBulkCreation = function (namespace, partitionId, idsTotal, request, callback) {
                        Severity: Minor
                        Found in blogic/BulkIdCreation.js - About 35 mins to fix

                          Expected return with your callback function.
                          Open

                                      callback(err,null);
                          Severity: Minor
                          Found in blogic/BulkIdCreation.js by eslint

                          Enforce Return After Callback (callback-return)

                          The callback pattern is at the heart of most I/O and event-driven programming in JavaScript.

                          function doSomething(err, callback) {
                              if (err) {
                                  return callback(err);
                              }
                              callback();
                          }

                          To prevent calling the callback multiple times it is important to return anytime the callback is triggered outside of the main function body. Neglecting this technique often leads to issues where you do something more than once. For example, in the case of an HTTP request, you may try to send HTTP headers more than once leading Node.js to throw a Can't render headers after they are sent to the client. error.

                          Rule Details

                          This rule is aimed at ensuring that callbacks used outside of the main function block are always part-of or immediately preceding a return statement. This rule decides what is a callback based on the name of the function being called.

                          Options

                          The rule takes a single option - an array of possible callback names - which may include object methods. The default callback names are callback, cb, next.

                          Default callback names

                          Examples of incorrect code for this rule with the default ["callback", "cb", "next"] option:

                          /*eslint callback-return: "error"*/
                          
                          function foo(err, callback) {
                              if (err) {
                                  callback(err);
                              }
                              callback();
                          }

                          Examples of correct code for this rule with the default ["callback", "cb", "next"] option:

                          /*eslint callback-return: "error"*/
                          
                          function foo(err, callback) {
                              if (err) {
                                  return callback(err);
                              }
                              callback();
                          }

                          Supplied callback names

                          Examples of incorrect code for this rule with the option ["done", "send.error", "send.success"]:

                          /*eslint callback-return: ["error", ["done", "send.error", "send.success"]]*/
                          
                          function foo(err, done) {
                              if (err) {
                                  done(err);
                              }
                              done();
                          }
                          
                          function bar(err, send) {
                              if (err) {
                                  send.error(err);
                              }
                              send.success();
                          }

                          Examples of correct code for this rule with the option ["done", "send.error", "send.success"]:

                          /*eslint callback-return: ["error", ["done", "send.error", "send.success"]]*/
                          
                          function foo(err, done) {
                              if (err) {
                                  return done(err);
                              }
                              done();
                          }
                          
                          function bar(err, send) {
                              if (err) {
                                  return send.error(err);
                              }
                              send.success();
                          }

                          Known Limitations

                          Because it is difficult to understand the meaning of a program through static analysis, this rule has limitations:

                          • false negatives when this rule reports correct code, but the program calls the callback more than one time (which is incorrect behavior)
                          • false positives when this rule reports incorrect code, but the program calls the callback only one time (which is correct behavior)

                          Passing the callback by reference

                          The static analysis of this rule does not detect that the program calls the callback if it is an argument of a function (for example, setTimeout).

                          Example of a false negative when this rule reports correct code:

                          /*eslint callback-return: "error"*/
                          
                          function foo(err, callback) {
                              if (err) {
                                  setTimeout(callback, 0); // this is bad, but WILL NOT warn
                              }
                              callback();
                          }

                          Triggering the callback within a nested function

                          The static analysis of this rule does not detect that the program calls the callback from within a nested function or an immediately-invoked function expression (IIFE).

                          Example of a false negative when this rule reports correct code:

                          /*eslint callback-return: "error"*/
                          
                          function foo(err, callback) {
                              if (err) {
                                  process.nextTick(function() {
                                      return callback(); // this is bad, but WILL NOT warn
                                  });
                              }
                              callback();
                          }

                          If/else statements

                          The static analysis of this rule does not detect that the program calls the callback only one time in each branch of an if statement.

                          Example of a false positive when this rule reports incorrect code:

                          /*eslint callback-return: "error"*/
                          
                          function foo(err, callback) {
                              if (err) {
                                  callback(err); // this is fine, but WILL warn
                              } else {
                                  callback();    // this is fine, but WILL warn
                              }
                          }

                          When Not To Use It

                          There are some cases where you might want to call a callback function more than once. In those cases this rule may lead to incorrect behavior. In those cases you may want to reserve a special name for those callbacks and not include that in the list of callbacks that trigger warnings.

                          Further Reading

                          Related Rules

                          Expected '===' and instead saw '=='.
                          Open

                              }else if (request.partitionId.substr(1,1)=="1") {
                          Severity: Minor
                          Found in blogic/BulkIdCreation.js by eslint

                          Require === and !== (eqeqeq)

                          It is considered good practice to use the type-safe equality operators === and !== instead of their regular counterparts == and !=.

                          The reason for this is that == and != do type coercion which follows the rather obscure Abstract Equality Comparison Algorithm. For instance, the following statements are all considered true:

                          • [] == false
                          • [] == ![]
                          • 3 == "03"

                          If one of those occurs in an innocent-looking statement such as a == b the actual problem is very difficult to spot.

                          Rule Details

                          This rule is aimed at eliminating the type-unsafe equality operators.

                          Examples of incorrect code for this rule:

                          /*eslint eqeqeq: "error"*/
                          
                          if (x == 42) { }
                          
                          if ("" == text) { }
                          
                          if (obj.getStuff() != undefined) { }

                          The --fix option on the command line automatically fixes some problems reported by this rule. A problem is only fixed if one of the operands is a typeof expression, or if both operands are literals with the same type.

                          Options

                          always

                          The "always" option (default) enforces the use of === and !== in every situation (except when you opt-in to more specific handling of null [see below]).

                          Examples of incorrect code for the "always" option:

                          /*eslint eqeqeq: ["error", "always"]*/
                          
                          a == b
                          foo == true
                          bananas != 1
                          value == undefined
                          typeof foo == 'undefined'
                          'hello' != 'world'
                          0 == 0
                          true == true
                          foo == null

                          Examples of correct code for the "always" option:

                          /*eslint eqeqeq: ["error", "always"]*/
                          
                          a === b
                          foo === true
                          bananas !== 1
                          value === undefined
                          typeof foo === 'undefined'
                          'hello' !== 'world'
                          0 === 0
                          true === true
                          foo === null

                          This rule optionally takes a second argument, which should be an object with the following supported properties:

                          • "null": Customize how this rule treats null literals. Possible values:
                            • always (default) - Always use === or !==.
                            • never - Never use === or !== with null.
                            • ignore - Do not apply this rule to null.

                          smart

                          The "smart" option enforces the use of === and !== except for these cases:

                          • Comparing two literal values
                          • Evaluating the value of typeof
                          • Comparing against null

                          Examples of incorrect code for the "smart" option:

                          /*eslint eqeqeq: ["error", "smart"]*/
                          
                          // comparing two variables requires ===
                          a == b
                          
                          // only one side is a literal
                          foo == true
                          bananas != 1
                          
                          // comparing to undefined requires ===
                          value == undefined

                          Examples of correct code for the "smart" option:

                          /*eslint eqeqeq: ["error", "smart"]*/
                          
                          typeof foo == 'undefined'
                          'hello' != 'world'
                          0 == 0
                          true == true
                          foo == null

                          allow-null

                          Deprecated: Instead of using this option use "always" and pass a "null" option property with value "ignore". This will tell eslint to always enforce strict equality except when comparing with the null literal.

                          ["error", "always", {"null": "ignore"}]

                          When Not To Use It

                          If you don't want to enforce a style for using equality operators, then it's safe to disable this rule. Source: http://eslint.org/docs/rules/

                          Unnecessary semicolon.
                          Open

                          var idRepo = require("./../blogic/IdReposition");;
                          Severity: Minor
                          Found in blogic/BulkIdCreation.js by eslint

                          disallow unnecessary semicolons (no-extra-semi)

                          Typing mistakes and misunderstandings about where semicolons are required can lead to semicolons that are unnecessary. While not technically an error, extra semicolons can cause confusion when reading code.

                          Rule Details

                          This rule disallows unnecessary semicolons.

                          Examples of incorrect code for this rule:

                          /*eslint no-extra-semi: "error"*/
                          
                          var x = 5;;
                          
                          function foo() {
                              // code
                          };

                          Examples of correct code for this rule:

                          /*eslint no-extra-semi: "error"*/
                          
                          var x = 5;
                          
                          var foo = function() {
                              // code
                          };

                          When Not To Use It

                          If you intentionally use extra semicolons then you can disable this rule.

                          Related Rules

                          Expected return with your callback function.
                          Open

                                                              callback(null, result);
                          Severity: Minor
                          Found in blogic/BulkIdCreation.js by eslint

                          Enforce Return After Callback (callback-return)

                          The callback pattern is at the heart of most I/O and event-driven programming in JavaScript.

                          function doSomething(err, callback) {
                              if (err) {
                                  return callback(err);
                              }
                              callback();
                          }

                          To prevent calling the callback multiple times it is important to return anytime the callback is triggered outside of the main function body. Neglecting this technique often leads to issues where you do something more than once. For example, in the case of an HTTP request, you may try to send HTTP headers more than once leading Node.js to throw a Can't render headers after they are sent to the client. error.

                          Rule Details

                          This rule is aimed at ensuring that callbacks used outside of the main function block are always part-of or immediately preceding a return statement. This rule decides what is a callback based on the name of the function being called.

                          Options

                          The rule takes a single option - an array of possible callback names - which may include object methods. The default callback names are callback, cb, next.

                          Default callback names

                          Examples of incorrect code for this rule with the default ["callback", "cb", "next"] option:

                          /*eslint callback-return: "error"*/
                          
                          function foo(err, callback) {
                              if (err) {
                                  callback(err);
                              }
                              callback();
                          }

                          Examples of correct code for this rule with the default ["callback", "cb", "next"] option:

                          /*eslint callback-return: "error"*/
                          
                          function foo(err, callback) {
                              if (err) {
                                  return callback(err);
                              }
                              callback();
                          }

                          Supplied callback names

                          Examples of incorrect code for this rule with the option ["done", "send.error", "send.success"]:

                          /*eslint callback-return: ["error", ["done", "send.error", "send.success"]]*/
                          
                          function foo(err, done) {
                              if (err) {
                                  done(err);
                              }
                              done();
                          }
                          
                          function bar(err, send) {
                              if (err) {
                                  send.error(err);
                              }
                              send.success();
                          }

                          Examples of correct code for this rule with the option ["done", "send.error", "send.success"]:

                          /*eslint callback-return: ["error", ["done", "send.error", "send.success"]]*/
                          
                          function foo(err, done) {
                              if (err) {
                                  return done(err);
                              }
                              done();
                          }
                          
                          function bar(err, send) {
                              if (err) {
                                  return send.error(err);
                              }
                              send.success();
                          }

                          Known Limitations

                          Because it is difficult to understand the meaning of a program through static analysis, this rule has limitations:

                          • false negatives when this rule reports correct code, but the program calls the callback more than one time (which is incorrect behavior)
                          • false positives when this rule reports incorrect code, but the program calls the callback only one time (which is correct behavior)

                          Passing the callback by reference

                          The static analysis of this rule does not detect that the program calls the callback if it is an argument of a function (for example, setTimeout).

                          Example of a false negative when this rule reports correct code:

                          /*eslint callback-return: "error"*/
                          
                          function foo(err, callback) {
                              if (err) {
                                  setTimeout(callback, 0); // this is bad, but WILL NOT warn
                              }
                              callback();
                          }

                          Triggering the callback within a nested function

                          The static analysis of this rule does not detect that the program calls the callback from within a nested function or an immediately-invoked function expression (IIFE).

                          Example of a false negative when this rule reports correct code:

                          /*eslint callback-return: "error"*/
                          
                          function foo(err, callback) {
                              if (err) {
                                  process.nextTick(function() {
                                      return callback(); // this is bad, but WILL NOT warn
                                  });
                              }
                              callback();
                          }

                          If/else statements

                          The static analysis of this rule does not detect that the program calls the callback only one time in each branch of an if statement.

                          Example of a false positive when this rule reports incorrect code:

                          /*eslint callback-return: "error"*/
                          
                          function foo(err, callback) {
                              if (err) {
                                  callback(err); // this is fine, but WILL warn
                              } else {
                                  callback();    // this is fine, but WILL warn
                              }
                          }

                          When Not To Use It

                          There are some cases where you might want to call a callback function more than once. In those cases this rule may lead to incorrect behavior. In those cases you may want to reserve a special name for those callbacks and not include that in the list of callbacks that trigger warnings.

                          Further Reading

                          Related Rules

                          Expected '===' and instead saw '=='.
                          Open

                                  if (err == null) {
                          Severity: Minor
                          Found in blogic/BulkIdCreation.js by eslint

                          Require === and !== (eqeqeq)

                          It is considered good practice to use the type-safe equality operators === and !== instead of their regular counterparts == and !=.

                          The reason for this is that == and != do type coercion which follows the rather obscure Abstract Equality Comparison Algorithm. For instance, the following statements are all considered true:

                          • [] == false
                          • [] == ![]
                          • 3 == "03"

                          If one of those occurs in an innocent-looking statement such as a == b the actual problem is very difficult to spot.

                          Rule Details

                          This rule is aimed at eliminating the type-unsafe equality operators.

                          Examples of incorrect code for this rule:

                          /*eslint eqeqeq: "error"*/
                          
                          if (x == 42) { }
                          
                          if ("" == text) { }
                          
                          if (obj.getStuff() != undefined) { }

                          The --fix option on the command line automatically fixes some problems reported by this rule. A problem is only fixed if one of the operands is a typeof expression, or if both operands are literals with the same type.

                          Options

                          always

                          The "always" option (default) enforces the use of === and !== in every situation (except when you opt-in to more specific handling of null [see below]).

                          Examples of incorrect code for the "always" option:

                          /*eslint eqeqeq: ["error", "always"]*/
                          
                          a == b
                          foo == true
                          bananas != 1
                          value == undefined
                          typeof foo == 'undefined'
                          'hello' != 'world'
                          0 == 0
                          true == true
                          foo == null

                          Examples of correct code for the "always" option:

                          /*eslint eqeqeq: ["error", "always"]*/
                          
                          a === b
                          foo === true
                          bananas !== 1
                          value === undefined
                          typeof foo === 'undefined'
                          'hello' !== 'world'
                          0 === 0
                          true === true
                          foo === null

                          This rule optionally takes a second argument, which should be an object with the following supported properties:

                          • "null": Customize how this rule treats null literals. Possible values:
                            • always (default) - Always use === or !==.
                            • never - Never use === or !== with null.
                            • ignore - Do not apply this rule to null.

                          smart

                          The "smart" option enforces the use of === and !== except for these cases:

                          • Comparing two literal values
                          • Evaluating the value of typeof
                          • Comparing against null

                          Examples of incorrect code for the "smart" option:

                          /*eslint eqeqeq: ["error", "smart"]*/
                          
                          // comparing two variables requires ===
                          a == b
                          
                          // only one side is a literal
                          foo == true
                          bananas != 1
                          
                          // comparing to undefined requires ===
                          value == undefined

                          Examples of correct code for the "smart" option:

                          /*eslint eqeqeq: ["error", "smart"]*/
                          
                          typeof foo == 'undefined'
                          'hello' != 'world'
                          0 == 0
                          true == true
                          foo == null

                          allow-null

                          Deprecated: Instead of using this option use "always" and pass a "null" option property with value "ignore". This will tell eslint to always enforce strict equality except when comparing with the null literal.

                          ["error", "always", {"null": "ignore"}]

                          When Not To Use It

                          If you don't want to enforce a style for using equality operators, then it's safe to disable this rule. Source: http://eslint.org/docs/rules/

                          Expected '===' and instead saw '=='.
                          Open

                              if (request.partitionId.substr(1,1)=="0") {
                          Severity: Minor
                          Found in blogic/BulkIdCreation.js by eslint

                          Require === and !== (eqeqeq)

                          It is considered good practice to use the type-safe equality operators === and !== instead of their regular counterparts == and !=.

                          The reason for this is that == and != do type coercion which follows the rather obscure Abstract Equality Comparison Algorithm. For instance, the following statements are all considered true:

                          • [] == false
                          • [] == ![]
                          • 3 == "03"

                          If one of those occurs in an innocent-looking statement such as a == b the actual problem is very difficult to spot.

                          Rule Details

                          This rule is aimed at eliminating the type-unsafe equality operators.

                          Examples of incorrect code for this rule:

                          /*eslint eqeqeq: "error"*/
                          
                          if (x == 42) { }
                          
                          if ("" == text) { }
                          
                          if (obj.getStuff() != undefined) { }

                          The --fix option on the command line automatically fixes some problems reported by this rule. A problem is only fixed if one of the operands is a typeof expression, or if both operands are literals with the same type.

                          Options

                          always

                          The "always" option (default) enforces the use of === and !== in every situation (except when you opt-in to more specific handling of null [see below]).

