
Security News
Socket Security Analysis Is Now One Click Away on npm
npm now links to Socket's security analysis on every package page. Here's what you'll find when you click through.
@fatso83/run-esm
Advanced tools
Runs a ESM module in Chrome and checks that a user-supplied test script exits cleanly
Simply runs a ECMAScript Module in Chrome to see that it does not throw
Quite a few project build actual ECMAScript Modules that are supposed to work natively (meaning not transpiled to ES5). This is simply a way of ensuring that these packages run in Chrome. You can choose to just load them or try running some additional script excercising the exported API - that's up to you.
You could try running them in Node using something like node -r esm, of course, but that introduces additional middleware that might or might not do the same as the Chrome runtime. You would also need to handle DOM APIs using something like JSDOM, introducing additional complexity for something quite simple.
See examples in test. The import path will always be root (/).
it("should exit cleanly if nothing throws", async () => {
await runEsm({
bundlePath: `${__dirname}/example-module.mjs`,
testScriptSource: `
import myModule from "./example-module.mjs";
myModule(); // works
`,
});
});
FAQs
Runs a ESM module in Chrome and checks that a user-supplied test script exits cleanly
We found that @fatso83/run-esm demonstrated a not healthy version release cadence and project activity because the last version was released a year ago. It has 1 open source maintainer 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.

Security News
npm now links to Socket's security analysis on every package page. Here's what you'll find when you click through.

Security News
A compromised npm publish token was used to push a malicious postinstall script in cline@2.3.0, affecting the popular AI coding agent CLI with 90k weekly downloads.

Product
Socket is now scanning AI agent skills across multiple languages and ecosystems, detecting malicious behavior before developers install, starting with skills.sh's 60,000+ skills.