
Research
/Security News
Toptal’s GitHub Organization Hijacked: 10 Malicious Packages Published
Threat actors hijacked Toptal’s GitHub org, publishing npm packages with malicious payloads that steal tokens and attempt to wipe victim systems.
github.com/awslabs/fhir-works-on-aws-routing
Please visit fhir-works-on-aws-deployment for overall vision of the project and for more context.
This package is an implementation of the routing of the FHIR Works interface. It is responsible for taking a FHIR based HTTP request and routing it to the correct sub-component. It also does all the resource validatation by way of JSON schemas. Finally, This component is responsible for generating the Capability Statement, which is used to describe what a FHRI API can do. To use and deploy this component (with the other 'out of the box' components) please follow the overall README
This package assumes certain infrastructure:
For usage please add this package to your package.json
file and install as a dependency. For usage examples please see the deployment component's package.json
This package is dependent on a type of each subcomponent:
NOTE: if your use-case does not require one of the above features/components, please set the your configuration as such and the router will route accordingly
For known issues please track the issues on the GitHub repository
See CONTRIBUTING for more information.
This project is licensed under the Apache-2.0 License.
FAQs
Unknown package
Did you know?
Socket for GitHub automatically highlights issues in each pull request and monitors the health of all your open source dependencies. Discover the contents of your packages and block harmful activity before you install or update your dependencies.
Research
/Security News
Threat actors hijacked Toptal’s GitHub org, publishing npm packages with malicious payloads that steal tokens and attempt to wipe victim systems.
Research
/Security News
Socket researchers investigate 4 malicious npm and PyPI packages with 56,000+ downloads that install surveillance malware.
Security News
The ongoing npm phishing campaign escalates as attackers hijack the popular 'is' package, embedding malware in multiple versions.