                          Examples of incorrect code for the "always" option:

                          /*eslint eqeqeq: ["error", "always"]*/
                          
                          a == b
                          foo == true
                          bananas != 1
                          value == undefined
                          typeof foo == 'undefined'
                          'hello' != 'world'
                          0 == 0
                          true == true
                          foo == null

                          Examples of correct code for the "always" option:

                          /*eslint eqeqeq: ["error", "always"]*/
                          
                          a === b
                          foo === true
                          bananas !== 1
                          value === undefined
                          typeof foo === 'undefined'
                          'hello' !== 'world'
                          0 === 0
                          true === true
                          foo === null

                          This rule optionally takes a second argument, which should be an object with the following supported properties:

                          • "null": Customize how this rule treats null literals. Possible values:
                            • always (default) - Always use === or !==.
                            • never - Never use === or !== with null.
                            • ignore - Do not apply this rule to null.

                          smart

                          The "smart" option enforces the use of === and !== except for these cases:

                          • Comparing two literal values
                          • Evaluating the value of typeof
                          • Comparing against null

                          Examples of incorrect code for the "smart" option:

                          /*eslint eqeqeq: ["error", "smart"]*/
                          
                          // comparing two variables requires ===
                          a == b
                          
                          // only one side is a literal
                          foo == true
                          bananas != 1
                          
                          // comparing to undefined requires ===
                          value == undefined

                          Examples of correct code for the "smart" option:

                          /*eslint eqeqeq: ["error", "smart"]*/
                          
                          typeof foo == 'undefined'
                          'hello' != 'world'
                          0 == 0
                          true == true
                          foo == null

                          allow-null

                          Deprecated: Instead of using this option use "always" and pass a "null" option property with value "ignore". This will tell eslint to always enforce strict equality except when comparing with the null literal.

                          ["error", "always", {"null": "ignore"}]

                          When Not To Use It

                          If you don't want to enforce a style for using equality operators, then it's safe to disable this rule. Source: http://eslint.org/docs/rules/

                          Expected return with your callback function.
                          Open

                                          callback(null, result);
                          Severity: Minor
                          Found in blogic/BulkIdCreation.js by eslint

                          Enforce Return After Callback (callback-return)

                          The callback pattern is at the heart of most I/O and event-driven programming in JavaScript.

                          function doSomething(err, callback) {
                              if (err) {
                                  return callback(err);
                              }
                              callback();
                          }

                          To prevent calling the callback multiple times it is important to return anytime the callback is triggered outside of the main function body. Neglecting this technique often leads to issues where you do something more than once. For example, in the case of an HTTP request, you may try to send HTTP headers more than once leading Node.js to throw a Can't render headers after they are sent to the client. error.

                          Rule Details

                          This rule is aimed at ensuring that callbacks used outside of the main function block are always part-of or immediately preceding a return statement. This rule decides what is a callback based on the name of the function being called.

                          Options

                          The rule takes a single option - an array of possible callback names - which may include object methods. The default callback names are callback, cb, next.

                          Default callback names

                          Examples of incorrect code for this rule with the default ["callback", "cb", "next"] option:

                          /*eslint callback-return: "error"*/
                          
                          function foo(err, callback) {
                              if (err) {
                                  callback(err);
                              }
                              callback();
                          }

                          Examples of correct code for this rule with the default ["callback", "cb", "next"] option:

                          /*eslint callback-return: "error"*/
                          
                          function foo(err, callback) {
                              if (err) {
                                  return callback(err);
                              }
                              callback();
                          }

                          Supplied callback names

                          Examples of incorrect code for this rule with the option ["done", "send.error", "send.success"]:

                          /*eslint callback-return: ["error", ["done", "send.error", "send.success"]]*/
                          
                          function foo(err, done) {
                              if (err) {
                                  done(err);
                              }
                              done();
                          }
                          
                          function bar(err, send) {
                              if (err) {
                                  send.error(err);
                              }
                              send.success();
                          }

                          Examples of correct code for this rule with the option ["done", "send.error", "send.success"]:

                          /*eslint callback-return: ["error", ["done", "send.error", "send.success"]]*/
                          
                          function foo(err, done) {
                              if (err) {
                                  return done(err);
                              }
                              done();
                          }
                          
                          function bar(err, send) {
                              if (err) {
                                  return send.error(err);
                              }
                              send.success();
                          }

                          Known Limitations

                          Because it is difficult to understand the meaning of a program through static analysis, this rule has limitations:

                          • false negatives when this rule reports correct code, but the program calls the callback more than one time (which is incorrect behavior)
                          • false positives when this rule reports incorrect code, but the program calls the callback only one time (which is correct behavior)

                          Passing the callback by reference

                          The static analysis of this rule does not detect that the program calls the callback if it is an argument of a function (for example, setTimeout).

                          Example of a false negative when this rule reports correct code:

                          /*eslint callback-return: "error"*/
                          
                          function foo(err, callback) {
                              if (err) {
                                  setTimeout(callback, 0); // this is bad, but WILL NOT warn
                              }
                              callback();
                          }

                          Triggering the callback within a nested function

                          The static analysis of this rule does not detect that the program calls the callback from within a nested function or an immediately-invoked function expression (IIFE).

                          Example of a false negative when this rule reports correct code:

                          /*eslint callback-return: "error"*/
                          
                          function foo(err, callback) {
                              if (err) {
                                  process.nextTick(function() {
                                      return callback(); // this is bad, but WILL NOT warn
                                  });
                              }
                              callback();
                          }

                          If/else statements

                          The static analysis of this rule does not detect that the program calls the callback only one time in each branch of an if statement.

                          Example of a false positive when this rule reports incorrect code:

                          /*eslint callback-return: "error"*/
                          
                          function foo(err, callback) {
                              if (err) {
                                  callback(err); // this is fine, but WILL warn
                              } else {
                                  callback();    // this is fine, but WILL warn
                              }
                          }

                          When Not To Use It

                          There are some cases where you might want to call a callback function more than once. In those cases this rule may lead to incorrect behavior. In those cases you may want to reserve a special name for those callbacks and not include that in the list of callbacks that trigger warnings.

                          Further Reading

                          Related Rules

                          Expected return with your callback function.
                          Open

                                                  callback(null);
                          Severity: Minor
                          Found in blogic/BulkIdCreation.js by eslint

                          Enforce Return After Callback (callback-return)

                          The callback pattern is at the heart of most I/O and event-driven programming in JavaScript.

                          function doSomething(err, callback) {
                              if (err) {
                                  return callback(err);
                              }
                              callback();
                          }

                          To prevent calling the callback multiple times it is important to return anytime the callback is triggered outside of the main function body. Neglecting this technique often leads to issues where you do something more than once. For example, in the case of an HTTP request, you may try to send HTTP headers more than once leading Node.js to throw a Can't render headers after they are sent to the client. error.

                          Rule Details

                          This rule is aimed at ensuring that callbacks used outside of the main function block are always part-of or immediately preceding a return statement. This rule decides what is a callback based on the name of the function being called.

                          Options

                          The rule takes a single option - an array of possible callback names - which may include object methods. The default callback names are callback, cb, next.

                          Default callback names

                          Examples of incorrect code for this rule with the default ["callback", "cb", "next"] option:

                          /*eslint callback-return: "error"*/
                          
                          function foo(err, callback) {
                              if (err) {
                                  callback(err);
                              }
                              callback();
                          }

                          Examples of correct code for this rule with the default ["callback", "cb", "next"] option:

                          /*eslint callback-return: "error"*/
                          
                          function foo(err, callback) {
                              if (err) {
                                  return callback(err);
                              }
                              callback();
                          }

                          Supplied callback names

                          Examples of incorrect code for this rule with the option ["done", "send.error", "send.success"]:

                          /*eslint callback-return: ["error", ["done", "send.error", "send.success"]]*/
                          
                          function foo(err, done) {
                              if (err) {
                                  done(err);
                              }
                              done();
                          }
                          
                          function bar(err, send) {
                              if (err) {
                                  send.error(err);
                              }
                              send.success();
                          }

                          Examples of correct code for this rule with the option ["done", "send.error", "send.success"]:

                          /*eslint callback-return: ["error", ["done", "send.error", "send.success"]]*/
                          
                          function foo(err, done) {
                              if (err) {
                                  return done(err);
                              }
                              done();
                          }
                          
                          function bar(err, send) {
                              if (err) {
                                  return send.error(err);
                              }
                              send.success();
                          }

                          Known Limitations

                          Because it is difficult to understand the meaning of a program through static analysis, this rule has limitations:

                          • false negatives when this rule reports correct code, but the program calls the callback more than one time (which is incorrect behavior)
                          • false positives when this rule reports incorrect code, but the program calls the callback only one time (which is correct behavior)

                          Passing the callback by reference

                          The static analysis of this rule does not detect that the program calls the callback if it is an argument of a function (for example, setTimeout).

                          Example of a false negative when this rule reports correct code:

                          /*eslint callback-return: "error"*/
                          
                          function foo(err, callback) {
                              if (err) {
                                  setTimeout(callback, 0); // this is bad, but WILL NOT warn
                              }
                              callback();
                          }

                          Triggering the callback within a nested function

                          The static analysis of this rule does not detect that the program calls the callback from within a nested function or an immediately-invoked function expression (IIFE).

                          Example of a false negative when this rule reports correct code:

                          /*eslint callback-return: "error"*/
                          
                          function foo(err, callback) {
                              if (err) {
                                  process.nextTick(function() {
                                      return callback(); // this is bad, but WILL NOT warn
                                  });
                              }
                              callback();
                          }

                          If/else statements

                          The static analysis of this rule does not detect that the program calls the callback only one time in each branch of an if statement.

                          Example of a false positive when this rule reports incorrect code:

                          /*eslint callback-return: "error"*/
                          
                          function foo(err, callback) {
                              if (err) {
                                  callback(err); // this is fine, but WILL warn
                              } else {
                                  callback();    // this is fine, but WILL warn
                              }
                          }

                          When Not To Use It

                          There are some cases where you might want to call a callback function more than once. In those cases this rule may lead to incorrect behavior. In those cases you may want to reserve a special name for those callbacks and not include that in the list of callbacks that trigger warnings.

                          Further Reading

                          Related Rules

                          Expected '===' and instead saw '=='.
                          Open

                              }else if (request.partitionId.substr(1,1)=="2") {
                          Severity: Minor
                          Found in blogic/BulkIdCreation.js by eslint

                          Require === and !== (eqeqeq)

                          It is considered good practice to use the type-safe equality operators === and !== instead of their regular counterparts == and !=.

                          The reason for this is that == and != do type coercion which follows the rather obscure Abstract Equality Comparison Algorithm. For instance, the following statements are all considered true:

                          • [] == false
                          • [] == ![]
                          • 3 == "03"

                          If one of those occurs in an innocent-looking statement such as a == b the actual problem is very difficult to spot.

                          Rule Details

                          This rule is aimed at eliminating the type-unsafe equality operators.

                          Examples of incorrect code for this rule:

                          /*eslint eqeqeq: "error"*/
                          
                          if (x == 42) { }
                          
                          if ("" == text) { }
                          
                          if (obj.getStuff() != undefined) { }

                          The --fix option on the command line automatically fixes some problems reported by this rule. A problem is only fixed if one of the operands is a typeof expression, or if both operands are literals with the same type.

                          Options

                          always

                          The "always" option (default) enforces the use of === and !== in every situation (except when you opt-in to more specific handling of null [see below]).

                          Examples of incorrect code for the "always" option:

                          /*eslint eqeqeq: ["error", "always"]*/
                          
                          a == b
                          foo == true
                          bananas != 1
                          value == undefined
                          typeof foo == 'undefined'
                          'hello' != 'world'
                          0 == 0
                          true == true
                          foo == null

                          Examples of correct code for the "always" option:

                          /*eslint eqeqeq: ["error", "always"]*/
                          
                          a === b
                          foo === true
                          bananas !== 1
                          value === undefined
                          typeof foo === 'undefined'
                          'hello' !== 'world'
                          0 === 0
                          true === true
                          foo === null

                          This rule optionally takes a second argument, which should be an object with the following supported properties:

                          • "null": Customize how this rule treats null literals. Possible values:
                            • always (default) - Always use === or !==.
                            • never - Never use === or !== with null.
                            • ignore - Do not apply this rule to null.

                          smart

                          The "smart" option enforces the use of === and !== except for these cases:

                          • Comparing two literal values
                          • Evaluating the value of typeof
                          • Comparing against null

                          Examples of incorrect code for the "smart" option:

                          /*eslint eqeqeq: ["error", "smart"]*/
                          
                          // comparing two variables requires ===
                          a == b
                          
                          // only one side is a literal
                          foo == true
                          bananas != 1
                          
                          // comparing to undefined requires ===
                          value == undefined

                          Examples of correct code for the "smart" option:

                          /*eslint eqeqeq: ["error", "smart"]*/
                          
                          typeof foo == 'undefined'
                          'hello' != 'world'
                          0 == 0
                          true == true
                          foo == null

                          allow-null

                          Deprecated: Instead of using this option use "always" and pass a "null" option property with value "ignore". This will tell eslint to always enforce strict equality except when comparing with the null literal.

                          ["error", "always", {"null": "ignore"}]

                          When Not To Use It

                          If you don't want to enforce a style for using equality operators, then it's safe to disable this rule. Source: http://eslint.org/docs/rules/

                          Expected return with your callback function.
                          Open

                                                  callback (error,null);
                          Severity: Minor
                          Found in blogic/BulkIdCreation.js by eslint

                          Enforce Return After Callback (callback-return)

                          The callback pattern is at the heart of most I/O and event-driven programming in JavaScript.

                          function doSomething(err, callback) {
                              if (err) {
                                  return callback(err);
                              }
                              callback();
                          }

                          To prevent calling the callback multiple times it is important to return anytime the callback is triggered outside of the main function body. Neglecting this technique often leads to issues where you do something more than once. For example, in the case of an HTTP request, you may try to send HTTP headers more than once leading Node.js to throw a Can't render headers after they are sent to the client. error.

                          Rule Details

                          This rule is aimed at ensuring that callbacks used outside of the main function block are always part-of or immediately preceding a return statement. This rule decides what is a callback based on the name of the function being called.

                          Options

                          The rule takes a single option - an array of possible callback names - which may include object methods. The default callback names are callback, cb, next.

                          Default callback names

                          Examples of incorrect code for this rule with the default ["callback", "cb", "next"] option:

                          /*eslint callback-return: "error"*/
                          
                          function foo(err, callback) {
                              if (err) {
                                  callback(err);
                              }
                              callback();
                          }

                          Examples of correct code for this rule with the default ["callback", "cb", "next"] option:

                          /*eslint callback-return: "error"*/
                          
                          function foo(err, callback) {
                              if (err) {
                                  return callback(err);
                              }
                              callback();
                          }

                          Supplied callback names

                          Examples of incorrect code for this rule with the option ["done", "send.error", "send.success"]:

                          /*eslint callback-return: ["error", ["done", "send.error", "send.success"]]*/
                          
                          function foo(err, done) {
                              if (err) {
                                  done(err);
                              }
                              done();
                          }
                          
                          function bar(err, send) {
                              if (err) {
                                  send.error(err);
                              }
                              send.success();
                          }

                          Examples of correct code for this rule with the option ["done", "send.error", "send.success"]:

                          /*eslint callback-return: ["error", ["done", "send.error", "send.success"]]*/
                          
                          function foo(err, done) {
                              if (err) {
                                  return done(err);
                              }
                              done();
                          }
                          
                          function bar(err, send) {
                              if (err) {
                                  return send.error(err);
                              }
                              send.success();
                          }

                          Known Limitations

                          Because it is difficult to understand the meaning of a program through static analysis, this rule has limitations:

                          • false negatives when this rule reports correct code, but the program calls the callback more than one time (which is incorrect behavior)
                          • false positives when this rule reports incorrect code, but the program calls the callback only one time (which is correct behavior)

                          Passing the callback by reference

                          The static analysis of this rule does not detect that the program calls the callback if it is an argument of a function (for example, setTimeout).

                          Example of a false negative when this rule reports correct code:

                          /*eslint callback-return: "error"*/
                          
                          function foo(err, callback) {
                              if (err) {
                                  setTimeout(callback, 0); // this is bad, but WILL NOT warn
                              }
                              callback();
                          }

                          Triggering the callback within a nested function

                          The static analysis of this rule does not detect that the program calls the callback from within a nested function or an immediately-invoked function expression (IIFE).

                          Example of a false negative when this rule reports correct code:

                          /*eslint callback-return: "error"*/
                          
                          function foo(err, callback) {
                              if (err) {
                                  process.nextTick(function() {
                                      return callback(); // this is bad, but WILL NOT warn
                                  });
                              }
                              callback();
                          }

                          If/else statements

                          The static analysis of this rule does not detect that the program calls the callback only one time in each branch of an if statement.

                          Example of a false positive when this rule reports incorrect code:

                          /*eslint callback-return: "error"*/
                          
                          function foo(err, callback) {
                              if (err) {
                                  callback(err); // this is fine, but WILL warn
                              } else {
                                  callback();    // this is fine, but WILL warn
                              }
                          }

                          When Not To Use It

                          There are some cases where you might want to call a callback function more than once. In those cases this rule may lead to incorrect behavior. In those cases you may want to reserve a special name for those callbacks and not include that in the list of callbacks that trigger warnings.

                          Further Reading

                          Related Rules

                          Use ‘===’ to compare with ‘null’.
                          Open

                                  if (err == null) {
                          Severity: Minor
                          Found in blogic/BulkIdCreation.js by eslint

                          Disallow Null Comparisons (no-eq-null)

                          Comparing to null without a type-checking operator (== or !=), can have unintended results as the comparison will evaluate to true when comparing to not just a null, but also an undefined value.

