SES-shim
underscore
SES-shim | underscore | |
---|---|---|
13 | 32 | |
736 | 27,236 | |
0.7% | - | |
9.9 | 4.0 | |
1 day ago | about 1 month ago | |
JavaScript | JavaScript | |
Apache License 2.0 | MIT License |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
Activity is a relative number indicating how actively a project is being developed. Recent commits have higher weight than older ones.
For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.
SES-shim
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Malicious libraries can steal all your application secrets in Elixir
I used E in the 90s: http://erights.org/
I haven't kept up with newer systems but I've heard of https://github.com/endojs/endo and just came across http://reports-archive.adm.cs.cmu.edu/anon/home/anon/isr2017... (which says "in the style of the E programming language" -- that's as far as I've read) while looking that up.
WebAssembly was designed to follow the same capability security principles. CHERI too as someone else just brought up.
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Building an Extension System on the Web
There are other potential solutions I haven’t explored close enough (like Endo and SES), or completely omitted as they’re based on an imperfect blacklist-based approach to security (like sandboxed WebWorkers). However, the mentioned 4 solutions are the top contenders, at least in my mind.
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Harvesting credit card numbers and passwords from your site
I don't know why you are being silently downvoted, as I think it is worth talking about the potential of using static analysis to improve things.
One promising approach is Endo[0] which "uses LavaMoat to automatically generate reviewable policies that determine what capabilities will be distributed to third party dependencies."
[0] https://github.com/endojs/endo
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Show HN: Run unsafe user generated JavaScript in the browser
Agoric moved forward and Realms gave way to SES
https://github.com/endojs/endo/tree/master/packages/ses
And Endo is a set of tools (being) built around it to make it more practical for particular usecases
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Deno 1.26
Yea you could restrict the app by whitelisting only the network services and folders that it will use and that's pretty valuable though at least on Linux could already easily be achieved otherwise. It's good that Deno makes it easy but let's be honest, most people will just pass -A.
I'd love to see a permissions system on a library basis. It would ask the first time a dependency is added and when a new permission is requested after an update. Javascript doesn't make that easy though by being so dynamic. SES could maybe help: https://github.com/endojs/endo/blob/master/packages/ses/READ...
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Node runtime that sandboxes all NPM dependencies by default
I was poking around on the internet a bit earlier and I found this project. It looks pretty cool, and I figured perhaps a few of y'all might find it cool too!
I have no idea if it actually sandboxes networking by default. This other project, endo[0], seems to add some of that functionality.
Regardless of the maturity though, it makes me excited to see this type of work getting done now!
(What made me want to research it was this[1] thread from the other day.)
0: https://github.com/endojs/endo
1: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=30215212
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Open source maintainer pulls the plug on NPM packages colors and faker, now what
Fortunately the problem could become more tractable if something like SES / Endo takes off:
"Endo protects program integrity both in-process and in distributed systems. SES protects local integrity, defending an application against supply chain attacks: hacks that enter through upgrades to third-party dependencies. Endo does this by encouraging the Principle of Least Authority. ... Endo uses LavaMoat to automatically generate reviewable policies that determine what capabilities will be distributed to third party dependencies."
https://github.com/endojs/endo
- Is metamask running on JavaScript?
- Embedded malware in RC (NPM package)
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Researcher hacks over 35 tech firms in novel supply chain attack
Yeah. JavaScript is probably the closest to being there (with things like SES[0], LavaMoat[1], etc.) but we're not quite there yet. It's just shocking that this sort of thing is as seemingly obscure as it is; it's like the whole industry has collectively thrown up their hands and said code execution is unavoidably radioactively dangerous. (While simultaneously using package managers that... well.) But it doesn't have to be!
[0] https://github.com/Agoric/ses-shim
[1] https://github.com/LavaMoat/LavaMoat
underscore
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8 NPM Packages for JavaScript Beginners [2024][+tutorials]
Not too far behind is Underscore.js, another utility library that's all about enhancing your JavaScript mojo. Whether you're dealing with arrays, objects, or strings, Underscore has got something for you. It's like Lodash's sibling, offering similar functionalities but with its own flair. The choice between them is like picking between chocolate and vanilla - it really comes down to personal taste.
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No Lodash
Interesting! Looks like this jgonggrijp user has been keeping things moving for the last couple years: https://github.com/jashkenas/underscore/graphs/contributors
- Not Your Grandfather’s Perl
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Yoda Conditions (From the office)
Underscore
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Top 7 template engines for Node JS 2022
Its GitHub repository is https://github.com/jashkenas/underscore. Companies are used by large companies like Pinterest, Tesla Motors, Figma, Coursera, PostMan, Reddit, LinkedIn, Tumblr, Alibaba, Hulu, and more.
- Unde as putea gasi exercitii de sortare a listelor in javascript pentru interviu de frontend?
- Discovered a 63kb tiddlywiki like self saving HTML+JS wiki and its looking cool
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What does it mean this function removeItem = (item) => { _.remove(this.items, item); };inside this class? And anyone knows why there is an underscore before the method?
That’s a function from the underscore library which can be found here: https://www.npmjs.com/package/underscore
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Underscore.js: create a map out of list of objects using a key found in the object
I am using the excellent Underscore.js library. I have a specific task which I can do fine using JavaScript or jQuery but was wondering if there was some sort of abstraction avaialable in Underscore that I was missing out on.
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Asking Functional vs Class components again.
There are many functional libraries for js like underscore, ramda, or even ts specific ones like fp-ts.
What are some alternatives?
rfcs - Public change requests/proposals & ideation
lodash - A modern JavaScript utility library delivering modularity, performance, & extras.
Swift Argument Parser - Straightforward, type-safe argument parsing for Swift
ramda - :ram: Practical functional Javascript
GHSA-g2q5-5433-rhrf
Sugar - A Javascript library for working with native objects.
colors.js - get colors in your node.js console
lazy.js - Like Underscore, but lazier
sandworm-guard-js - Easy auditing & sandboxing for your JavaScript dependencies 🪱
Mout - Modular JavaScript Utilities
linux - Kernel source tree for Raspberry Pi-provided kernel builds. Issues unrelated to the linux kernel should be posted on the community forum at https://forums.raspberrypi.com/
rubico - [a]synchronous functional programming