eslint/default-case Restriction 
What it does 
Enforces that all switch statements include a default case, unless explicitly marked with a configured comment.
Why is this bad? 
Without a default case, it is unclear whether the omission was intentional or an oversight. Adding a default or a special comment makes the code more explicit and reduces mistakes.
You may optionally include a // no default after the last case if there is no default case. The comment may be in any desired case, such as // No Default.
Options 
First option:
- Type: object
- Properties: - commentPattern:- string(default:- /^no default$/i) - A regex pattern used to detect comments that mark the absence of a- defaultcase as intentional.
 
Example configuration:
{
  "default-case": ["error", { "commentPattern": "^skip\\sdefault" }]
}Examples of incorrect code for this rule:
/* default-case: ["error"] */
switch (foo) {
  case 1:
    break;
}Examples of correct code for this rule:
/* default-case: ["error"] */
switch (a) {
  case 1:
    break;
  default:
    break;
}
switch (a) {
  case 1:
    break;
    // no default
}commentPattern 
Examples of incorrect code for this rule with the { "commentPattern": "^skip\\sdefault" } option:
/* default-case: ["error", { "commentPattern": "^skip\\sdefault" }] */
switch (a) {
  case 1:
    break;
    // no default
}Examples of correct code for this rule with the { "commentPattern": "^skip\\sdefault" } option:
/* default-case: ["error", { "commentPattern": "^skip\\sdefault" }] */
switch (a) {
  case 1:
    break;
    // skip default
}How to use 
To enable this rule in the CLI or using the config file, you can use:
oxlint --deny default-case{
  "rules": {
    "default-case": "error"
  }
}