                          if (foo == null) {
                            bar();
                          }

                          Rule Details

                          The no-eq-null rule aims reduce potential bug and unwanted behavior by ensuring that comparisons to null only match null, and not also undefined. As such it will flag comparisons to null when using == and !=.

                          Examples of incorrect code for this rule:

                          /*eslint no-eq-null: "error"*/
                          
                          if (foo == null) {
                            bar();
                          }
                          
                          while (qux != null) {
                            baz();
                          }

                          Examples of correct code for this rule:

                          /*eslint no-eq-null: "error"*/
                          
                          if (foo === null) {
                            bar();
                          }
                          
                          while (qux !== null) {
                            baz();
                          }

                          Source: http://eslint.org/docs/rules/

                          Expected return with your callback function.
                          Open

                                          callback(null);
                          Severity: Minor
                          Found in blogic/BulkIdCreation.js by eslint

                          Enforce Return After Callback (callback-return)

                          The callback pattern is at the heart of most I/O and event-driven programming in JavaScript.

                          function doSomething(err, callback) {
                              if (err) {
                                  return callback(err);
                              }
                              callback();
                          }

                          To prevent calling the callback multiple times it is important to return anytime the callback is triggered outside of the main function body. Neglecting this technique often leads to issues where you do something more than once. For example, in the case of an HTTP request, you may try to send HTTP headers more than once leading Node.js to throw a Can't render headers after they are sent to the client. error.

                          Rule Details

                          This rule is aimed at ensuring that callbacks used outside of the main function block are always part-of or immediately preceding a return statement. This rule decides what is a callback based on the name of the function being called.

                          Options

                          The rule takes a single option - an array of possible callback names - which may include object methods. The default callback names are callback, cb, next.

                          Default callback names

                          Examples of incorrect code for this rule with the default ["callback", "cb", "next"] option:

                          /*eslint callback-return: "error"*/
                          
                          function foo(err, callback) {
                              if (err) {
                                  callback(err);
                              }
                              callback();
                          }

                          Examples of correct code for this rule with the default ["callback", "cb", "next"] option:

                          /*eslint callback-return: "error"*/
                          
                          function foo(err, callback) {
                              if (err) {
                                  return callback(err);
                              }
                              callback();
                          }

                          Supplied callback names

                          Examples of incorrect code for this rule with the option ["done", "send.error", "send.success"]:

                          /*eslint callback-return: ["error", ["done", "send.error", "send.success"]]*/
                          
                          function foo(err, done) {
                              if (err) {
                                  done(err);
                              }
                              done();
                          }
                          
                          function bar(err, send) {
                              if (err) {
                                  send.error(err);
                              }
                              send.success();
                          }

                          Examples of correct code for this rule with the option ["done", "send.error", "send.success"]:

                          /*eslint callback-return: ["error", ["done", "send.error", "send.success"]]*/
                          
                          function foo(err, done) {
                              if (err) {
                                  return done(err);
                              }
                              done();
                          }
                          
                          function bar(err, send) {
                              if (err) {
                                  return send.error(err);
                              }
                              send.success();
                          }

                          Known Limitations

                          Because it is difficult to understand the meaning of a program through static analysis, this rule has limitations:

                          • false negatives when this rule reports correct code, but the program calls the callback more than one time (which is incorrect behavior)
                          • false positives when this rule reports incorrect code, but the program calls the callback only one time (which is correct behavior)

                          Passing the callback by reference

                          The static analysis of this rule does not detect that the program calls the callback if it is an argument of a function (for example, setTimeout).

                          Example of a false negative when this rule reports correct code:

                          /*eslint callback-return: "error"*/
                          
                          function foo(err, callback) {
                              if (err) {
                                  setTimeout(callback, 0); // this is bad, but WILL NOT warn
                              }
                              callback();
                          }

                          Triggering the callback within a nested function

                          The static analysis of this rule does not detect that the program calls the callback from within a nested function or an immediately-invoked function expression (IIFE).

                          Example of a false negative when this rule reports correct code:

                          /*eslint callback-return: "error"*/
                          
                          function foo(err, callback) {
                              if (err) {
                                  process.nextTick(function() {
                                      return callback(); // this is bad, but WILL NOT warn
                                  });
                              }
                              callback();
                          }

                          If/else statements

                          The static analysis of this rule does not detect that the program calls the callback only one time in each branch of an if statement.

                          Example of a false positive when this rule reports incorrect code:

                          /*eslint callback-return: "error"*/
                          
                          function foo(err, callback) {
                              if (err) {
                                  callback(err); // this is fine, but WILL warn
                              } else {
                                  callback();    // this is fine, but WILL warn
                              }
                          }

                          When Not To Use It

                          There are some cases where you might want to call a callback function more than once. In those cases this rule may lead to incorrect behavior. In those cases you may want to reserve a special name for those callbacks and not include that in the list of callbacks that trigger warnings.

                          Further Reading

                          Related Rules

                          Expected '===' and instead saw '=='.
                          Open

                              }else if (request.partitionId.substr(1,1)=="1"){
                          Severity: Minor
                          Found in blogic/BulkIdCreation.js by eslint

                          Require === and !== (eqeqeq)

                          It is considered good practice to use the type-safe equality operators === and !== instead of their regular counterparts == and !=.

                          The reason for this is that == and != do type coercion which follows the rather obscure Abstract Equality Comparison Algorithm. For instance, the following statements are all considered true:

                          • [] == false
                          • [] == ![]
                          • 3 == "03"

                          If one of those occurs in an innocent-looking statement such as a == b the actual problem is very difficult to spot.

                          Rule Details

                          This rule is aimed at eliminating the type-unsafe equality operators.

                          Examples of incorrect code for this rule:

                          /*eslint eqeqeq: "error"*/
                          
                          if (x == 42) { }
                          
                          if ("" == text) { }
                          
                          if (obj.getStuff() != undefined) { }

                          The --fix option on the command line automatically fixes some problems reported by this rule. A problem is only fixed if one of the operands is a typeof expression, or if both operands are literals with the same type.

                          Options

                          always

                          The "always" option (default) enforces the use of === and !== in every situation (except when you opt-in to more specific handling of null [see below]).

                          Examples of incorrect code for the "always" option:

                          /*eslint eqeqeq: ["error", "always"]*/
                          
                          a == b
                          foo == true
                          bananas != 1
                          value == undefined
                          typeof foo == 'undefined'
                          'hello' != 'world'
                          0 == 0
                          true == true
                          foo == null

                          Examples of correct code for the "always" option:

                          /*eslint eqeqeq: ["error", "always"]*/
                          
                          a === b
                          foo === true
                          bananas !== 1
                          value === undefined
                          typeof foo === 'undefined'
                          'hello' !== 'world'
                          0 === 0
                          true === true
                          foo === null

                          This rule optionally takes a second argument, which should be an object with the following supported properties:

                          • "null": Customize how this rule treats null literals. Possible values:
                            • always (default) - Always use === or !==.
                            • never - Never use === or !== with null.
                            • ignore - Do not apply this rule to null.

                          smart

                          The "smart" option enforces the use of === and !== except for these cases:

                          • Comparing two literal values
                          • Evaluating the value of typeof
                          • Comparing against null

                          Examples of incorrect code for the "smart" option:

                          /*eslint eqeqeq: ["error", "smart"]*/
                          
                          // comparing two variables requires ===
                          a == b
                          
                          // only one side is a literal
                          foo == true
                          bananas != 1
                          
                          // comparing to undefined requires ===
                          value == undefined

                          Examples of correct code for the "smart" option:

                          /*eslint eqeqeq: ["error", "smart"]*/
                          
                          typeof foo == 'undefined'
                          'hello' != 'world'
                          0 == 0
                          true == true
                          foo == null

                          allow-null

                          Deprecated: Instead of using this option use "always" and pass a "null" option property with value "ignore". This will tell eslint to always enforce strict equality except when comparing with the null literal.

                          ["error", "always", {"null": "ignore"}]

                          When Not To Use It

                          If you don't want to enforce a style for using equality operators, then it's safe to disable this rule. Source: http://eslint.org/docs/rules/

                          Expected return with your callback function.
                          Open

                                      callback(err,null);
                          Severity: Minor
                          Found in blogic/BulkIdCreation.js by eslint

                          Enforce Return After Callback (callback-return)

                          The callback pattern is at the heart of most I/O and event-driven programming in JavaScript.

                          function doSomething(err, callback) {
                              if (err) {
                                  return callback(err);
                              }
                              callback();
                          }

                          To prevent calling the callback multiple times it is important to return anytime the callback is triggered outside of the main function body. Neglecting this technique often leads to issues where you do something more than once. For example, in the case of an HTTP request, you may try to send HTTP headers more than once leading Node.js to throw a Can't render headers after they are sent to the client. error.

                          Rule Details

                          This rule is aimed at ensuring that callbacks used outside of the main function block are always part-of or immediately preceding a return statement. This rule decides what is a callback based on the name of the function being called.

                          Options

                          The rule takes a single option - an array of possible callback names - which may include object methods. The default callback names are callback, cb, next.

                          Default callback names

                          Examples of incorrect code for this rule with the default ["callback", "cb", "next"] option:

                          /*eslint callback-return: "error"*/
                          
                          function foo(err, callback) {
                              if (err) {
                                  callback(err);
                              }
                              callback();
                          }

                          Examples of correct code for this rule with the default ["callback", "cb", "next"] option:

                          /*eslint callback-return: "error"*/
                          
                          function foo(err, callback) {
                              if (err) {
                                  return callback(err);
                              }
                              callback();
                          }

                          Supplied callback names

                          Examples of incorrect code for this rule with the option ["done", "send.error", "send.success"]:

                          /*eslint callback-return: ["error", ["done", "send.error", "send.success"]]*/
                          
                          function foo(err, done) {
                              if (err) {
                                  done(err);
                              }
                              done();
                          }
                          
                          function bar(err, send) {
                              if (err) {
                                  send.error(err);
                              }
                              send.success();
                          }

                          Examples of correct code for this rule with the option ["done", "send.error", "send.success"]:

                          /*eslint callback-return: ["error", ["done", "send.error", "send.success"]]*/
                          
                          function foo(err, done) {
                              if (err) {
                                  return done(err);
                              }
                              done();
                          }
                          
                          function bar(err, send) {
                              if (err) {
                                  return send.error(err);
                              }
                              send.success();
                          }

                          Known Limitations

                          Because it is difficult to understand the meaning of a program through static analysis, this rule has limitations:

                          • false negatives when this rule reports correct code, but the program calls the callback more than one time (which is incorrect behavior)
                          • false positives when this rule reports incorrect code, but the program calls the callback only one time (which is correct behavior)

                          Passing the callback by reference

                          The static analysis of this rule does not detect that the program calls the callback if it is an argument of a function (for example, setTimeout).

                          Example of a false negative when this rule reports correct code:

                          /*eslint callback-return: "error"*/
                          
                          function foo(err, callback) {
                              if (err) {
                                  setTimeout(callback, 0); // this is bad, but WILL NOT warn
                              }
                              callback();
                          }

                          Triggering the callback within a nested function

                          The static analysis of this rule does not detect that the program calls the callback from within a nested function or an immediately-invoked function expression (IIFE).

                          Example of a false negative when this rule reports correct code:

                          /*eslint callback-return: "error"*/
                          
                          function foo(err, callback) {
                              if (err) {
                                  process.nextTick(function() {
                                      return callback(); // this is bad, but WILL NOT warn
                                  });
                              }
                              callback();
                          }

                          If/else statements

                          The static analysis of this rule does not detect that the program calls the callback only one time in each branch of an if statement.

                          Example of a false positive when this rule reports incorrect code:

                          /*eslint callback-return: "error"*/
                          
                          function foo(err, callback) {
                              if (err) {
                                  callback(err); // this is fine, but WILL warn
                              } else {
                                  callback();    // this is fine, but WILL warn
                              }
                          }

                          When Not To Use It

                          There are some cases where you might want to call a callback function more than once. In those cases this rule may lead to incorrect behavior. In those cases you may want to reserve a special name for those callbacks and not include that in the list of callbacks that trigger warnings.

                          Further Reading

                          Related Rules

                          Expected return with your callback function.
                          Open

                                                          callback(error, null);
                          Severity: Minor
                          Found in blogic/BulkIdCreation.js by eslint

                          Enforce Return After Callback (callback-return)

                          The callback pattern is at the heart of most I/O and event-driven programming in JavaScript.

                          function doSomething(err, callback) {
                              if (err) {
                                  return callback(err);
                              }
                              callback();
                          }

                          To prevent calling the callback multiple times it is important to return anytime the callback is triggered outside of the main function body. Neglecting this technique often leads to issues where you do something more than once. For example, in the case of an HTTP request, you may try to send HTTP headers more than once leading Node.js to throw a Can't render headers after they are sent to the client. error.

                          Rule Details

                          This rule is aimed at ensuring that callbacks used outside of the main function block are always part-of or immediately preceding a return statement. This rule decides what is a callback based on the name of the function being called.

                          Options

                          The rule takes a single option - an array of possible callback names - which may include object methods. The default callback names are callback, cb, next.

                          Default callback names

                          Examples of incorrect code for this rule with the default ["callback", "cb", "next"] option:

                          /*eslint callback-return: "error"*/
                          
                          function foo(err, callback) {
                              if (err) {
                                  callback(err);
                              }
                              callback();
                          }

                          Examples of correct code for this rule with the default ["callback", "cb", "next"] option:

                          /*eslint callback-return: "error"*/
                          
                          function foo(err, callback) {
                              if (err) {
                                  return callback(err);
                              }
                              callback();
                          }

                          Supplied callback names

                          Examples of incorrect code for this rule with the option ["done", "send.error", "send.success"]:

                          /*eslint callback-return: ["error", ["done", "send.error", "send.success"]]*/
                          
                          function foo(err, done) {
                              if (err) {
                                  done(err);
                              }
                              done();
                          }
                          
                          function bar(err, send) {
                              if (err) {
                                  send.error(err);
                              }
                              send.success();
                          }

                          Examples of correct code for this rule with the option ["done", "send.error", "send.success"]:

                          /*eslint callback-return: ["error", ["done", "send.error", "send.success"]]*/
                          
                          function foo(err, done) {
                              if (err) {
                                  return done(err);
                              }
                              done();
                          }
                          
                          function bar(err, send) {
                              if (err) {
                                  return send.error(err);
                              }
                              send.success();
                          }

                          Known Limitations

                          Because it is difficult to understand the meaning of a program through static analysis, this rule has limitations:

                          • false negatives when this rule reports correct code, but the program calls the callback more than one time (which is incorrect behavior)
                          • false positives when this rule reports incorrect code, but the program calls the callback only one time (which is correct behavior)

                          Passing the callback by reference

                          The static analysis of this rule does not detect that the program calls the callback if it is an argument of a function (for example, setTimeout).

                          Example of a false negative when this rule reports correct code:

                          /*eslint callback-return: "error"*/
                          
                          function foo(err, callback) {
                              if (err) {
                                  setTimeout(callback, 0); // this is bad, but WILL NOT warn
                              }
                              callback();
                          }

                          Triggering the callback within a nested function

                          The static analysis of this rule does not detect that the program calls the callback from within a nested function or an immediately-invoked function expression (IIFE).

                          Example of a false negative when this rule reports correct code:

                          /*eslint callback-return: "error"*/
                          
                          function foo(err, callback) {
                              if (err) {
                                  process.nextTick(function() {
                                      return callback(); // this is bad, but WILL NOT warn
                                  });
                              }
                              callback();
                          }

                          If/else statements

                          The static analysis of this rule does not detect that the program calls the callback only one time in each branch of an if statement.

                          Example of a false positive when this rule reports incorrect code:

                          /*eslint callback-return: "error"*/
                          
                          function foo(err, callback) {
                              if (err) {
                                  callback(err); // this is fine, but WILL warn
                              } else {
                                  callback();    // this is fine, but WILL warn
                              }
                          }

                          When Not To Use It

                          There are some cases where you might want to call a callback function more than once. In those cases this rule may lead to incorrect behavior. In those cases you may want to reserve a special name for those callbacks and not include that in the list of callbacks that trigger warnings.

                          Further Reading

                          Related Rules

                          Expected return with your callback function.
                          Open

                                                              callback(null, result);
                          Severity: Minor
                          Found in blogic/BulkIdCreation.js by eslint

                          Enforce Return After Callback (callback-return)

                          The callback pattern is at the heart of most I/O and event-driven programming in JavaScript.

                          function doSomething(err, callback) {
                              if (err) {
                                  return callback(err);
                              }
                              callback();
                          }

                          To prevent calling the callback multiple times it is important to return anytime the callback is triggered outside of the main function body. Neglecting this technique often leads to issues where you do something more than once. For example, in the case of an HTTP request, you may try to send HTTP headers more than once leading Node.js to throw a Can't render headers after they are sent to the client. error.

                          Rule Details

                          This rule is aimed at ensuring that callbacks used outside of the main function block are always part-of or immediately preceding a return statement. This rule decides what is a callback based on the name of the function being called.

