
Product
Reachability for Ruby Now in Beta
Reachability analysis for Ruby is now in beta, helping teams identify which vulnerabilities are truly exploitable in their applications.
github.com/lgfa29/go-immutable-radix
Advanced tools
Provides the iradix package that implements an immutable radix tree.
The package only provides a single Tree implementation, optimized for sparse nodes.
As a radix tree, it provides the following:
A tree supports using a transaction to batch multiple updates (insert, delete) in a more efficient manner than performing each operation one at a time.
For a mutable variant, see go-radix.
The full documentation is available on Godoc.
Below is a simple example of usage
// Create a tree
r := iradix.New()
r, _, _ = r.Insert([]byte("foo"), 1)
r, _, _ = r.Insert([]byte("bar"), 2)
r, _, _ = r.Insert([]byte("foobar"), 2)
// Find the longest prefix match
m, _, _ := r.Root().LongestPrefix([]byte("foozip"))
if string(m) != "foo" {
panic("should be foo")
}
Here is an example of performing a range scan of the keys.
// Create a tree
r := iradix.New()
r, _, _ = r.Insert([]byte("001"), 1)
r, _, _ = r.Insert([]byte("002"), 2)
r, _, _ = r.Insert([]byte("005"), 5)
r, _, _ = r.Insert([]byte("010"), 10)
r, _, _ = r.Insert([]byte("100"), 10)
// Range scan over the keys that sort lexicographically between [003, 050)
it := r.Root().Iterator()
it.SeekLowerBound([]byte("003"))
for key, _, ok := it.Next(); ok; key, _, ok = it.Next() {
if key >= "050" {
break
}
fmt.Println(key)
}
// Output:
// 005
// 010
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.

Product
Reachability analysis for Ruby is now in beta, helping teams identify which vulnerabilities are truly exploitable in their applications.

Research
/Security News
Malicious npm packages use Adspect cloaking and fake CAPTCHAs to fingerprint visitors and redirect victims to crypto-themed scam sites.

Security News
Recent coverage mislabels the latest TEA protocol spam as a worm. Here’s what’s actually happening.