
Security News
Vite+ Joins the Push to Consolidate JavaScript Tooling
Evan You announces Vite+, a commercial, Rust-powered toolchain built on the Vite ecosystem to unify JavaScript development and fund open source.
@firebase/app-check-compat
Advanced tools
This is the Firebase App Check component (compat version) of the Firebase JS SDK.
This package is not intended for direct usage, and should only be used via the officially supported firebase
package.
This is the standard version of Firebase App Check designed for use with the modern Firebase JavaScript SDK (v9+). It offers similar functionalities but with a modular approach, promoting better tree-shaking and potentially smaller bundle sizes compared to @firebase/app-check-compat.
While not a direct alternative, recaptcha-v3 is a package that provides Google reCAPTCHA v3 services which can be used for similar purposes of protecting web apps from abuse. However, it does not integrate directly with Firebase services.
FAQs
A compat App Check package for new firebase packages
The npm package @firebase/app-check-compat receives a total of 2,696,292 weekly downloads. As such, @firebase/app-check-compat popularity was classified as popular.
We found that @firebase/app-check-compat 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.
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
Evan You announces Vite+, a commercial, Rust-powered toolchain built on the Vite ecosystem to unify JavaScript development and fund open source.
Security News
Ruby Central’s incident report on the RubyGems.org access dispute sparks backlash from former maintainers and renewed debate over project governance.
Research
/Security News
Socket researchers uncover how threat actors weaponize Discord across the npm, PyPI, and RubyGems ecosystems to exfiltrate sensitive data.