                          Options

                          The rule takes a single option - an array of possible callback names - which may include object methods. The default callback names are callback, cb, next.

                          Default callback names

                          Examples of incorrect code for this rule with the default ["callback", "cb", "next"] option:

                          /*eslint callback-return: "error"*/
                          
                          function foo(err, callback) {
                              if (err) {
                                  callback(err);
                              }
                              callback();
                          }

                          Examples of correct code for this rule with the default ["callback", "cb", "next"] option:

                          /*eslint callback-return: "error"*/
                          
                          function foo(err, callback) {
                              if (err) {
                                  return callback(err);
                              }
                              callback();
                          }

                          Supplied callback names

                          Examples of incorrect code for this rule with the option ["done", "send.error", "send.success"]:

                          /*eslint callback-return: ["error", ["done", "send.error", "send.success"]]*/
                          
                          function foo(err, done) {
                              if (err) {
                                  done(err);
                              }
                              done();
                          }
                          
                          function bar(err, send) {
                              if (err) {
                                  send.error(err);
                              }
                              send.success();
                          }

                          Examples of correct code for this rule with the option ["done", "send.error", "send.success"]:

                          /*eslint callback-return: ["error", ["done", "send.error", "send.success"]]*/
                          
                          function foo(err, done) {
                              if (err) {
                                  return done(err);
                              }
                              done();
                          }
                          
                          function bar(err, send) {
                              if (err) {
                                  return send.error(err);
                              }
                              send.success();
                          }

                          Known Limitations

                          Because it is difficult to understand the meaning of a program through static analysis, this rule has limitations:

                          • false negatives when this rule reports correct code, but the program calls the callback more than one time (which is incorrect behavior)
                          • false positives when this rule reports incorrect code, but the program calls the callback only one time (which is correct behavior)

                          Passing the callback by reference

                          The static analysis of this rule does not detect that the program calls the callback if it is an argument of a function (for example, setTimeout).

                          Example of a false negative when this rule reports correct code:

                          /*eslint callback-return: "error"*/
                          
                          function foo(err, callback) {
                              if (err) {
                                  setTimeout(callback, 0); // this is bad, but WILL NOT warn
                              }
                              callback();
                          }

                          Triggering the callback within a nested function

                          The static analysis of this rule does not detect that the program calls the callback from within a nested function or an immediately-invoked function expression (IIFE).

                          Example of a false negative when this rule reports correct code:

                          /*eslint callback-return: "error"*/
                          
                          function foo(err, callback) {
                              if (err) {
                                  process.nextTick(function() {
                                      return callback(); // this is bad, but WILL NOT warn
                                  });
                              }
                              callback();
                          }

                          If/else statements

                          The static analysis of this rule does not detect that the program calls the callback only one time in each branch of an if statement.

                          Example of a false positive when this rule reports incorrect code:

                          /*eslint callback-return: "error"*/
                          
                          function foo(err, callback) {
                              if (err) {
                                  callback(err); // this is fine, but WILL warn
                              } else {
                                  callback();    // this is fine, but WILL warn
                              }
                          }

                          When Not To Use It

                          There are some cases where you might want to call a callback function more than once. In those cases this rule may lead to incorrect behavior. In those cases you may want to reserve a special name for those callbacks and not include that in the list of callbacks that trigger warnings.

                          Further Reading

                          Related Rules

                          Expected '===' and instead saw '=='.
                          Open

                                  if (err == null) {
                          Severity: Minor
                          Found in blogic/BulkIdCreation.js by eslint

                          Require === and !== (eqeqeq)

                          It is considered good practice to use the type-safe equality operators === and !== instead of their regular counterparts == and !=.

                          The reason for this is that == and != do type coercion which follows the rather obscure Abstract Equality Comparison Algorithm. For instance, the following statements are all considered true:

                          • [] == false
                          • [] == ![]
                          • 3 == "03"

                          If one of those occurs in an innocent-looking statement such as a == b the actual problem is very difficult to spot.

                          Rule Details

                          This rule is aimed at eliminating the type-unsafe equality operators.

                          Examples of incorrect code for this rule:

                          /*eslint eqeqeq: "error"*/
                          
                          if (x == 42) { }
                          
                          if ("" == text) { }
                          
                          if (obj.getStuff() != undefined) { }

                          The --fix option on the command line automatically fixes some problems reported by this rule. A problem is only fixed if one of the operands is a typeof expression, or if both operands are literals with the same type.

                          Options

                          always

                          The "always" option (default) enforces the use of === and !== in every situation (except when you opt-in to more specific handling of null [see below]).

                          Examples of incorrect code for the "always" option:

                          /*eslint eqeqeq: ["error", "always"]*/
                          
                          a == b
                          foo == true
                          bananas != 1
                          value == undefined
                          typeof foo == 'undefined'
                          'hello' != 'world'
                          0 == 0
                          true == true
                          foo == null

                          Examples of correct code for the "always" option:

                          /*eslint eqeqeq: ["error", "always"]*/
                          
                          a === b
                          foo === true
                          bananas !== 1
                          value === undefined
                          typeof foo === 'undefined'
                          'hello' !== 'world'
                          0 === 0
                          true === true
                          foo === null

                          This rule optionally takes a second argument, which should be an object with the following supported properties:

                          • "null": Customize how this rule treats null literals. Possible values:
                            • always (default) - Always use === or !==.
                            • never - Never use === or !== with null.
                            • ignore - Do not apply this rule to null.

                          smart

                          The "smart" option enforces the use of === and !== except for these cases:

                          • Comparing two literal values
                          • Evaluating the value of typeof
                          • Comparing against null

                          Examples of incorrect code for the "smart" option:

                          /*eslint eqeqeq: ["error", "smart"]*/
                          
                          // comparing two variables requires ===
                          a == b
                          
                          // only one side is a literal
                          foo == true
                          bananas != 1
                          
                          // comparing to undefined requires ===
                          value == undefined

                          Examples of correct code for the "smart" option:

                          /*eslint eqeqeq: ["error", "smart"]*/
                          
                          typeof foo == 'undefined'
                          'hello' != 'world'
                          0 == 0
                          true == true
                          foo == null

                          allow-null

                          Deprecated: Instead of using this option use "always" and pass a "null" option property with value "ignore". This will tell eslint to always enforce strict equality except when comparing with the null literal.

                          ["error", "always", {"null": "ignore"}]

                          When Not To Use It

                          If you don't want to enforce a style for using equality operators, then it's safe to disable this rule. Source: http://eslint.org/docs/rules/

                          Expected return with your callback function.
                          Open

                                          callback(err, null);
                          Severity: Minor
                          Found in blogic/BulkIdCreation.js by eslint

                          Enforce Return After Callback (callback-return)

                          The callback pattern is at the heart of most I/O and event-driven programming in JavaScript.

                          function doSomething(err, callback) {
                              if (err) {
                                  return callback(err);
                              }
                              callback();
                          }

                          To prevent calling the callback multiple times it is important to return anytime the callback is triggered outside of the main function body. Neglecting this technique often leads to issues where you do something more than once. For example, in the case of an HTTP request, you may try to send HTTP headers more than once leading Node.js to throw a Can't render headers after they are sent to the client. error.

                          Rule Details

                          This rule is aimed at ensuring that callbacks used outside of the main function block are always part-of or immediately preceding a return statement. This rule decides what is a callback based on the name of the function being called.

                          Options

                          The rule takes a single option - an array of possible callback names - which may include object methods. The default callback names are callback, cb, next.

                          Default callback names

                          Examples of incorrect code for this rule with the default ["callback", "cb", "next"] option:

                          /*eslint callback-return: "error"*/
                          
                          function foo(err, callback) {
                              if (err) {
                                  callback(err);
                              }
                              callback();
                          }

                          Examples of correct code for this rule with the default ["callback", "cb", "next"] option:

                          /*eslint callback-return: "error"*/
                          
                          function foo(err, callback) {
                              if (err) {
                                  return callback(err);
                              }
                              callback();
                          }

                          Supplied callback names

                          Examples of incorrect code for this rule with the option ["done", "send.error", "send.success"]:

                          /*eslint callback-return: ["error", ["done", "send.error", "send.success"]]*/
                          
                          function foo(err, done) {
                              if (err) {
                                  done(err);
                              }
                              done();
                          }
                          
                          function bar(err, send) {
                              if (err) {
                                  send.error(err);
                              }
                              send.success();
                          }

                          Examples of correct code for this rule with the option ["done", "send.error", "send.success"]:

                          /*eslint callback-return: ["error", ["done", "send.error", "send.success"]]*/
                          
                          function foo(err, done) {
                              if (err) {
                                  return done(err);
                              }
                              done();
                          }
                          
                          function bar(err, send) {
                              if (err) {
                                  return send.error(err);
                              }
                              send.success();
                          }

                          Known Limitations

                          Because it is difficult to understand the meaning of a program through static analysis, this rule has limitations:

                          • false negatives when this rule reports correct code, but the program calls the callback more than one time (which is incorrect behavior)
                          • false positives when this rule reports incorrect code, but the program calls the callback only one time (which is correct behavior)

                          Passing the callback by reference

                          The static analysis of this rule does not detect that the program calls the callback if it is an argument of a function (for example, setTimeout).

                          Example of a false negative when this rule reports correct code:

                          /*eslint callback-return: "error"*/
                          
                          function foo(err, callback) {
                              if (err) {
                                  setTimeout(callback, 0); // this is bad, but WILL NOT warn
                              }
                              callback();
                          }

                          Triggering the callback within a nested function

                          The static analysis of this rule does not detect that the program calls the callback from within a nested function or an immediately-invoked function expression (IIFE).

                          Example of a false negative when this rule reports correct code:

                          /*eslint callback-return: "error"*/
                          
                          function foo(err, callback) {
                              if (err) {
                                  process.nextTick(function() {
                                      return callback(); // this is bad, but WILL NOT warn
                                  });
                              }
                              callback();
                          }

                          If/else statements

                          The static analysis of this rule does not detect that the program calls the callback only one time in each branch of an if statement.

                          Example of a false positive when this rule reports incorrect code:

                          /*eslint callback-return: "error"*/
                          
                          function foo(err, callback) {
                              if (err) {
                                  callback(err); // this is fine, but WILL warn
                              } else {
                                  callback();    // this is fine, but WILL warn
                              }
                          }

                          When Not To Use It

                          There are some cases where you might want to call a callback function more than once. In those cases this rule may lead to incorrect behavior. In those cases you may want to reserve a special name for those callbacks and not include that in the list of callbacks that trigger warnings.

                          Further Reading

                          Related Rules

                          Expected return with your callback function.
                          Open

                                          callback(null);
                          Severity: Minor
                          Found in blogic/BulkIdCreation.js by eslint

                          Enforce Return After Callback (callback-return)

                          The callback pattern is at the heart of most I/O and event-driven programming in JavaScript.

                          function doSomething(err, callback) {
                              if (err) {
                                  return callback(err);
                              }
                              callback();
                          }

                          To prevent calling the callback multiple times it is important to return anytime the callback is triggered outside of the main function body. Neglecting this technique often leads to issues where you do something more than once. For example, in the case of an HTTP request, you may try to send HTTP headers more than once leading Node.js to throw a Can't render headers after they are sent to the client. error.

                          Rule Details

                          This rule is aimed at ensuring that callbacks used outside of the main function block are always part-of or immediately preceding a return statement. This rule decides what is a callback based on the name of the function being called.

                          Options

                          The rule takes a single option - an array of possible callback names - which may include object methods. The default callback names are callback, cb, next.

                          Default callback names

                          Examples of incorrect code for this rule with the default ["callback", "cb", "next"] option:

                          /*eslint callback-return: "error"*/
                          
                          function foo(err, callback) {
                              if (err) {
                                  callback(err);
                              }
                              callback();
                          }

                          Examples of correct code for this rule with the default ["callback", "cb", "next"] option:

                          /*eslint callback-return: "error"*/
                          
                          function foo(err, callback) {
                              if (err) {
                                  return callback(err);
                              }
                              callback();
                          }

                          Supplied callback names

                          Examples of incorrect code for this rule with the option ["done", "send.error", "send.success"]:

                          /*eslint callback-return: ["error", ["done", "send.error", "send.success"]]*/
                          
                          function foo(err, done) {
                              if (err) {
                                  done(err);
                              }
                              done();
                          }
                          
                          function bar(err, send) {
                              if (err) {
                                  send.error(err);
                              }
                              send.success();
                          }

                          Examples of correct code for this rule with the option ["done", "send.error", "send.success"]:

                          /*eslint callback-return: ["error", ["done", "send.error", "send.success"]]*/
                          
                          function foo(err, done) {
                              if (err) {
                                  return done(err);
                              }
                              done();
                          }
                          
                          function bar(err, send) {
                              if (err) {
                                  return send.error(err);
                              }
                              send.success();
                          }

                          Known Limitations

                          Because it is difficult to understand the meaning of a program through static analysis, this rule has limitations:

                          • false negatives when this rule reports correct code, but the program calls the callback more than one time (which is incorrect behavior)
                          • false positives when this rule reports incorrect code, but the program calls the callback only one time (which is correct behavior)

                          Passing the callback by reference

                          The static analysis of this rule does not detect that the program calls the callback if it is an argument of a function (for example, setTimeout).

                          Example of a false negative when this rule reports correct code:

                          /*eslint callback-return: "error"*/
                          
                          function foo(err, callback) {
                              if (err) {
                                  setTimeout(callback, 0); // this is bad, but WILL NOT warn
                              }
                              callback();
                          }

                          Triggering the callback within a nested function

                          The static analysis of this rule does not detect that the program calls the callback from within a nested function or an immediately-invoked function expression (IIFE).

                          Example of a false negative when this rule reports correct code:

                          /*eslint callback-return: "error"*/
                          
                          function foo(err, callback) {
                              if (err) {
                                  process.nextTick(function() {
                                      return callback(); // this is bad, but WILL NOT warn
                                  });
                              }
                              callback();
                          }

                          If/else statements

                          The static analysis of this rule does not detect that the program calls the callback only one time in each branch of an if statement.

                          Example of a false positive when this rule reports incorrect code:

                          /*eslint callback-return: "error"*/
                          
                          function foo(err, callback) {
                              if (err) {
                                  callback(err); // this is fine, but WILL warn
                              } else {
                                  callback();    // this is fine, but WILL warn
                              }
                          }

                          When Not To Use It

                          There are some cases where you might want to call a callback function more than once. In those cases this rule may lead to incorrect behavior. In those cases you may want to reserve a special name for those callbacks and not include that in the list of callbacks that trigger warnings.

                          Further Reading

                          Related Rules

                          Expected return with your callback function.
                          Open

                                                  callback (error,null);
                          Severity: Minor
                          Found in blogic/BulkIdCreation.js by eslint

                          Enforce Return After Callback (callback-return)

                          The callback pattern is at the heart of most I/O and event-driven programming in JavaScript.

                          function doSomething(err, callback) {
                              if (err) {
                                  return callback(err);
                              }
                              callback();
                          }

                          To prevent calling the callback multiple times it is important to return anytime the callback is triggered outside of the main function body. Neglecting this technique often leads to issues where you do something more than once. For example, in the case of an HTTP request, you may try to send HTTP headers more than once leading Node.js to throw a Can't render headers after they are sent to the client. error.

                          Rule Details

                          This rule is aimed at ensuring that callbacks used outside of the main function block are always part-of or immediately preceding a return statement. This rule decides what is a callback based on the name of the function being called.

                          Options

                          The rule takes a single option - an array of possible callback names - which may include object methods. The default callback names are callback, cb, next.

                          Default callback names

                          Examples of incorrect code for this rule with the default ["callback", "cb", "next"] option:

                          /*eslint callback-return: "error"*/
                          
                          function foo(err, callback) {
                              if (err) {
                                  callback(err);
                              }
                              callback();
                          }

                          Examples of correct code for this rule with the default ["callback", "cb", "next"] option:

                          /*eslint callback-return: "error"*/
                          
                          function foo(err, callback) {
                              if (err) {
                                  return callback(err);
                              }
                              callback();
                          }

                          Supplied callback names

                          Examples of incorrect code for this rule with the option ["done", "send.error", "send.success"]:

                          /*eslint callback-return: ["error", ["done", "send.error", "send.success"]]*/
                          
                          function foo(err, done) {
                              if (err) {
                                  done(err);
                              }
                              done();
                          }
                          
                          function bar(err, send) {
                              if (err) {
                                  send.error(err);
                              }
                              send.success();
                          }

                          Examples of correct code for this rule with the option ["done", "send.error", "send.success"]:

                          /*eslint callback-return: ["error", ["done", "send.error", "send.success"]]*/
                          
                          function foo(err, done) {
                              if (err) {
                                  return done(err);
                              }
                              done();
                          }
                          
                          function bar(err, send) {
                              if (err) {
                                  return send.error(err);
                              }
                              send.success();
                          }

                          Known Limitations

                          Because it is difficult to understand the meaning of a program through static analysis, this rule has limitations:

                          • false negatives when this rule reports correct code, but the program calls the callback more than one time (which is incorrect behavior)
                          • false positives when this rule reports incorrect code, but the program calls the callback only one time (which is correct behavior)

                          Passing the callback by reference

                          The static analysis of this rule does not detect that the program calls the callback if it is an argument of a function (for example, setTimeout).

