asarmor
bytenode
Our great sponsors
asarmor | bytenode | |
---|---|---|
3 | 12 | |
213 | 2,436 | |
- | 2.6% | |
8.0 | 6.8 | |
9 days ago | 4 days ago | |
TypeScript | JavaScript | |
MIT License | 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.
asarmor
- How to secure an Electron app with a license key
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Compile your JS code: New Bytenode support for Electron
What are you thoughts on https://github.com/sleeyax/asarmor? My thinking is I could use bytenode to protect my business logic and use asarmor to make the resulting asar non-trivial to uncompress, giving my renderer some kind of "protection" but without requiring me to turn off context isolation or enable nodeIntegration.
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Hide source code
The simplest way to have some kind of source code protection is to package into an asar file and use asarmour to make it non trivial to extract the archive. https://github.com/sleeyax/asarmor
bytenode
- ByteNode: A minimalist bytecode compiler for Node.js
- How to restrict the access to an on premise node server?
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electron-vite: Easy way to protect your Electron source code
electron-vite inspired by bytenode, the specific implementation:
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Where do you store api keys or jwt token in an electron app?
take a look into this one, https://github.com/bytenode/bytenode
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Where to hide or store database key in electron app? (Is it possible to do with c++ addons?)
did you try https://github.com/bytenode/bytenode? take a look, it seems it does what you need
- Delivering an application in CL w.o. source
- How to secure an Electron app with a license key
- Protecting Node code
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Decompiling Node.js in Ghidra
The title is a bit misleading; the post is about jsc files containing nodejs "bytecode" produced by bytenode.
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Compile your JS code: New Bytenode support for Electron
It doesn't appear that there is any performance penalty to using Bytenode. There are some benchmark functions in the repository, but certainly more work could be done to test. My gut feeling is that the minor overhead of loading the binary is balanced out by the minor speed increase by giving V8 a pre-compiled file.
What are some alternatives?
electron-bytenode-example - A basic Hello World boilerplate using Webpack to convert Electron Javascript code to binary using Bytenode and the Bytenode Webpack Plugin
pkg - Package your Node.js project into an executable [Moved to: https://github.com/vercel/pkg]
pkg - Package your Node.js project into an executable
thislang - A subset of javascript implemented in that subset of javascript. Yes, it can run itself.
wat-compiler - webassembly wat text format to binary compiler
deploy - Deployment tools for standalone Common Lisp applications
electron-vite - Next generation Electron build tooling based on Vite 新一代 Electron 开发构建工具,支持源代码保护
electron-vite-bytecode-example - electron-vite source code protection example
pkg-unpacker - Unpack any pkg application
deploy - Ansible role to deploy scripting applications like PHP, Python, Ruby, etc. in a capistrano style