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Quasar RAT Disguised as an npm Package for Detecting Vulnerabilities in Ethereum Smart Contracts
Socket researchers uncover a malicious npm package posing as a tool for detecting vulnerabilities in Etherium smart contracts.
@equinor/fusion
Advanced tools
Everything a Fusion app needs to communicate with the core.
$ yarn add @equinor/fusion
$ npm install @equinor/fusion --save
import React from "react";
import { Spinner } from "@equinor/fusion-components";
import { useCurrentUser } from "@equinor/fusion";
const MyComponent = () => {
const currentUser = useCurrentUser();
// Current user might not be retrieved from the cache when the component loads,
// So check for nulL!
if(currentUser == null) {
return <Spinner />;
}
return (
<h1>Hi {currentUser.name}!</h1>
);
};
export default MyComponent;
import React from "react";
import { Spinner } from "@equinor/fusion-components";
import { useCurrentContext, ContextTypes, useHandover, useHandoverMcpkgs } from "@equinor/fusion";
const MyHandoverCommpkgDetails = ({ id }) => {
const currentProject = useCurrentContext(ContextTypes.PDP);
const [isFetching, handoverMcpkgs] = useHandoverMcpkgs(currentProject, id);
if(isFetching) {
return <Spinner />;
}
return (
<ul>
{handoverMcpkgs.map(mcpkg => (
<li>
{mcpkg.mcPkgNo}
</li>
))}
</ul>
);
};
const MyHandoverComponent = () => {
const currentProject = useCurrentContext(ContextTypes.PDP);
const [isFetching, handoverData] = useHandover(currentProject);
if(isFetching) {
return <Spinner />;
}
return (
<ul>
{handoverData.map(handoverItem => (
<li>
<h2>{handoverItem.commpkgNo}</h2>
<MyHandoverCommpkgDetails id={handoverItem.id} />
</li>
))}
</ul>
);
};
export default MyComponent;
Core settings are read-only for apps
import React from "react";
import { useCoreSettings, ComponentDisplayTypes } from "@equinor/fusion";
const MyComponent = () => {
const coreSettings = useCoreSettings();
if(coreSettings.componentDisplayType === ComponentDisplayTypes.Compact) {
return (<span>Looks like you prefere compact mode!</span>);
} else {
return (<h2>Some more spacing for you!</h2>)
}
};
export default MyComponent;
App settings are automatically scoped to the current app
import React from "react";
import { Button } from "@equinor/fusion-components";
import { useAppSettings } from "@equinor/fusion";
const MyComponent = () => {
const [appSettings, setAppSettings] = useAppSettings();
return (
<Button
primary contained
onClick={() => setAppSettings("toggle", !appSettings.toggle)}
>
Click to toggle {appSettings.toggle ? "On" : "Off"}
</Button>
);
};
export default MyComponent;
import React, { useRef } from "react";
import { render } from "react-dom";
import { Router } from "react-router";
import { createBrowserHistory } from "history";
import {
AuthContainer,
createFusionContext,
FusionContext,
ServiceResolver,
} from "@equinor/fusion";
const serviceResolver: ServiceResolver = {
getDataProxyUrl: () => "http://api.url.com",
getOrgUrl: () => "http://api.url.com",
};
const start = async () => {
const authContainer = new AuthContainer();
// Handle redirect from login
await authContainer.handleWindowCallbackAsync();
// Register the main fusion AAD app (get the client id from config)
const coreAppClientId = "{client-id}";
const coreAppRegistered = await authContainer.registerAppAsync(
coreAppClientId,
[serviceResolver.getDataProxyUrl(), serviceResolver.getOrgUrl()]
);
if(!coreAppRegistered) {
authContainer.login(coreAppClientId);
} else {
const Root = () => {
const root = useRef();
const overlay = useRef();
const fusionContext = createFusionContext(
authContainer,
serviceResolver,
{ root, overlay, }
);
return (
<Router history={fusionContext.history}>
<FusionContext.Provider value={fusionContext}>
<div id="fusion-root" ref={rootRef}>
{/* The app component goes here */}
</div>
<div id="overlay-container" ref={overlayRef}>
{/* Leave this empty. Used for dialogs, popovers, tooltips etc. */}
</div>
</FusionContext.Provider>
</Router>
);
};
render(<Root />, document.getElementById("app"));
}
};
start();
FAQs
Everything a Fusion app needs to communicate with the core
The npm package @equinor/fusion receives a total of 996 weekly downloads. As such, @equinor/fusion popularity was classified as not popular.
We found that @equinor/fusion demonstrated a healthy version release cadence and project activity because the last version was released less than a year ago. It has 4 open source maintainers collaborating on the project.
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