                          Example of a false negative when this rule reports correct code:

                          /*eslint callback-return: "error"*/
                          
                          function foo(err, callback) {
                              if (err) {
                                  setTimeout(callback, 0); // this is bad, but WILL NOT warn
                              }
                              callback();
                          }

                          Triggering the callback within a nested function

                          The static analysis of this rule does not detect that the program calls the callback from within a nested function or an immediately-invoked function expression (IIFE).

                          Example of a false negative when this rule reports correct code:

                          /*eslint callback-return: "error"*/
                          
                          function foo(err, callback) {
                              if (err) {
                                  process.nextTick(function() {
                                      return callback(); // this is bad, but WILL NOT warn
                                  });
                              }
                              callback();
                          }

                          If/else statements

                          The static analysis of this rule does not detect that the program calls the callback only one time in each branch of an if statement.

                          Example of a false positive when this rule reports incorrect code:

                          /*eslint callback-return: "error"*/
                          
                          function foo(err, callback) {
                              if (err) {
                                  callback(err); // this is fine, but WILL warn
                              } else {
                                  callback();    // this is fine, but WILL warn
                              }
                          }

                          When Not To Use It

                          There are some cases where you might want to call a callback function more than once. In those cases this rule may lead to incorrect behavior. In those cases you may want to reserve a special name for those callbacks and not include that in the list of callbacks that trigger warnings.

                          Further Reading

                          Related Rules

                          Use ‘===’ to compare with ‘null’.
                          Open

                                  if (err == null) {
                          Severity: Minor
                          Found in blogic/BulkIdCreation.js by eslint

                          Disallow Null Comparisons (no-eq-null)

                          Comparing to null without a type-checking operator (== or !=), can have unintended results as the comparison will evaluate to true when comparing to not just a null, but also an undefined value.

                          if (foo == null) {
                            bar();
                          }

                          Rule Details

                          The no-eq-null rule aims reduce potential bug and unwanted behavior by ensuring that comparisons to null only match null, and not also undefined. As such it will flag comparisons to null when using == and !=.

                          Examples of incorrect code for this rule:

                          /*eslint no-eq-null: "error"*/
                          
                          if (foo == null) {
                            bar();
                          }
                          
                          while (qux != null) {
                            baz();
                          }

                          Examples of correct code for this rule:

                          /*eslint no-eq-null: "error"*/
                          
                          if (foo === null) {
                            bar();
                          }
                          
                          while (qux !== null) {
                            baz();
                          }

                          Source: http://eslint.org/docs/rules/

                          Expected return with your callback function.
                          Open

                                      callback(err);
                          Severity: Minor
                          Found in blogic/BulkIdCreation.js by eslint

                          Enforce Return After Callback (callback-return)

                          The callback pattern is at the heart of most I/O and event-driven programming in JavaScript.

                          function doSomething(err, callback) {
                              if (err) {
                                  return callback(err);
                              }
                              callback();
                          }

                          To prevent calling the callback multiple times it is important to return anytime the callback is triggered outside of the main function body. Neglecting this technique often leads to issues where you do something more than once. For example, in the case of an HTTP request, you may try to send HTTP headers more than once leading Node.js to throw a Can't render headers after they are sent to the client. error.

                          Rule Details

                          This rule is aimed at ensuring that callbacks used outside of the main function block are always part-of or immediately preceding a return statement. This rule decides what is a callback based on the name of the function being called.

                          Options

                          The rule takes a single option - an array of possible callback names - which may include object methods. The default callback names are callback, cb, next.

                          Default callback names

                          Examples of incorrect code for this rule with the default ["callback", "cb", "next"] option:

                          /*eslint callback-return: "error"*/
                          
                          function foo(err, callback) {
                              if (err) {
                                  callback(err);
                              }
                              callback();
                          }

                          Examples of correct code for this rule with the default ["callback", "cb", "next"] option:

                          /*eslint callback-return: "error"*/
                          
                          function foo(err, callback) {
                              if (err) {
                                  return callback(err);
                              }
                              callback();
                          }

                          Supplied callback names

                          Examples of incorrect code for this rule with the option ["done", "send.error", "send.success"]:

                          /*eslint callback-return: ["error", ["done", "send.error", "send.success"]]*/
                          
                          function foo(err, done) {
                              if (err) {
                                  done(err);
                              }
                              done();
                          }
                          
                          function bar(err, send) {
                              if (err) {
                                  send.error(err);
                              }
                              send.success();
                          }

                          Examples of correct code for this rule with the option ["done", "send.error", "send.success"]:

                          /*eslint callback-return: ["error", ["done", "send.error", "send.success"]]*/
                          
                          function foo(err, done) {
                              if (err) {
                                  return done(err);
                              }
                              done();
                          }
                          
                          function bar(err, send) {
                              if (err) {
                                  return send.error(err);
                              }
                              send.success();
                          }

                          Known Limitations

                          Because it is difficult to understand the meaning of a program through static analysis, this rule has limitations:

                          • false negatives when this rule reports correct code, but the program calls the callback more than one time (which is incorrect behavior)
                          • false positives when this rule reports incorrect code, but the program calls the callback only one time (which is correct behavior)

                          Passing the callback by reference

                          The static analysis of this rule does not detect that the program calls the callback if it is an argument of a function (for example, setTimeout).

                          Example of a false negative when this rule reports correct code:

                          /*eslint callback-return: "error"*/
                          
                          function foo(err, callback) {
                              if (err) {
                                  setTimeout(callback, 0); // this is bad, but WILL NOT warn
                              }
                              callback();
                          }

                          Triggering the callback within a nested function

                          The static analysis of this rule does not detect that the program calls the callback from within a nested function or an immediately-invoked function expression (IIFE).

                          Example of a false negative when this rule reports correct code:

                          /*eslint callback-return: "error"*/
                          
                          function foo(err, callback) {
                              if (err) {
                                  process.nextTick(function() {
                                      return callback(); // this is bad, but WILL NOT warn
                                  });
                              }
                              callback();
                          }

                          If/else statements

                          The static analysis of this rule does not detect that the program calls the callback only one time in each branch of an if statement.

                          Example of a false positive when this rule reports incorrect code:

                          /*eslint callback-return: "error"*/
                          
                          function foo(err, callback) {
                              if (err) {
                                  callback(err); // this is fine, but WILL warn
                              } else {
                                  callback();    // this is fine, but WILL warn
                              }
                          }

                          When Not To Use It

                          There are some cases where you might want to call a callback function more than once. In those cases this rule may lead to incorrect behavior. In those cases you may want to reserve a special name for those callbacks and not include that in the list of callbacks that trigger warnings.

                          Further Reading

                          Related Rules

                          Expected return with your callback function.
                          Open

                                          callback(err,null);
                          Severity: Minor
                          Found in blogic/BulkIdCreation.js by eslint

                          Enforce Return After Callback (callback-return)

                          The callback pattern is at the heart of most I/O and event-driven programming in JavaScript.

                          function doSomething(err, callback) {
                              if (err) {
                                  return callback(err);
                              }
                              callback();
                          }

                          To prevent calling the callback multiple times it is important to return anytime the callback is triggered outside of the main function body. Neglecting this technique often leads to issues where you do something more than once. For example, in the case of an HTTP request, you may try to send HTTP headers more than once leading Node.js to throw a Can't render headers after they are sent to the client. error.

                          Rule Details

                          This rule is aimed at ensuring that callbacks used outside of the main function block are always part-of or immediately preceding a return statement. This rule decides what is a callback based on the name of the function being called.

                          Options

                          The rule takes a single option - an array of possible callback names - which may include object methods. The default callback names are callback, cb, next.

                          Default callback names

                          Examples of incorrect code for this rule with the default ["callback", "cb", "next"] option:

                          /*eslint callback-return: "error"*/
                          
                          function foo(err, callback) {
                              if (err) {
                                  callback(err);
                              }
                              callback();
                          }

                          Examples of correct code for this rule with the default ["callback", "cb", "next"] option:

                          /*eslint callback-return: "error"*/
                          
                          function foo(err, callback) {
                              if (err) {
                                  return callback(err);
                              }
                              callback();
                          }

                          Supplied callback names

                          Examples of incorrect code for this rule with the option ["done", "send.error", "send.success"]:

                          /*eslint callback-return: ["error", ["done", "send.error", "send.success"]]*/
                          
                          function foo(err, done) {
                              if (err) {
                                  done(err);
                              }
                              done();
                          }
                          
                          function bar(err, send) {
                              if (err) {
                                  send.error(err);
                              }
                              send.success();
                          }

                          Examples of correct code for this rule with the option ["done", "send.error", "send.success"]:

                          /*eslint callback-return: ["error", ["done", "send.error", "send.success"]]*/
                          
                          function foo(err, done) {
                              if (err) {
                                  return done(err);
                              }
                              done();
                          }
                          
                          function bar(err, send) {
                              if (err) {
                                  return send.error(err);
                              }
                              send.success();
                          }

                          Known Limitations

                          Because it is difficult to understand the meaning of a program through static analysis, this rule has limitations:

                          • false negatives when this rule reports correct code, but the program calls the callback more than one time (which is incorrect behavior)
                          • false positives when this rule reports incorrect code, but the program calls the callback only one time (which is correct behavior)

                          Passing the callback by reference

                          The static analysis of this rule does not detect that the program calls the callback if it is an argument of a function (for example, setTimeout).

                          Example of a false negative when this rule reports correct code:

                          /*eslint callback-return: "error"*/
                          
                          function foo(err, callback) {
                              if (err) {
                                  setTimeout(callback, 0); // this is bad, but WILL NOT warn
                              }
                              callback();
                          }

                          Triggering the callback within a nested function

                          The static analysis of this rule does not detect that the program calls the callback from within a nested function or an immediately-invoked function expression (IIFE).

                          Example of a false negative when this rule reports correct code:

                          /*eslint callback-return: "error"*/
                          
                          function foo(err, callback) {
                              if (err) {
                                  process.nextTick(function() {
                                      return callback(); // this is bad, but WILL NOT warn
                                  });
                              }
                              callback();
                          }

                          If/else statements

                          The static analysis of this rule does not detect that the program calls the callback only one time in each branch of an if statement.

                          Example of a false positive when this rule reports incorrect code:

                          /*eslint callback-return: "error"*/
                          
                          function foo(err, callback) {
                              if (err) {
                                  callback(err); // this is fine, but WILL warn
                              } else {
                                  callback();    // this is fine, but WILL warn
                              }
                          }

                          When Not To Use It

                          There are some cases where you might want to call a callback function more than once. In those cases this rule may lead to incorrect behavior. In those cases you may want to reserve a special name for those callbacks and not include that in the list of callbacks that trigger warnings.

                          Further Reading

                          Related Rules

                          Expected return with your callback function.
                          Open

                                                  callback (error,null);
                          Severity: Minor
                          Found in blogic/BulkIdCreation.js by eslint

                          Enforce Return After Callback (callback-return)

                          The callback pattern is at the heart of most I/O and event-driven programming in JavaScript.

                          function doSomething(err, callback) {
                              if (err) {
                                  return callback(err);
                              }
                              callback();
                          }

                          To prevent calling the callback multiple times it is important to return anytime the callback is triggered outside of the main function body. Neglecting this technique often leads to issues where you do something more than once. For example, in the case of an HTTP request, you may try to send HTTP headers more than once leading Node.js to throw a Can't render headers after they are sent to the client. error.

                          Rule Details

                          This rule is aimed at ensuring that callbacks used outside of the main function block are always part-of or immediately preceding a return statement. This rule decides what is a callback based on the name of the function being called.

                          Options

                          The rule takes a single option - an array of possible callback names - which may include object methods. The default callback names are callback, cb, next.

                          Default callback names

                          Examples of incorrect code for this rule with the default ["callback", "cb", "next"] option:

                          /*eslint callback-return: "error"*/
                          
                          function foo(err, callback) {
                              if (err) {
                                  callback(err);
                              }
                              callback();
                          }

                          Examples of correct code for this rule with the default ["callback", "cb", "next"] option:

                          /*eslint callback-return: "error"*/
                          
                          function foo(err, callback) {
                              if (err) {
                                  return callback(err);
                              }
                              callback();
                          }

                          Supplied callback names

                          Examples of incorrect code for this rule with the option ["done", "send.error", "send.success"]:

                          /*eslint callback-return: ["error", ["done", "send.error", "send.success"]]*/
                          
                          function foo(err, done) {
                              if (err) {
                                  done(err);
                              }
                              done();
                          }
                          
                          function bar(err, send) {
                              if (err) {
                                  send.error(err);
                              }
                              send.success();
                          }

                          Examples of correct code for this rule with the option ["done", "send.error", "send.success"]:

                          /*eslint callback-return: ["error", ["done", "send.error", "send.success"]]*/
                          
                          function foo(err, done) {
                              if (err) {
                                  return done(err);
                              }
                              done();
                          }
                          
                          function bar(err, send) {
                              if (err) {
                                  return send.error(err);
                              }
                              send.success();
                          }

                          Known Limitations

                          Because it is difficult to understand the meaning of a program through static analysis, this rule has limitations:

                          • false negatives when this rule reports correct code, but the program calls the callback more than one time (which is incorrect behavior)
                          • false positives when this rule reports incorrect code, but the program calls the callback only one time (which is correct behavior)

                          Passing the callback by reference

                          The static analysis of this rule does not detect that the program calls the callback if it is an argument of a function (for example, setTimeout).

                          Example of a false negative when this rule reports correct code:

                          /*eslint callback-return: "error"*/
                          
                          function foo(err, callback) {
                              if (err) {
                                  setTimeout(callback, 0); // this is bad, but WILL NOT warn
                              }
                              callback();
                          }

                          Triggering the callback within a nested function

                          The static analysis of this rule does not detect that the program calls the callback from within a nested function or an immediately-invoked function expression (IIFE).

                          Example of a false negative when this rule reports correct code:

                          /*eslint callback-return: "error"*/
                          
                          function foo(err, callback) {
                              if (err) {
                                  process.nextTick(function() {
                                      return callback(); // this is bad, but WILL NOT warn
                                  });
                              }
                              callback();
                          }

                          If/else statements

                          The static analysis of this rule does not detect that the program calls the callback only one time in each branch of an if statement.

                          Example of a false positive when this rule reports incorrect code:

                          /*eslint callback-return: "error"*/
                          
                          function foo(err, callback) {
                              if (err) {
                                  callback(err); // this is fine, but WILL warn
                              } else {
                                  callback();    // this is fine, but WILL warn
                              }
                          }

                          When Not To Use It

                          There are some cases where you might want to call a callback function more than once. In those cases this rule may lead to incorrect behavior. In those cases you may want to reserve a special name for those callbacks and not include that in the list of callbacks that trigger warnings.

                          Further Reading

                          Related Rules

                          Expected '===' and instead saw '=='.
                          Open

                              if (request.partitionId.substr(1,1)=="0") {
                          Severity: Minor
                          Found in blogic/BulkIdCreation.js by eslint

                          Require === and !== (eqeqeq)

                          It is considered good practice to use the type-safe equality operators === and !== instead of their regular counterparts == and !=.

                          The reason for this is that == and != do type coercion which follows the rather obscure Abstract Equality Comparison Algorithm. For instance, the following statements are all considered true:

                          • [] == false
                          • [] == ![]
                          • 3 == "03"

                          If one of those occurs in an innocent-looking statement such as a == b the actual problem is very difficult to spot.

                          Rule Details

                          This rule is aimed at eliminating the type-unsafe equality operators.

                          Examples of incorrect code for this rule:

                          /*eslint eqeqeq: "error"*/
                          
                          if (x == 42) { }
                          
                          if ("" == text) { }
                          
                          if (obj.getStuff() != undefined) { }

                          The --fix option on the command line automatically fixes some problems reported by this rule. A problem is only fixed if one of the operands is a typeof expression, or if both operands are literals with the same type.

                          Options

                          always

                          The "always" option (default) enforces the use of === and !== in every situation (except when you opt-in to more specific handling of null [see below]).

                          Examples of incorrect code for the "always" option:

                          /*eslint eqeqeq: ["error", "always"]*/
                          
                          a == b
                          foo == true
                          bananas != 1
                          value == undefined
                          typeof foo == 'undefined'
                          'hello' != 'world'
                          0 == 0
                          true == true
                          foo == null

                          Examples of correct code for the "always" option:

                          /*eslint eqeqeq: ["error", "always"]*/
                          
                          a === b
                          foo === true
                          bananas !== 1
                          value === undefined
                          typeof foo === 'undefined'
                          'hello' !== 'world'
                          0 === 0
                          true === true
                          foo === null

                          This rule optionally takes a second argument, which should be an object with the following supported properties:

                          • "null": Customize how this rule treats null literals. Possible values:
                            • always (default) - Always use === or !==.
                            • never - Never use === or !== with null.
                            • ignore - Do not apply this rule to null.

