![Introducing Enhanced Alert Actions and Triage Functionality](https://cdn.sanity.io/images/cgdhsj6q/production/fe71306d515f85de6139b46745ea7180362324f0-2530x946.png?w=800&fit=max&auto=format)
Product
Introducing Enhanced Alert Actions and Triage Functionality
Socket now supports four distinct alert actions instead of the previous two, and alert triaging allows users to override the actions taken for all individual alerts.
@esbuild/linux-riscv64
Advanced tools
Changelog
0.18.15
Add the --serve-fallback=
option (#2904)
The web server built into esbuild serves the latest in-memory results of the configured build. If the requested path doesn't match any in-memory build result, esbuild also provides the --servedir=
option to tell esbuild to serve the requested path from that directory instead. And if the requested path doesn't match either of those things, esbuild will either automatically generate a directory listing (for directories) or return a 404 error.
Starting with this release, that last step can now be replaced with telling esbuild to serve a specific HTML file using the --serve-fallback=
option. This can be used to provide a "not found" page for missing URLs. It can also be used to implement a single-page app that mutates the current URL and therefore requires the single app entry point to be served when the page is loaded regardless of whatever the current URL is.
Use the tsconfig
field in package.json
during extends
resolution (#3247)
This release adds a feature from TypeScript 3.2 where if a tsconfig.json
file specifies a package name in the extends
field and that package's package.json
file has a tsconfig
field, the contents of that field are used in the search for the base tsconfig.json
file.
Implement CSS nesting without :is()
when possible (#1945)
Previously esbuild would always produce a warning when transforming nested CSS for a browser that doesn't support the :is()
pseudo-class. This was because the nesting transform needs to generate an :is()
in some complex cases which means the transformed CSS would then not work in that browser. However, the CSS nesting transform can often be done without generating an :is()
. So with this release, esbuild will no longer warn when targeting browsers that don't support :is()
in the cases where an :is()
isn't needed to represent the nested CSS.
In addition, esbuild's nested CSS transform has been updated to avoid generating an :is()
in cases where an :is()
is preferable but there's a longer alternative that is also equivalent. This update means esbuild can now generate a combinatorial explosion of CSS for complex CSS nesting syntax when targeting browsers that don't support :is()
. This combinatorial explosion is necessary to accurately represent the original semantics. For example:
/* Original code */
.first,
.second,
.third {
& > & {
color: red;
}
}
/* Old output (with --target=chrome80) */
:is(.first, .second, .third) > :is(.first, .second, .third) {
color: red;
}
/* New output (with --target=chrome80) */
.first > .first,
.first > .second,
.first > .third,
.second > .first,
.second > .second,
.second > .third,
.third > .first,
.third > .second,
.third > .third {
color: red;
}
This change means you can now use CSS nesting with esbuild when targeting an older browser that doesn't support :is()
. You'll now only get a warning from esbuild if you use complex CSS nesting syntax that esbuild can't represent in that older browser without using :is()
. There are two such cases:
/* Case 1 */
a b {
.foo & {
color: red;
}
}
/* Case 2 */
a {
> b& {
color: red;
}
}
These two cases still need to use :is()
, both for different reasons, and cannot be used when targeting an older browser that doesn't support :is()
:
/* Case 1 */
.foo :is(a b) {
color: red;
}
/* Case 2 */
a > a:is(b) {
color: red;
}
Automatically lower inset
in CSS for older browsers
With this release, esbuild will now automatically expand the inset
property to the top
, right
, bottom
, and left
properties when esbuild's target
is set to a browser that doesn't support inset
:
/* Original code */
.app {
position: absolute;
inset: 10px 20px;
}
/* Old output (with --target=chrome80) */
.app {
position: absolute;
inset: 10px 20px;
}
/* New output (with --target=chrome80) */
.app {
position: absolute;
top: 10px;
right: 20px;
bottom: 10px;
left: 20px;
}
Add support for the new @starting-style
CSS rule (#3249)
This at rule allow authors to start CSS transitions on first style update. That is, you can now make the transition take effect when the display
property changes from none
to block
.
/* Original code */
@starting-style {
h1 {
background-color: transparent;
}
}
/* Output */
@starting-style{h1{background-color:transparent}}
This was contributed by @yisibl.
Readme
This is the Linux RISC-V 64-bit binary for esbuild, a JavaScript bundler and minifier. See https://github.com/evanw/esbuild for details.
FAQs
The Linux RISC-V 64-bit binary for esbuild, a JavaScript bundler.
The npm package @esbuild/linux-riscv64 receives a total of 4,815,903 weekly downloads. As such, @esbuild/linux-riscv64 popularity was classified as popular.
We found that @esbuild/linux-riscv64 demonstrated a healthy version release cadence and project activity because the last version was released less than a year ago. It has 2 open source maintainers collaborating on the project.
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
Socket now supports four distinct alert actions instead of the previous two, and alert triaging allows users to override the actions taken for all individual alerts.
Security News
Polyfill.io has been serving malware for months via its CDN, after the project's open source maintainer sold the service to a company based in China.
Security News
OpenSSF is warning open source maintainers to stay vigilant against reputation farming on GitHub, where users artificially inflate their status by manipulating interactions on closed issues and PRs.