
Research
Security News
Lazarus Strikes npm Again with New Wave of Malicious Packages
The Socket Research Team has discovered six new malicious npm packages linked to North Korea’s Lazarus Group, designed to steal credentials and deploy backdoors.
@eslint/config-inspector
Advanced tools
A visual tool for inspecting and understanding your ESLint flat configs
A visual tool for inspecting and understanding your ESLint flat configs.
Go to the project root that contains eslint.config.js
and run:
npx @eslint/config-inspector@latest
Visit http://localhost:7777/ to view and play with your ESLint config. Changes to the config file will be updated automatically.
Or play it right in your browser now:
It is also possible to build a static web app for your ESLint config:
npx @eslint/config-inspector build
This will generate a Single-Page Application (SPA) under .eslint-config-inspector
, with the snapshot of the current ESLint config. You can deploy it somewhere, or use it for comparison etc.
We operate under the ESLint Contributor Guidelines, so please be sure to read them before contributing. If you're not sure where to dig in, check out the issues.
This project uses the following stack:
server/api
powered by NitroTo start the development server:
pnpm install
(we highly recommend you to enable corepack enable
first)pnpm dev
to start the development server at http://localhost:3000To test the production build:
pnpm build
to build the apppnpm start
to start the production server at http://localhost:7777Apache-2.0 License
FAQs
A visual tool for inspecting and understanding your ESLint flat configs
The npm package @eslint/config-inspector receives a total of 157,513 weekly downloads. As such, @eslint/config-inspector popularity was classified as popular.
We found that @eslint/config-inspector demonstrated a healthy version release cadence and project activity because the last version was released less than a year ago. It has 0 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.
Research
Security News
The Socket Research Team has discovered six new malicious npm packages linked to North Korea’s Lazarus Group, designed to steal credentials and deploy backdoors.
Security News
Socket CEO Feross Aboukhadijeh discusses the open web, open source security, and how Socket tackles software supply chain attacks on The Pair Program podcast.
Security News
Opengrep continues building momentum with the alpha release of its Playground tool, demonstrating the project's rapid evolution just two months after its initial launch.