                          smart

                          The "smart" option enforces the use of === and !== except for these cases:

                          • Comparing two literal values
                          • Evaluating the value of typeof
                          • Comparing against null

                          Examples of incorrect code for the "smart" option:

                          /*eslint eqeqeq: ["error", "smart"]*/
                          
                          // comparing two variables requires ===
                          a == b
                          
                          // only one side is a literal
                          foo == true
                          bananas != 1
                          
                          // comparing to undefined requires ===
                          value == undefined

                          Examples of correct code for the "smart" option:

                          /*eslint eqeqeq: ["error", "smart"]*/
                          
                          typeof foo == 'undefined'
                          'hello' != 'world'
                          0 == 0
                          true == true
                          foo == null

                          allow-null

                          Deprecated: Instead of using this option use "always" and pass a "null" option property with value "ignore". This will tell eslint to always enforce strict equality except when comparing with the null literal.

                          ["error", "always", {"null": "ignore"}]

                          When Not To Use It

                          If you don't want to enforce a style for using equality operators, then it's safe to disable this rule. Source: http://eslint.org/docs/rules/

                          Expected return with your callback function.
                          Open

                                          callback(null,result);
                          Severity: Minor
                          Found in blogic/BulkIdCreation.js by eslint

                          Enforce Return After Callback (callback-return)

                          The callback pattern is at the heart of most I/O and event-driven programming in JavaScript.

                          function doSomething(err, callback) {
                              if (err) {
                                  return callback(err);
                              }
                              callback();
                          }

                          To prevent calling the callback multiple times it is important to return anytime the callback is triggered outside of the main function body. Neglecting this technique often leads to issues where you do something more than once. For example, in the case of an HTTP request, you may try to send HTTP headers more than once leading Node.js to throw a Can't render headers after they are sent to the client. error.

                          Rule Details

                          This rule is aimed at ensuring that callbacks used outside of the main function block are always part-of or immediately preceding a return statement. This rule decides what is a callback based on the name of the function being called.

                          Options

                          The rule takes a single option - an array of possible callback names - which may include object methods. The default callback names are callback, cb, next.

                          Default callback names

                          Examples of incorrect code for this rule with the default ["callback", "cb", "next"] option:

                          /*eslint callback-return: "error"*/
                          
                          function foo(err, callback) {
                              if (err) {
                                  callback(err);
                              }
                              callback();
                          }

                          Examples of correct code for this rule with the default ["callback", "cb", "next"] option:

                          /*eslint callback-return: "error"*/
                          
                          function foo(err, callback) {
                              if (err) {
                                  return callback(err);
                              }
                              callback();
                          }

                          Supplied callback names

                          Examples of incorrect code for this rule with the option ["done", "send.error", "send.success"]:

                          /*eslint callback-return: ["error", ["done", "send.error", "send.success"]]*/
                          
                          function foo(err, done) {
                              if (err) {
                                  done(err);
                              }
                              done();
                          }
                          
                          function bar(err, send) {
                              if (err) {
                                  send.error(err);
                              }
                              send.success();
                          }

                          Examples of correct code for this rule with the option ["done", "send.error", "send.success"]:

                          /*eslint callback-return: ["error", ["done", "send.error", "send.success"]]*/
                          
                          function foo(err, done) {
                              if (err) {
                                  return done(err);
                              }
                              done();
                          }
                          
                          function bar(err, send) {
                              if (err) {
                                  return send.error(err);
                              }
                              send.success();
                          }

                          Known Limitations

                          Because it is difficult to understand the meaning of a program through static analysis, this rule has limitations:

                          • false negatives when this rule reports correct code, but the program calls the callback more than one time (which is incorrect behavior)
                          • false positives when this rule reports incorrect code, but the program calls the callback only one time (which is correct behavior)

                          Passing the callback by reference

                          The static analysis of this rule does not detect that the program calls the callback if it is an argument of a function (for example, setTimeout).

                          Example of a false negative when this rule reports correct code:

                          /*eslint callback-return: "error"*/
                          
                          function foo(err, callback) {
                              if (err) {
                                  setTimeout(callback, 0); // this is bad, but WILL NOT warn
                              }
                              callback();
                          }

                          Triggering the callback within a nested function

                          The static analysis of this rule does not detect that the program calls the callback from within a nested function or an immediately-invoked function expression (IIFE).

                          Example of a false negative when this rule reports correct code:

                          /*eslint callback-return: "error"*/
                          
                          function foo(err, callback) {
                              if (err) {
                                  process.nextTick(function() {
                                      return callback(); // this is bad, but WILL NOT warn
                                  });
                              }
                              callback();
                          }

                          If/else statements

                          The static analysis of this rule does not detect that the program calls the callback only one time in each branch of an if statement.

                          Example of a false positive when this rule reports incorrect code:

                          /*eslint callback-return: "error"*/
                          
                          function foo(err, callback) {
                              if (err) {
                                  callback(err); // this is fine, but WILL warn
                              } else {
                                  callback();    // this is fine, but WILL warn
                              }
                          }

                          When Not To Use It

                          There are some cases where you might want to call a callback function more than once. In those cases this rule may lead to incorrect behavior. In those cases you may want to reserve a special name for those callbacks and not include that in the list of callbacks that trigger warnings.

                          Further Reading

                          Related Rules

                          Expected return with your callback function.
                          Open

                                      callback(err,null);
                          Severity: Minor
                          Found in blogic/BulkIdCreation.js by eslint

                          Enforce Return After Callback (callback-return)

                          The callback pattern is at the heart of most I/O and event-driven programming in JavaScript.

                          function doSomething(err, callback) {
                              if (err) {
                                  return callback(err);
                              }
                              callback();
                          }

                          To prevent calling the callback multiple times it is important to return anytime the callback is triggered outside of the main function body. Neglecting this technique often leads to issues where you do something more than once. For example, in the case of an HTTP request, you may try to send HTTP headers more than once leading Node.js to throw a Can't render headers after they are sent to the client. error.

                          Rule Details

                          This rule is aimed at ensuring that callbacks used outside of the main function block are always part-of or immediately preceding a return statement. This rule decides what is a callback based on the name of the function being called.

                          Options

                          The rule takes a single option - an array of possible callback names - which may include object methods. The default callback names are callback, cb, next.

                          Default callback names

                          Examples of incorrect code for this rule with the default ["callback", "cb", "next"] option:

                          /*eslint callback-return: "error"*/
                          
                          function foo(err, callback) {
                              if (err) {
                                  callback(err);
                              }
                              callback();
                          }

                          Examples of correct code for this rule with the default ["callback", "cb", "next"] option:

                          /*eslint callback-return: "error"*/
                          
                          function foo(err, callback) {
                              if (err) {
                                  return callback(err);
                              }
                              callback();
                          }

                          Supplied callback names

                          Examples of incorrect code for this rule with the option ["done", "send.error", "send.success"]:

                          /*eslint callback-return: ["error", ["done", "send.error", "send.success"]]*/
                          
                          function foo(err, done) {
                              if (err) {
                                  done(err);
                              }
                              done();
                          }
                          
                          function bar(err, send) {
                              if (err) {
                                  send.error(err);
                              }
                              send.success();
                          }

                          Examples of correct code for this rule with the option ["done", "send.error", "send.success"]:

                          /*eslint callback-return: ["error", ["done", "send.error", "send.success"]]*/
                          
                          function foo(err, done) {
                              if (err) {
                                  return done(err);
                              }
                              done();
                          }
                          
                          function bar(err, send) {
                              if (err) {
                                  return send.error(err);
                              }
                              send.success();
                          }

                          Known Limitations

                          Because it is difficult to understand the meaning of a program through static analysis, this rule has limitations:

                          • false negatives when this rule reports correct code, but the program calls the callback more than one time (which is incorrect behavior)
                          • false positives when this rule reports incorrect code, but the program calls the callback only one time (which is correct behavior)

                          Passing the callback by reference

                          The static analysis of this rule does not detect that the program calls the callback if it is an argument of a function (for example, setTimeout).

                          Example of a false negative when this rule reports correct code:

                          /*eslint callback-return: "error"*/
                          
                          function foo(err, callback) {
                              if (err) {
                                  setTimeout(callback, 0); // this is bad, but WILL NOT warn
                              }
                              callback();
                          }

                          Triggering the callback within a nested function

                          The static analysis of this rule does not detect that the program calls the callback from within a nested function or an immediately-invoked function expression (IIFE).

                          Example of a false negative when this rule reports correct code:

                          /*eslint callback-return: "error"*/
                          
                          function foo(err, callback) {
                              if (err) {
                                  process.nextTick(function() {
                                      return callback(); // this is bad, but WILL NOT warn
                                  });
                              }
                              callback();
                          }

                          If/else statements

                          The static analysis of this rule does not detect that the program calls the callback only one time in each branch of an if statement.

                          Example of a false positive when this rule reports incorrect code:

                          /*eslint callback-return: "error"*/
                          
                          function foo(err, callback) {
                              if (err) {
                                  callback(err); // this is fine, but WILL warn
                              } else {
                                  callback();    // this is fine, but WILL warn
                              }
                          }

                          When Not To Use It

                          There are some cases where you might want to call a callback function more than once. In those cases this rule may lead to incorrect behavior. In those cases you may want to reserve a special name for those callbacks and not include that in the list of callbacks that trigger warnings.

                          Further Reading

                          Related Rules

                          Expected return with your callback function.
                          Open

                                                          callback(error, null);
                          Severity: Minor
                          Found in blogic/BulkIdCreation.js by eslint

                          Enforce Return After Callback (callback-return)

                          The callback pattern is at the heart of most I/O and event-driven programming in JavaScript.

                          function doSomething(err, callback) {
                              if (err) {
                                  return callback(err);
                              }
                              callback();
                          }

                          To prevent calling the callback multiple times it is important to return anytime the callback is triggered outside of the main function body. Neglecting this technique often leads to issues where you do something more than once. For example, in the case of an HTTP request, you may try to send HTTP headers more than once leading Node.js to throw a Can't render headers after they are sent to the client. error.

                          Rule Details

                          This rule is aimed at ensuring that callbacks used outside of the main function block are always part-of or immediately preceding a return statement. This rule decides what is a callback based on the name of the function being called.

                          Options

                          The rule takes a single option - an array of possible callback names - which may include object methods. The default callback names are callback, cb, next.

                          Default callback names

                          Examples of incorrect code for this rule with the default ["callback", "cb", "next"] option:

                          /*eslint callback-return: "error"*/
                          
                          function foo(err, callback) {
                              if (err) {
                                  callback(err);
                              }
                              callback();
                          }

                          Examples of correct code for this rule with the default ["callback", "cb", "next"] option:

                          /*eslint callback-return: "error"*/
                          
                          function foo(err, callback) {
                              if (err) {
                                  return callback(err);
                              }
                              callback();
                          }

                          Supplied callback names

                          Examples of incorrect code for this rule with the option ["done", "send.error", "send.success"]:

                          /*eslint callback-return: ["error", ["done", "send.error", "send.success"]]*/
                          
                          function foo(err, done) {
                              if (err) {
                                  done(err);
                              }
                              done();
                          }
                          
                          function bar(err, send) {
                              if (err) {
                                  send.error(err);
                              }
                              send.success();
                          }

                          Examples of correct code for this rule with the option ["done", "send.error", "send.success"]:

                          /*eslint callback-return: ["error", ["done", "send.error", "send.success"]]*/
                          
                          function foo(err, done) {
                              if (err) {
                                  return done(err);
                              }
                              done();
                          }
                          
                          function bar(err, send) {
                              if (err) {
                                  return send.error(err);
                              }
                              send.success();
                          }

                          Known Limitations

                          Because it is difficult to understand the meaning of a program through static analysis, this rule has limitations:

                          • false negatives when this rule reports correct code, but the program calls the callback more than one time (which is incorrect behavior)
                          • false positives when this rule reports incorrect code, but the program calls the callback only one time (which is correct behavior)

                          Passing the callback by reference

                          The static analysis of this rule does not detect that the program calls the callback if it is an argument of a function (for example, setTimeout).

                          Example of a false negative when this rule reports correct code:

                          /*eslint callback-return: "error"*/
                          
                          function foo(err, callback) {
                              if (err) {
                                  setTimeout(callback, 0); // this is bad, but WILL NOT warn
                              }
                              callback();
                          }

                          Triggering the callback within a nested function

                          The static analysis of this rule does not detect that the program calls the callback from within a nested function or an immediately-invoked function expression (IIFE).

                          Example of a false negative when this rule reports correct code:

                          /*eslint callback-return: "error"*/
                          
                          function foo(err, callback) {
                              if (err) {
                                  process.nextTick(function() {
                                      return callback(); // this is bad, but WILL NOT warn
                                  });
                              }
                              callback();
                          }

                          If/else statements

                          The static analysis of this rule does not detect that the program calls the callback only one time in each branch of an if statement.

                          Example of a false positive when this rule reports incorrect code:

                          /*eslint callback-return: "error"*/
                          
                          function foo(err, callback) {
                              if (err) {
                                  callback(err); // this is fine, but WILL warn
                              } else {
                                  callback();    // this is fine, but WILL warn
                              }
                          }

                          When Not To Use It

                          There are some cases where you might want to call a callback function more than once. In those cases this rule may lead to incorrect behavior. In those cases you may want to reserve a special name for those callbacks and not include that in the list of callbacks that trigger warnings.

                          Further Reading

                          Related Rules

                          Expected '===' and instead saw '=='.
                          Open

                              }else if (request.partitionId.substr(1,1)=="2") {
                          Severity: Minor
                          Found in blogic/BulkIdCreation.js by eslint

                          Require === and !== (eqeqeq)

                          It is considered good practice to use the type-safe equality operators === and !== instead of their regular counterparts == and !=.

                          The reason for this is that == and != do type coercion which follows the rather obscure Abstract Equality Comparison Algorithm. For instance, the following statements are all considered true:

                          • [] == false
                          • [] == ![]
                          • 3 == "03"

                          If one of those occurs in an innocent-looking statement such as a == b the actual problem is very difficult to spot.

                          Rule Details

                          This rule is aimed at eliminating the type-unsafe equality operators.

                          Examples of incorrect code for this rule:

                          /*eslint eqeqeq: "error"*/
                          
                          if (x == 42) { }
                          
                          if ("" == text) { }
                          
                          if (obj.getStuff() != undefined) { }

                          The --fix option on the command line automatically fixes some problems reported by this rule. A problem is only fixed if one of the operands is a typeof expression, or if both operands are literals with the same type.

                          Options

                          always

                          The "always" option (default) enforces the use of === and !== in every situation (except when you opt-in to more specific handling of null [see below]).

                          Examples of incorrect code for the "always" option:

                          /*eslint eqeqeq: ["error", "always"]*/
                          
                          a == b
                          foo == true
                          bananas != 1
                          value == undefined
                          typeof foo == 'undefined'
                          'hello' != 'world'
                          0 == 0
                          true == true
                          foo == null

                          Examples of correct code for the "always" option:

                          /*eslint eqeqeq: ["error", "always"]*/
                          
                          a === b
                          foo === true
                          bananas !== 1
                          value === undefined
                          typeof foo === 'undefined'
                          'hello' !== 'world'
                          0 === 0
                          true === true
                          foo === null

                          This rule optionally takes a second argument, which should be an object with the following supported properties:

                          • "null": Customize how this rule treats null literals. Possible values:
                            • always (default) - Always use === or !==.
                            • never - Never use === or !== with null.
                            • ignore - Do not apply this rule to null.

                          smart

                          The "smart" option enforces the use of === and !== except for these cases:

                          • Comparing two literal values
                          • Evaluating the value of typeof
                          • Comparing against null

                          Examples of incorrect code for the "smart" option:

                          /*eslint eqeqeq: ["error", "smart"]*/
                          
                          // comparing two variables requires ===
                          a == b
                          
                          // only one side is a literal
                          foo == true
                          bananas != 1
                          
                          // comparing to undefined requires ===
                          value == undefined

                          Examples of correct code for the "smart" option:

                          /*eslint eqeqeq: ["error", "smart"]*/
                          
                          typeof foo == 'undefined'
                          'hello' != 'world'
                          0 == 0
                          true == true
                          foo == null

                          allow-null

                          Deprecated: Instead of using this option use "always" and pass a "null" option property with value "ignore". This will tell eslint to always enforce strict equality except when comparing with the null literal.

                          ["error", "always", {"null": "ignore"}]

                          When Not To Use It

                          If you don't want to enforce a style for using equality operators, then it's safe to disable this rule. Source: http://eslint.org/docs/rules/

                          Expected error to be handled.
                          Open

                                      db.getDB(function (err,connection)
                          Severity: Minor
                          Found in blogic/BulkIdCreation.js by eslint

                          Enforce Callback Error Handling (handle-callback-err)

                          In Node.js, a common pattern for dealing with asynchronous behavior is called the callback pattern. This pattern expects an Error object or null as the first argument of the callback. Forgetting to handle these errors can lead to some really strange behavior in your application.

                          function loadData (err, data) {
                              doSomething(); // forgot to handle error
                          }

                          Rule Details

                          This rule expects that when you're using the callback pattern in Node.js you'll handle the error.

                          Options

                          The rule takes a single string option: the name of the error parameter. The default is "err".

