birdcage
conf
birdcage | conf | |
---|---|---|
13 | 4 | |
172 | 1,186 | |
0.6% | - | |
7.3 | 5.1 | |
13 days ago | about 2 months ago | |
Rust | TypeScript | |
GNU General Public License v3.0 only | 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.
birdcage
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Ledger's NPM account has been hacked
Co-funder @ Phylum here (https://phylum.io) We have been actively scanning dependencies across npm (and PyPI, RubyGems, Crates.io, etc.) for nearly three years now; quite successfully, I might add (https://blog.phylum.io/tag/research/). We _automatically_ hit on this package when it was published, and our research team has been all over it.
A collective of us are active in Discord (https://discord.gg/Fe6pr5eW6p), continuing to hunt attacks like these. If that's something that interests you, we'd love to have you!
In addition to this, we've released several open source tools to help protect against supply chain attacks:
1. https://github.com/phylum-dev/birdcage - Birdcage is a cross-platform embeddable sandbox that's been baked into our CLI (which wraps npm, pypi, etc.) to sandbox package installations
2. https://github.com/phylum-dev/cli - Our CLI provides an extension capability so you can lock down random executables you might use during your software development (define _what_ it's allowed to do, e.g. network access, and then lock it down with Birdcage)
We also have a variety of integrations, including Github, Gitlab, BitBucket, CircleCI, Tines, Sophos, etc.
https://docs.phylum.io/docs/integrations_overview
It's unfortunate that software dependency attacks continue to plague open source registries. It seems unlikely this will let up in the near future. We are continuing to work closely with the open source ecosystems to try and get these sorts of packages removed when they pop up.
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Cryptocurrency Miner Masquerading as GCC Compiler Found in NPM Package
To be clear, this particular package did not execute code during install, so the sandbox wouldn't have come into play, but it would have been blocked by the pre-check against Phylum's API.
Would greatly appreciate any feedback on our extensions and suggestions for improving our sandbox! We recently had a few individuals submit some great issues and suggestions, which we absolutely loved receiving.
Happy to answer any questions about software supply chain attacks or security in general!
1. https://blog.phylum.io/junes-sophisticated-npm-attack-attrib...
2. https://blog.phylum.io/rust-malware-staged-on-crates-io/
3. https://blog.phylum.io/npm-emails-validator-package-malware/
4. https://github.com/phylum-dev/cli
5. https://github.com/phylum-dev/birdcage
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Rust Malware Staged on Crates.io
We're actively working on this with our sandbox (https://github.com/phylum-dev/birdcage). We've wrapped the likes of pip, yarn, and npm already and are making moves to similarly provide support for cargo.
Currently comes as part of the Phylum CLI (https://github.com/phylum-dev/cli), so that doing something like:
phylum npm install
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Social engineering campaign targeting tech employees spreads through NPM malware
We (https://phylum.io) actually open sourced our sandbox for this exact purpose.
https://github.com/phylum-dev/birdcage
It's baked into our CLI and supports limiting access to network, disk, etc. during package installation. For example, running something like
phylum npm install react
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Attackers Repurposing existing Python-based Malware for Distribution on NPM
We've open sourced our sandbox, which limits access to network/disk/etc. during package installation. In this way, nasty install scripts won't have the opportunity to ship your credentials/SSH keys off to a remote sever.
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Attackers are hiding malware in minified packages distributed to NPM
The sandbox is also open source and available for use by the community.
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Active Malware Campaign Targeting Popular Python Packages Underway
In addition to this, taking precautions to not install unknown packages is probably also extremely prudent. Towards that end, we've open sourced a cross platform embeddable sandbox for package installations. Source is freely available on Github (https://github.com/phylum-dev/birdcage) and we've added it into our tooling so you can run pip install ... and it'll limit access to disk, network, etc. during package installation.
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Supply Chain Attack Using PyPI Packages “Colorslib”, “Httpslib”, and “Libhttps”
Been working on this exact thing for nearly two years at https://www.phylum.io. We identified and reported about 1.2k packages in ecosystems like npm, pypi and others last year. GitHub app that checks your PRs for malware. We also built a free open source sandbox for package installations [1] so if malware does get executed it’s done in a locked down environment. Happy to chat further about this sort of thing, it’s something I’m wildly interested in!
