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Malicious npm Package Targets Solana Developers and Hijacks Funds
A malicious npm package targets Solana developers, rerouting funds in 2% of transactions to a hardcoded address.
github.com/Jeffail/gabs/v2
Gabs is a small utility for dealing with dynamic or unknown JSON structures in Go. It's pretty much just a helpful wrapper for navigating hierarchies of map[string]interface{}
objects provided by the encoding/json
package. It does nothing spectacular apart from being fabulous.
If you're migrating from version 1 check out migration.md
for guidance.
Using modules:
import (
"github.com/Jeffail/gabs/v2"
)
Without modules:
import (
"github.com/Jeffail/gabs"
)
jsonParsed, err := gabs.ParseJSON([]byte(`{
"outer":{
"inner":{
"value1":10,
"value2":22
},
"alsoInner":{
"value1":20,
"array1":[
30, 40
]
}
}
}`))
if err != nil {
panic(err)
}
var value float64
var ok bool
value, ok = jsonParsed.Path("outer.inner.value1").Data().(float64)
// value == 10.0, ok == true
value, ok = jsonParsed.Search("outer", "inner", "value1").Data().(float64)
// value == 10.0, ok == true
value, ok = jsonParsed.Search("outer", "alsoInner", "array1", "1").Data().(float64)
// value == 40.0, ok == true
gObj, err := jsonParsed.JSONPointer("/outer/alsoInner/array1/1")
if err != nil {
panic(err)
}
value, ok = gObj.Data().(float64)
// value == 40.0, ok == true
value, ok = jsonParsed.Path("does.not.exist").Data().(float64)
// value == 0.0, ok == false
exists := jsonParsed.Exists("outer", "inner", "value1")
// exists == true
exists = jsonParsed.ExistsP("does.not.exist")
// exists == false
jsonParsed, err := gabs.ParseJSON([]byte(`{"object":{"first":1,"second":2,"third":3}}`))
if err != nil {
panic(err)
}
// S is shorthand for Search
for key, child := range jsonParsed.S("object").ChildrenMap() {
fmt.Printf("key: %v, value: %v\n", key, child.Data().(float64))
}
jsonParsed, err := gabs.ParseJSON([]byte(`{"array":["first","second","third"]}`))
if err != nil {
panic(err)
}
for _, child := range jsonParsed.S("array").Children() {
fmt.Println(child.Data().(string))
}
Will print:
first
second
third
Children() will return all children of an array in order. This also works on objects, however, the children will be returned in a random order.
If your structure contains arrays you must target an index in your search.
jsonParsed, err := gabs.ParseJSON([]byte(`{"array":[{"value":1},{"value":2},{"value":3}]}`))
if err != nil {
panic(err)
}
fmt.Println(jsonParsed.Path("array.1.value").String())
Will print 2
.
jsonObj := gabs.New()
// or gabs.Wrap(jsonObject) to work on an existing map[string]interface{}
jsonObj.Set(10, "outer", "inner", "value")
jsonObj.SetP(20, "outer.inner.value2")
jsonObj.Set(30, "outer", "inner2", "value3")
fmt.Println(jsonObj.String())
Will print:
{"outer":{"inner":{"value":10,"value2":20},"inner2":{"value3":30}}}
To pretty-print:
fmt.Println(jsonObj.StringIndent("", " "))
Will print:
{
"outer": {
"inner": {
"value": 10,
"value2": 20
},
"inner2": {
"value3": 30
}
}
}
jsonObj := gabs.New()
jsonObj.Array("foo", "array")
// Or .ArrayP("foo.array")
jsonObj.ArrayAppend(10, "foo", "array")
jsonObj.ArrayAppend(20, "foo", "array")
jsonObj.ArrayAppend(30, "foo", "array")
fmt.Println(jsonObj.String())
Will print:
{"foo":{"array":[10,20,30]}}
Working with arrays by index:
jsonObj := gabs.New()
// Create an array with the length of 3
jsonObj.ArrayOfSize(3, "foo")
jsonObj.S("foo").SetIndex("test1", 0)
jsonObj.S("foo").SetIndex("test2", 1)
// Create an embedded array with the length of 3
jsonObj.S("foo").ArrayOfSizeI(3, 2)
jsonObj.S("foo").Index(2).SetIndex(1, 0)
jsonObj.S("foo").Index(2).SetIndex(2, 1)
jsonObj.S("foo").Index(2).SetIndex(3, 2)
fmt.Println(jsonObj.String())
Will print:
{"foo":["test1","test2",[1,2,3]]}
This is the easiest part:
jsonParsedObj, _ := gabs.ParseJSON([]byte(`{
"outer":{
"values":{
"first":10,
"second":11
}
},
"outer2":"hello world"
}`))
jsonOutput := jsonParsedObj.String()
// Becomes `{"outer":{"values":{"first":10,"second":11}},"outer2":"hello world"}`
And to serialize a specific segment is as simple as:
jsonParsedObj := gabs.ParseJSON([]byte(`{
"outer":{
"values":{
"first":10,
"second":11
}
},
"outer2":"hello world"
}`))
jsonOutput := jsonParsedObj.Search("outer").String()
// Becomes `{"values":{"first":10,"second":11}}`
You can merge a JSON structure into an existing one, where collisions will be converted into a JSON array.
jsonParsed1, _ := ParseJSON([]byte(`{"outer":{"value1":"one"}}`))
jsonParsed2, _ := ParseJSON([]byte(`{"outer":{"inner":{"value3":"three"}},"outer2":{"value2":"two"}}`))
jsonParsed1.Merge(jsonParsed2)
// Becomes `{"outer":{"inner":{"value3":"three"},"value1":"one"},"outer2":{"value2":"two"}}`
Arrays are merged:
jsonParsed1, _ := ParseJSON([]byte(`{"array":["one"]}`))
jsonParsed2, _ := ParseJSON([]byte(`{"array":["two"]}`))
jsonParsed1.Merge(jsonParsed2)
// Becomes `{"array":["one", "two"]}`
Gabs uses the json
package under the bonnet, which by default will parse all number values into float64
. If you need to parse Int
values then you should use a json.Decoder
:
sample := []byte(`{"test":{"int":10,"float":6.66}}`)
dec := json.NewDecoder(bytes.NewReader(sample))
dec.UseNumber()
val, err := gabs.ParseJSONDecoder(dec)
if err != nil {
t.Errorf("Failed to parse: %v", err)
return
}
intValue, err := val.Path("test.int").Data().(json.Number).Int64()
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