                          Examples of incorrect code for this rule with the default "err" parameter name:

                          /*eslint handle-callback-err: "error"*/
                          
                          function loadData (err, data) {
                              doSomething();
                          }

                          Examples of correct code for this rule with the default "err" parameter name:

                          /*eslint handle-callback-err: "error"*/
                          
                          function loadData (err, data) {
                              if (err) {
                                  console.log(err.stack);
                              }
                              doSomething();
                          }
                          
                          function generateError (err) {
                              if (err) {}
                          }

                          Examples of correct code for this rule with a sample "error" parameter name:

                          /*eslint handle-callback-err: ["error", "error"]*/
                          
                          function loadData (error, data) {
                              if (error) {
                                 console.log(error.stack);
                              }
                              doSomething();
                          }

                          regular expression

                          Sometimes (especially in big projects) the name of the error variable is not consistent across the project, so you need a more flexible configuration to ensure that the rule reports all unhandled errors.

                          If the configured name of the error variable begins with a ^ it is considered to be a regexp pattern.

                          • If the option is "^(err|error|anySpecificError)$", the rule reports unhandled errors where the parameter name can be err, error or anySpecificError.
                          • If the option is "^.+Error$", the rule reports unhandled errors where the parameter name ends with Error (for example, connectionError or validationError will match).
                          • If the option is "^.*(e|E)rr", the rule reports unhandled errors where the parameter name matches any string that contains err or Err (for example, err, error, anyError, some_err will match).

                          When Not To Use It

                          There are cases where it may be safe for your application to ignore errors, however only ignore errors if you are confident that some other form of monitoring will help you catch the problem.

                          Further Reading

                          Expected return with your callback function.
                          Open

                                      callback(null);
                          Severity: Minor
                          Found in blogic/BulkIdCreation.js by eslint

                          Enforce Return After Callback (callback-return)

                          The callback pattern is at the heart of most I/O and event-driven programming in JavaScript.

                          function doSomething(err, callback) {
                              if (err) {
                                  return callback(err);
                              }
                              callback();
                          }

                          To prevent calling the callback multiple times it is important to return anytime the callback is triggered outside of the main function body. Neglecting this technique often leads to issues where you do something more than once. For example, in the case of an HTTP request, you may try to send HTTP headers more than once leading Node.js to throw a Can't render headers after they are sent to the client. error.

                          Rule Details

                          This rule is aimed at ensuring that callbacks used outside of the main function block are always part-of or immediately preceding a return statement. This rule decides what is a callback based on the name of the function being called.

                          Options

                          The rule takes a single option - an array of possible callback names - which may include object methods. The default callback names are callback, cb, next.

                          Default callback names

                          Examples of incorrect code for this rule with the default ["callback", "cb", "next"] option:

                          /*eslint callback-return: "error"*/
                          
                          function foo(err, callback) {
                              if (err) {
                                  callback(err);
                              }
                              callback();
                          }

                          Examples of correct code for this rule with the default ["callback", "cb", "next"] option:

                          /*eslint callback-return: "error"*/
                          
                          function foo(err, callback) {
                              if (err) {
                                  return callback(err);
                              }
                              callback();
                          }

                          Supplied callback names

                          Examples of incorrect code for this rule with the option ["done", "send.error", "send.success"]:

                          /*eslint callback-return: ["error", ["done", "send.error", "send.success"]]*/
                          
                          function foo(err, done) {
                              if (err) {
                                  done(err);
                              }
                              done();
                          }
                          
                          function bar(err, send) {
                              if (err) {
                                  send.error(err);
                              }
                              send.success();
                          }

                          Examples of correct code for this rule with the option ["done", "send.error", "send.success"]:

                          /*eslint callback-return: ["error", ["done", "send.error", "send.success"]]*/
                          
                          function foo(err, done) {
                              if (err) {
                                  return done(err);
                              }
                              done();
                          }
                          
                          function bar(err, send) {
                              if (err) {
                                  return send.error(err);
                              }
                              send.success();
                          }

                          Known Limitations

                          Because it is difficult to understand the meaning of a program through static analysis, this rule has limitations:

                          • false negatives when this rule reports correct code, but the program calls the callback more than one time (which is incorrect behavior)
                          • false positives when this rule reports incorrect code, but the program calls the callback only one time (which is correct behavior)

                          Passing the callback by reference

                          The static analysis of this rule does not detect that the program calls the callback if it is an argument of a function (for example, setTimeout).

                          Example of a false negative when this rule reports correct code:

                          /*eslint callback-return: "error"*/
                          
                          function foo(err, callback) {
                              if (err) {
                                  setTimeout(callback, 0); // this is bad, but WILL NOT warn
                              }
                              callback();
                          }

                          Triggering the callback within a nested function

                          The static analysis of this rule does not detect that the program calls the callback from within a nested function or an immediately-invoked function expression (IIFE).

                          Example of a false negative when this rule reports correct code:

                          /*eslint callback-return: "error"*/
                          
                          function foo(err, callback) {
                              if (err) {
                                  process.nextTick(function() {
                                      return callback(); // this is bad, but WILL NOT warn
                                  });
                              }
                              callback();
                          }

                          If/else statements

                          The static analysis of this rule does not detect that the program calls the callback only one time in each branch of an if statement.

                          Example of a false positive when this rule reports incorrect code:

                          /*eslint callback-return: "error"*/
                          
                          function foo(err, callback) {
                              if (err) {
                                  callback(err); // this is fine, but WILL warn
                              } else {
                                  callback();    // this is fine, but WILL warn
                              }
                          }

                          When Not To Use It

                          There are some cases where you might want to call a callback function more than once. In those cases this rule may lead to incorrect behavior. In those cases you may want to reserve a special name for those callbacks and not include that in the list of callbacks that trigger warnings.

                          Further Reading

                          Related Rules

                          Expected error to be handled.
                          Open

                                      db.getDB(function (err,connection)
                          Severity: Minor
                          Found in blogic/BulkIdCreation.js by eslint

                          Enforce Callback Error Handling (handle-callback-err)

                          In Node.js, a common pattern for dealing with asynchronous behavior is called the callback pattern. This pattern expects an Error object or null as the first argument of the callback. Forgetting to handle these errors can lead to some really strange behavior in your application.

                          function loadData (err, data) {
                              doSomething(); // forgot to handle error
                          }

                          Rule Details

                          This rule expects that when you're using the callback pattern in Node.js you'll handle the error.

                          Options

                          The rule takes a single string option: the name of the error parameter. The default is "err".

                          Examples of incorrect code for this rule with the default "err" parameter name:

                          /*eslint handle-callback-err: "error"*/
                          
                          function loadData (err, data) {
                              doSomething();
                          }

                          Examples of correct code for this rule with the default "err" parameter name:

                          /*eslint handle-callback-err: "error"*/
                          
                          function loadData (err, data) {
                              if (err) {
                                  console.log(err.stack);
                              }
                              doSomething();
                          }
                          
                          function generateError (err) {
                              if (err) {}
                          }

                          Examples of correct code for this rule with a sample "error" parameter name:

                          /*eslint handle-callback-err: ["error", "error"]*/
                          
                          function loadData (error, data) {
                              if (error) {
                                 console.log(error.stack);
                              }
                              doSomething();
                          }

                          regular expression

                          Sometimes (especially in big projects) the name of the error variable is not consistent across the project, so you need a more flexible configuration to ensure that the rule reports all unhandled errors.

                          If the configured name of the error variable begins with a ^ it is considered to be a regexp pattern.

                          • If the option is "^(err|error|anySpecificError)$", the rule reports unhandled errors where the parameter name can be err, error or anySpecificError.
                          • If the option is "^.+Error$", the rule reports unhandled errors where the parameter name ends with Error (for example, connectionError or validationError will match).
                          • If the option is "^.*(e|E)rr", the rule reports unhandled errors where the parameter name matches any string that contains err or Err (for example, err, error, anyError, some_err will match).

                          When Not To Use It

                          There are cases where it may be safe for your application to ignore errors, however only ignore errors if you are confident that some other form of monitoring will help you catch the problem.

                          Further Reading

                          Expected return with your callback function.
                          Open

                                          callback(null,result);
                          Severity: Minor
                          Found in blogic/BulkIdCreation.js by eslint

                          Enforce Return After Callback (callback-return)

                          The callback pattern is at the heart of most I/O and event-driven programming in JavaScript.

                          function doSomething(err, callback) {
                              if (err) {
                                  return callback(err);
                              }
                              callback();
                          }

                          To prevent calling the callback multiple times it is important to return anytime the callback is triggered outside of the main function body. Neglecting this technique often leads to issues where you do something more than once. For example, in the case of an HTTP request, you may try to send HTTP headers more than once leading Node.js to throw a Can't render headers after they are sent to the client. error.

                          Rule Details

                          This rule is aimed at ensuring that callbacks used outside of the main function block are always part-of or immediately preceding a return statement. This rule decides what is a callback based on the name of the function being called.

                          Options

                          The rule takes a single option - an array of possible callback names - which may include object methods. The default callback names are callback, cb, next.

                          Default callback names

                          Examples of incorrect code for this rule with the default ["callback", "cb", "next"] option:

                          /*eslint callback-return: "error"*/
                          
                          function foo(err, callback) {
                              if (err) {
                                  callback(err);
                              }
                              callback();
                          }

                          Examples of correct code for this rule with the default ["callback", "cb", "next"] option:

                          /*eslint callback-return: "error"*/
                          
                          function foo(err, callback) {
                              if (err) {
                                  return callback(err);
                              }
                              callback();
                          }

                          Supplied callback names

                          Examples of incorrect code for this rule with the option ["done", "send.error", "send.success"]:

                          /*eslint callback-return: ["error", ["done", "send.error", "send.success"]]*/
                          
                          function foo(err, done) {
                              if (err) {
                                  done(err);
                              }
                              done();
                          }
                          
                          function bar(err, send) {
                              if (err) {
                                  send.error(err);
                              }
                              send.success();
                          }

                          Examples of correct code for this rule with the option ["done", "send.error", "send.success"]:

                          /*eslint callback-return: ["error", ["done", "send.error", "send.success"]]*/
                          
                          function foo(err, done) {
                              if (err) {
                                  return done(err);
                              }
                              done();
                          }
                          
                          function bar(err, send) {
                              if (err) {
                                  return send.error(err);
                              }
                              send.success();
                          }

                          Known Limitations

                          Because it is difficult to understand the meaning of a program through static analysis, this rule has limitations:

                          • false negatives when this rule reports correct code, but the program calls the callback more than one time (which is incorrect behavior)
                          • false positives when this rule reports incorrect code, but the program calls the callback only one time (which is correct behavior)

                          Passing the callback by reference

                          The static analysis of this rule does not detect that the program calls the callback if it is an argument of a function (for example, setTimeout).

                          Example of a false negative when this rule reports correct code:

                          /*eslint callback-return: "error"*/
                          
                          function foo(err, callback) {
                              if (err) {
                                  setTimeout(callback, 0); // this is bad, but WILL NOT warn
                              }
                              callback();
                          }

                          Triggering the callback within a nested function

                          The static analysis of this rule does not detect that the program calls the callback from within a nested function or an immediately-invoked function expression (IIFE).

                          Example of a false negative when this rule reports correct code:

                          /*eslint callback-return: "error"*/
                          
                          function foo(err, callback) {
                              if (err) {
                                  process.nextTick(function() {
                                      return callback(); // this is bad, but WILL NOT warn
                                  });
                              }
                              callback();
                          }

                          If/else statements

                          The static analysis of this rule does not detect that the program calls the callback only one time in each branch of an if statement.

                          Example of a false positive when this rule reports incorrect code:

                          /*eslint callback-return: "error"*/
                          
                          function foo(err, callback) {
                              if (err) {
                                  callback(err); // this is fine, but WILL warn
                              } else {
                                  callback();    // this is fine, but WILL warn
                              }
                          }

                          When Not To Use It

                          There are some cases where you might want to call a callback function more than once. In those cases this rule may lead to incorrect behavior. In those cases you may want to reserve a special name for those callbacks and not include that in the list of callbacks that trigger warnings.

                          Further Reading

                          Related Rules

                          Expected error to be handled.
                          Open

                                      db.getDB(function (err,connection)
                          Severity: Minor
                          Found in blogic/BulkIdCreation.js by eslint

                          Enforce Callback Error Handling (handle-callback-err)

                          In Node.js, a common pattern for dealing with asynchronous behavior is called the callback pattern. This pattern expects an Error object or null as the first argument of the callback. Forgetting to handle these errors can lead to some really strange behavior in your application.

                          function loadData (err, data) {
                              doSomething(); // forgot to handle error
                          }

                          Rule Details

                          This rule expects that when you're using the callback pattern in Node.js you'll handle the error.

                          Options

                          The rule takes a single string option: the name of the error parameter. The default is "err".

                          Examples of incorrect code for this rule with the default "err" parameter name:

                          /*eslint handle-callback-err: "error"*/
                          
                          function loadData (err, data) {
                              doSomething();
                          }

                          Examples of correct code for this rule with the default "err" parameter name:

                          /*eslint handle-callback-err: "error"*/
                          
                          function loadData (err, data) {
                              if (err) {
                                  console.log(err.stack);
                              }
                              doSomething();
                          }
                          
                          function generateError (err) {
                              if (err) {}
                          }

                          Examples of correct code for this rule with a sample "error" parameter name:

                          /*eslint handle-callback-err: ["error", "error"]*/
                          
                          function loadData (error, data) {
                              if (error) {
                                 console.log(error.stack);
                              }
                              doSomething();
                          }

                          regular expression

                          Sometimes (especially in big projects) the name of the error variable is not consistent across the project, so you need a more flexible configuration to ensure that the rule reports all unhandled errors.

                          If the configured name of the error variable begins with a ^ it is considered to be a regexp pattern.

                          • If the option is "^(err|error|anySpecificError)$", the rule reports unhandled errors where the parameter name can be err, error or anySpecificError.
                          • If the option is "^.+Error$", the rule reports unhandled errors where the parameter name ends with Error (for example, connectionError or validationError will match).
                          • If the option is "^.*(e|E)rr", the rule reports unhandled errors where the parameter name matches any string that contains err or Err (for example, err, error, anyError, some_err will match).

                          When Not To Use It

                          There are cases where it may be safe for your application to ignore errors, however only ignore errors if you are confident that some other form of monitoring will help you catch the problem.

                          Further Reading

                          Expected return with your callback function.
                          Open

                                                              callback(null, result);
                          Severity: Minor
                          Found in blogic/BulkIdCreation.js by eslint

                          Enforce Return After Callback (callback-return)

                          The callback pattern is at the heart of most I/O and event-driven programming in JavaScript.

                          function doSomething(err, callback) {
                              if (err) {
                                  return callback(err);
                              }
                              callback();
                          }

                          To prevent calling the callback multiple times it is important to return anytime the callback is triggered outside of the main function body. Neglecting this technique often leads to issues where you do something more than once. For example, in the case of an HTTP request, you may try to send HTTP headers more than once leading Node.js to throw a Can't render headers after they are sent to the client. error.

                          Rule Details

                          This rule is aimed at ensuring that callbacks used outside of the main function block are always part-of or immediately preceding a return statement. This rule decides what is a callback based on the name of the function being called.

                          Options

                          The rule takes a single option - an array of possible callback names - which may include object methods. The default callback names are callback, cb, next.

                          Default callback names

                          Examples of incorrect code for this rule with the default ["callback", "cb", "next"] option:

                          /*eslint callback-return: "error"*/
                          
                          function foo(err, callback) {
                              if (err) {
                                  callback(err);
                              }
                              callback();
                          }

                          Examples of correct code for this rule with the default ["callback", "cb", "next"] option:

                          /*eslint callback-return: "error"*/
                          
                          function foo(err, callback) {
                              if (err) {
                                  return callback(err);
                              }
                              callback();
                          }

                          Supplied callback names

                          Examples of incorrect code for this rule with the option ["done", "send.error", "send.success"]:

                          /*eslint callback-return: ["error", ["done", "send.error", "send.success"]]*/
                          
                          function foo(err, done) {
                              if (err) {
                                  done(err);
                              }
                              done();
                          }
                          
                          function bar(err, send) {
                              if (err) {
                                  send.error(err);
                              }
                              send.success();
                          }

                          Examples of correct code for this rule with the option ["done", "send.error", "send.success"]:

                          /*eslint callback-return: ["error", ["done", "send.error", "send.success"]]*/
                          
                          function foo(err, done) {
                              if (err) {
                                  return done(err);
                              }
                              done();
                          }
                          
                          function bar(err, send) {
                              if (err) {
                                  return send.error(err);
                              }
                              send.success();
                          }

                          Known Limitations

                          Because it is difficult to understand the meaning of a program through static analysis, this rule has limitations:

                          • false negatives when this rule reports correct code, but the program calls the callback more than one time (which is incorrect behavior)
                          • false positives when this rule reports incorrect code, but the program calls the callback only one time (which is correct behavior)

                          Passing the callback by reference

                          The static analysis of this rule does not detect that the program calls the callback if it is an argument of a function (for example, setTimeout).

                          Example of a false negative when this rule reports correct code:

                          /*eslint callback-return: "error"*/
                          
                          function foo(err, callback) {
                              if (err) {
                                  setTimeout(callback, 0); // this is bad, but WILL NOT warn
                              }
                              callback();
                          }

                          Triggering the callback within a nested function

                          The static analysis of this rule does not detect that the program calls the callback from within a nested function or an immediately-invoked function expression (IIFE).