[1] https://github.com/phylum-dev/birdcage
- Ransomware currently being published to PyPI in ongoing campaign
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Ransomware Python Packages Currently Being Published to PyPI
(Disclaimer: I'm one of the co-founders at Phylum)
Our system has been alerting us to this actor's activities all morning (beginning sometime last night). They have been wildly active, and have continued to publish packages as we've worked to get them removed.
Interestingly, they have ported the Python bits to Javascript and have started publishing to NPM as well. Exact same TTP, crossing two ecosystems.
Our platform monitors these ecosystems, scanning packages for signs of risk as they are published. This way we can get them removed before they impact the wider open source community. We currently support Javascript, Typescript, Python, Ruby, Java, C# and recently just rolled out Golang and Rust support into beta.
We believe in a defense in depth approach to supply chain security and have also published an open source sandbox that limits access to the filesystem, network, disk and environment variables.
https://github.com/phylum-dev/birdcage
This is rolled into our CLI so that you can do things like `phylum npm install ` and install packages in a sandboxed way.
Happy to answer questions about this attack, security, sandboxes, etc!
conf
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Social engineering campaign targeting tech employees spreads through NPM malware
Wow. There is even one package to not use a JavaScript object: https://www.npmjs.com/package/conf
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Rob Pike: “Dotfiles” being hidden is a UNIXv2 mistake (2012)
info on XDG: [the XDG spec](https://standards.freedesktop.org/basedir-spec/basedir-spec-...)
tools that respect XDG, for fellow JS CLI developers:
- https://github.com/davidtheclark/cosmiconfig Find and load configuration from a package.json property, rc file, or CommonJS module. [Check `searchPaths` to implement XDG spec compliance.](https://github.com/davidtheclark/cosmiconfig/issues/152)
- Sindre's libraries use [`env-paths`](https://github.com/sindresorhus/env-paths#pathsconfig) to get paths compliant with this.
- https://github.com/sindresorhus/conf simple config storing (maybe try [conf-cli](https://github.com/natzcam/conf-cli) to manipulate if needed) the successor to [configstore](https://github.com/sindresorhus/conf#how-is-this-different-f...)
- https://github.com/jonschlinkert/data-store conf like datastore but in the shclinkerverse
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Building a CLI tool using node - An Ultimate Beginners guide 🚀
Now, we implement history feature through which we can view the lastly created password through the -h or --history flag. For this purpose we use conf package. But first, let's create the flag feature. We use process.argvfor this purpose, process.argv is an inbuilt API used to get the arguments passed via command line like -h. We will slice it to remove the first two indexes of it to get relevant data only.
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How to Build a Command Line Interface (CLI) Application with Node.JS👨🎓🤓.
conf:This package allows us to save persistent information on the user’s machine. We will be using it to save the user’s todo list
What are some alternatives?
secimport - eBPF Python runtime sandbox with seccomp (Blocks RCE).
DraftLog - 📜 Create mutable log lines into the terminal, and give life to your logs!
packj - Packj stops :zap: Solarwinds-, ESLint-, and PyTorch-like attacks by flagging malicious/vulnerable open-source dependencies ("weak links") in your software supply-chain
listr - Terminal task list
wapm-cli - 📦 WebAssembly Package Manager (CLI)
Bit - A build system for development of composable software.
lunasec - LunaSec - Dependency Security Scanner that automatically notifies you about vulnerabilities like Log4Shell or node-ipc in your Pull Requests and Builds. Protect yourself in 30 seconds with the LunaTrace GitHub App: https://github.com/marketplace/lunatrace-by-lunasec/
Commander.js - node.js command-line interfaces made easy
Contents - Community documentation, code, links to third-party resources, ... See the issues and pull requests for pending content. Contributions are welcome !
cli-truncate - Truncate a string to a specific width in the terminal
cargo-vet - supply-chain security for Rust
oclif - CLI for generating, building, and releasing oclif CLIs. Built by Salesforce.