                          Example of a false negative when this rule reports correct code:

                          /*eslint callback-return: "error"*/
                          
                          function foo(err, callback) {
                              if (err) {
                                  process.nextTick(function() {
                                      return callback(); // this is bad, but WILL NOT warn
                                  });
                              }
                              callback();
                          }

                          If/else statements

                          The static analysis of this rule does not detect that the program calls the callback only one time in each branch of an if statement.

                          Example of a false positive when this rule reports incorrect code:

                          /*eslint callback-return: "error"*/
                          
                          function foo(err, callback) {
                              if (err) {
                                  callback(err); // this is fine, but WILL warn
                              } else {
                                  callback();    // this is fine, but WILL warn
                              }
                          }

                          When Not To Use It

                          There are some cases where you might want to call a callback function more than once. In those cases this rule may lead to incorrect behavior. In those cases you may want to reserve a special name for those callbacks and not include that in the list of callbacks that trigger warnings.

                          Further Reading

                          Related Rules

                          Expected return with your callback function.
                          Open

                                                  callback(str);
                          Severity: Minor
                          Found in blogic/BulkIdCreation.js by eslint

                          Enforce Return After Callback (callback-return)

                          The callback pattern is at the heart of most I/O and event-driven programming in JavaScript.

                          function doSomething(err, callback) {
                              if (err) {
                                  return callback(err);
                              }
                              callback();
                          }

                          To prevent calling the callback multiple times it is important to return anytime the callback is triggered outside of the main function body. Neglecting this technique often leads to issues where you do something more than once. For example, in the case of an HTTP request, you may try to send HTTP headers more than once leading Node.js to throw a Can't render headers after they are sent to the client. error.

                          Rule Details

                          This rule is aimed at ensuring that callbacks used outside of the main function block are always part-of or immediately preceding a return statement. This rule decides what is a callback based on the name of the function being called.

                          Options

                          The rule takes a single option - an array of possible callback names - which may include object methods. The default callback names are callback, cb, next.

                          Default callback names

                          Examples of incorrect code for this rule with the default ["callback", "cb", "next"] option:

                          /*eslint callback-return: "error"*/
                          
                          function foo(err, callback) {
                              if (err) {
                                  callback(err);
                              }
                              callback();
                          }

                          Examples of correct code for this rule with the default ["callback", "cb", "next"] option:

                          /*eslint callback-return: "error"*/
                          
                          function foo(err, callback) {
                              if (err) {
                                  return callback(err);
                              }
                              callback();
                          }

                          Supplied callback names

                          Examples of incorrect code for this rule with the option ["done", "send.error", "send.success"]:

                          /*eslint callback-return: ["error", ["done", "send.error", "send.success"]]*/
                          
                          function foo(err, done) {
                              if (err) {
                                  done(err);
                              }
                              done();
                          }
                          
                          function bar(err, send) {
                              if (err) {
                                  send.error(err);
                              }
                              send.success();
                          }

                          Examples of correct code for this rule with the option ["done", "send.error", "send.success"]:

                          /*eslint callback-return: ["error", ["done", "send.error", "send.success"]]*/
                          
                          function foo(err, done) {
                              if (err) {
                                  return done(err);
                              }
                              done();
                          }
                          
                          function bar(err, send) {
                              if (err) {
                                  return send.error(err);
                              }
                              send.success();
                          }

                          Known Limitations

                          Because it is difficult to understand the meaning of a program through static analysis, this rule has limitations:

                          • false negatives when this rule reports correct code, but the program calls the callback more than one time (which is incorrect behavior)
                          • false positives when this rule reports incorrect code, but the program calls the callback only one time (which is correct behavior)

                          Passing the callback by reference

                          The static analysis of this rule does not detect that the program calls the callback if it is an argument of a function (for example, setTimeout).

                          Example of a false negative when this rule reports correct code:

                          /*eslint callback-return: "error"*/
                          
                          function foo(err, callback) {
                              if (err) {
                                  setTimeout(callback, 0); // this is bad, but WILL NOT warn
                              }
                              callback();
                          }

                          Triggering the callback within a nested function

                          The static analysis of this rule does not detect that the program calls the callback from within a nested function or an immediately-invoked function expression (IIFE).

                          Example of a false negative when this rule reports correct code:

                          /*eslint callback-return: "error"*/
                          
                          function foo(err, callback) {
                              if (err) {
                                  process.nextTick(function() {
                                      return callback(); // this is bad, but WILL NOT warn
                                  });
                              }
                              callback();
                          }

                          If/else statements

                          The static analysis of this rule does not detect that the program calls the callback only one time in each branch of an if statement.

                          Example of a false positive when this rule reports incorrect code:

                          /*eslint callback-return: "error"*/
                          
                          function foo(err, callback) {
                              if (err) {
                                  callback(err); // this is fine, but WILL warn
                              } else {
                                  callback();    // this is fine, but WILL warn
                              }
                          }

                          When Not To Use It

                          There are some cases where you might want to call a callback function more than once. In those cases this rule may lead to incorrect behavior. In those cases you may want to reserve a special name for those callbacks and not include that in the list of callbacks that trigger warnings.

                          Further Reading

                          Related Rules

                          Expected return with your callback function.
                          Open

                                                          callback(error, null);
                          Severity: Minor
                          Found in blogic/BulkIdCreation.js by eslint

                          Enforce Return After Callback (callback-return)

                          The callback pattern is at the heart of most I/O and event-driven programming in JavaScript.

                          function doSomething(err, callback) {
                              if (err) {
                                  return callback(err);
                              }
                              callback();
                          }

                          To prevent calling the callback multiple times it is important to return anytime the callback is triggered outside of the main function body. Neglecting this technique often leads to issues where you do something more than once. For example, in the case of an HTTP request, you may try to send HTTP headers more than once leading Node.js to throw a Can't render headers after they are sent to the client. error.

                          Rule Details

                          This rule is aimed at ensuring that callbacks used outside of the main function block are always part-of or immediately preceding a return statement. This rule decides what is a callback based on the name of the function being called.

                          Options

                          The rule takes a single option - an array of possible callback names - which may include object methods. The default callback names are callback, cb, next.

                          Default callback names

                          Examples of incorrect code for this rule with the default ["callback", "cb", "next"] option:

                          /*eslint callback-return: "error"*/
                          
                          function foo(err, callback) {
                              if (err) {
                                  callback(err);
                              }
                              callback();
                          }

                          Examples of correct code for this rule with the default ["callback", "cb", "next"] option:

                          /*eslint callback-return: "error"*/
                          
                          function foo(err, callback) {
                              if (err) {
                                  return callback(err);
                              }
                              callback();
                          }

                          Supplied callback names

                          Examples of incorrect code for this rule with the option ["done", "send.error", "send.success"]:

                          /*eslint callback-return: ["error", ["done", "send.error", "send.success"]]*/
                          
                          function foo(err, done) {
                              if (err) {
                                  done(err);
                              }
                              done();
                          }
                          
                          function bar(err, send) {
                              if (err) {
                                  send.error(err);
                              }
                              send.success();
                          }

                          Examples of correct code for this rule with the option ["done", "send.error", "send.success"]:

                          /*eslint callback-return: ["error", ["done", "send.error", "send.success"]]*/
                          
                          function foo(err, done) {
                              if (err) {
                                  return done(err);
                              }
                              done();
                          }
                          
                          function bar(err, send) {
                              if (err) {
                                  return send.error(err);
                              }
                              send.success();
                          }

                          Known Limitations

                          Because it is difficult to understand the meaning of a program through static analysis, this rule has limitations:

                          • false negatives when this rule reports correct code, but the program calls the callback more than one time (which is incorrect behavior)
                          • false positives when this rule reports incorrect code, but the program calls the callback only one time (which is correct behavior)

                          Passing the callback by reference

                          The static analysis of this rule does not detect that the program calls the callback if it is an argument of a function (for example, setTimeout).

                          Example of a false negative when this rule reports correct code:

                          /*eslint callback-return: "error"*/
                          
                          function foo(err, callback) {
                              if (err) {
                                  setTimeout(callback, 0); // this is bad, but WILL NOT warn
                              }
                              callback();
                          }

                          Triggering the callback within a nested function

                          The static analysis of this rule does not detect that the program calls the callback from within a nested function or an immediately-invoked function expression (IIFE).

                          Example of a false negative when this rule reports correct code:

                          /*eslint callback-return: "error"*/
                          
                          function foo(err, callback) {
                              if (err) {
                                  process.nextTick(function() {
                                      return callback(); // this is bad, but WILL NOT warn
                                  });
                              }
                              callback();
                          }

                          If/else statements

                          The static analysis of this rule does not detect that the program calls the callback only one time in each branch of an if statement.

                          Example of a false positive when this rule reports incorrect code:

                          /*eslint callback-return: "error"*/
                          
                          function foo(err, callback) {
                              if (err) {
                                  callback(err); // this is fine, but WILL warn
                              } else {
                                  callback();    // this is fine, but WILL warn
                              }
                          }

                          When Not To Use It

                          There are some cases where you might want to call a callback function more than once. In those cases this rule may lead to incorrect behavior. In those cases you may want to reserve a special name for those callbacks and not include that in the list of callbacks that trigger warnings.

                          Further Reading

                          Related Rules

                          Expected return with your callback function.
                          Open

                                          callback("It is necesary wait for ids reposition. Try again in few minutes");
                          Severity: Minor
                          Found in blogic/BulkIdCreation.js by eslint

                          Enforce Return After Callback (callback-return)

                          The callback pattern is at the heart of most I/O and event-driven programming in JavaScript.

                          function doSomething(err, callback) {
                              if (err) {
                                  return callback(err);
                              }
                              callback();
                          }

                          To prevent calling the callback multiple times it is important to return anytime the callback is triggered outside of the main function body. Neglecting this technique often leads to issues where you do something more than once. For example, in the case of an HTTP request, you may try to send HTTP headers more than once leading Node.js to throw a Can't render headers after they are sent to the client. error.

                          Rule Details

                          This rule is aimed at ensuring that callbacks used outside of the main function block are always part-of or immediately preceding a return statement. This rule decides what is a callback based on the name of the function being called.

                          Options

                          The rule takes a single option - an array of possible callback names - which may include object methods. The default callback names are callback, cb, next.

                          Default callback names

                          Examples of incorrect code for this rule with the default ["callback", "cb", "next"] option:

                          /*eslint callback-return: "error"*/
                          
                          function foo(err, callback) {
                              if (err) {
                                  callback(err);
                              }
                              callback();
                          }

                          Examples of correct code for this rule with the default ["callback", "cb", "next"] option:

                          /*eslint callback-return: "error"*/
                          
                          function foo(err, callback) {
                              if (err) {
                                  return callback(err);
                              }
                              callback();
                          }

                          Supplied callback names

                          Examples of incorrect code for this rule with the option ["done", "send.error", "send.success"]:

                          /*eslint callback-return: ["error", ["done", "send.error", "send.success"]]*/
                          
                          function foo(err, done) {
                              if (err) {
                                  done(err);
                              }
                              done();
                          }
                          
                          function bar(err, send) {
                              if (err) {
                                  send.error(err);
                              }
                              send.success();
                          }

                          Examples of correct code for this rule with the option ["done", "send.error", "send.success"]:

                          /*eslint callback-return: ["error", ["done", "send.error", "send.success"]]*/
                          
                          function foo(err, done) {
                              if (err) {
                                  return done(err);
                              }
                              done();
                          }
                          
                          function bar(err, send) {
                              if (err) {
                                  return send.error(err);
                              }
                              send.success();
                          }

                          Known Limitations

                          Because it is difficult to understand the meaning of a program through static analysis, this rule has limitations:

                          • false negatives when this rule reports correct code, but the program calls the callback more than one time (which is incorrect behavior)
                          • false positives when this rule reports incorrect code, but the program calls the callback only one time (which is correct behavior)

                          Passing the callback by reference

                          The static analysis of this rule does not detect that the program calls the callback if it is an argument of a function (for example, setTimeout).

                          Example of a false negative when this rule reports correct code:

                          /*eslint callback-return: "error"*/
                          
                          function foo(err, callback) {
                              if (err) {
                                  setTimeout(callback, 0); // this is bad, but WILL NOT warn
                              }
                              callback();
                          }

                          Triggering the callback within a nested function

                          The static analysis of this rule does not detect that the program calls the callback from within a nested function or an immediately-invoked function expression (IIFE).

                          Example of a false negative when this rule reports correct code:

                          /*eslint callback-return: "error"*/
                          
                          function foo(err, callback) {
                              if (err) {
                                  process.nextTick(function() {
                                      return callback(); // this is bad, but WILL NOT warn
                                  });
                              }
                              callback();
                          }

                          If/else statements

                          The static analysis of this rule does not detect that the program calls the callback only one time in each branch of an if statement.

                          Example of a false positive when this rule reports incorrect code:

                          /*eslint callback-return: "error"*/
                          
                          function foo(err, callback) {
                              if (err) {
                                  callback(err); // this is fine, but WILL warn
                              } else {
                                  callback();    // this is fine, but WILL warn
                              }
                          }

                          When Not To Use It

                          There are some cases where you might want to call a callback function more than once. In those cases this rule may lead to incorrect behavior. In those cases you may want to reserve a special name for those callbacks and not include that in the list of callbacks that trigger warnings.

                          Further Reading

                          Related Rules

                          Expected return with your callback function.
                          Open

                                          callback(err,null);
                          Severity: Minor
                          Found in blogic/BulkIdCreation.js by eslint

                          Enforce Return After Callback (callback-return)

                          The callback pattern is at the heart of most I/O and event-driven programming in JavaScript.

                          function doSomething(err, callback) {
                              if (err) {
                                  return callback(err);
                              }
                              callback();
                          }

                          To prevent calling the callback multiple times it is important to return anytime the callback is triggered outside of the main function body. Neglecting this technique often leads to issues where you do something more than once. For example, in the case of an HTTP request, you may try to send HTTP headers more than once leading Node.js to throw a Can't render headers after they are sent to the client. error.

                          Rule Details

                          This rule is aimed at ensuring that callbacks used outside of the main function block are always part-of or immediately preceding a return statement. This rule decides what is a callback based on the name of the function being called.

                          Options

                          The rule takes a single option - an array of possible callback names - which may include object methods. The default callback names are callback, cb, next.

                          Default callback names

                          Examples of incorrect code for this rule with the default ["callback", "cb", "next"] option:

                          /*eslint callback-return: "error"*/
                          
                          function foo(err, callback) {
                              if (err) {
                                  callback(err);
                              }
                              callback();
                          }

                          Examples of correct code for this rule with the default ["callback", "cb", "next"] option:

                          /*eslint callback-return: "error"*/
                          
                          function foo(err, callback) {
                              if (err) {
                                  return callback(err);
                              }
                              callback();
                          }

                          Supplied callback names

                          Examples of incorrect code for this rule with the option ["done", "send.error", "send.success"]:

                          /*eslint callback-return: ["error", ["done", "send.error", "send.success"]]*/
                          
                          function foo(err, done) {
                              if (err) {
                                  done(err);
                              }
                              done();
                          }
                          
                          function bar(err, send) {
                              if (err) {
                                  send.error(err);
                              }
                              send.success();
                          }

                          Examples of correct code for this rule with the option ["done", "send.error", "send.success"]:

                          /*eslint callback-return: ["error", ["done", "send.error", "send.success"]]*/
                          
                          function foo(err, done) {
                              if (err) {
                                  return done(err);
                              }
                              done();
                          }
                          
                          function bar(err, send) {
                              if (err) {
                                  return send.error(err);
                              }
                              send.success();
                          }

                          Known Limitations

                          Because it is difficult to understand the meaning of a program through static analysis, this rule has limitations:

                          • false negatives when this rule reports correct code, but the program calls the callback more than one time (which is incorrect behavior)
                          • false positives when this rule reports incorrect code, but the program calls the callback only one time (which is correct behavior)

                          Passing the callback by reference

                          The static analysis of this rule does not detect that the program calls the callback if it is an argument of a function (for example, setTimeout).

                          Example of a false negative when this rule reports correct code:

                          /*eslint callback-return: "error"*/
                          
                          function foo(err, callback) {
                              if (err) {
                                  setTimeout(callback, 0); // this is bad, but WILL NOT warn
                              }
                              callback();
                          }

                          Triggering the callback within a nested function

                          The static analysis of this rule does not detect that the program calls the callback from within a nested function or an immediately-invoked function expression (IIFE).

                          Example of a false negative when this rule reports correct code:

                          /*eslint callback-return: "error"*/
                          
                          function foo(err, callback) {
                              if (err) {
                                  process.nextTick(function() {
                                      return callback(); // this is bad, but WILL NOT warn
                                  });
                              }
                              callback();
                          }

                          If/else statements

                          The static analysis of this rule does not detect that the program calls the callback only one time in each branch of an if statement.

                          Example of a false positive when this rule reports incorrect code:

                          /*eslint callback-return: "error"*/
                          
                          function foo(err, callback) {
                              if (err) {
                                  callback(err); // this is fine, but WILL warn
                              } else {
                                  callback();    // this is fine, but WILL warn
                              }
                          }

                          When Not To Use It

                          There are some cases where you might want to call a callback function more than once. In those cases this rule may lead to incorrect behavior. In those cases you may want to reserve a special name for those callbacks and not include that in the list of callbacks that trigger warnings.

                          Further Reading

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