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Axios Supply Chain Attack Reaches OpenAI macOS Signing Pipeline, Forces Certificate Rotation
OpenAI rotated macOS signing certificates after a malicious Axios package reached its CI pipeline in a broader software supply chain attack.
@flagbit/tslint-config
Advanced tools
Install the package inside your project...
yarn add @flagbit/tslint-config
...and add a tslint.json containing this:
{
"extends": "@flagbit/tslint-config"
}
Our tslint rules are pretty much the same as in a regular @angular/cli project, but with a twist:
Everything needs to be documented! A good example of well documented code can be found here:
A minimal example would be something like this:
/**
* ExampleComponent
* ================
*
* This component is used to demostrate how our code should look like.
*/
export class ExampleComponent {
/**
* We are storing something inside this property
*/
private _something = false;
/**
* The description of this method
* @param param The parameter that is getting passed
*/
public someMethod(param: number): boolean {
if (param) {
return true;
}
return this._something;
}
}
This rule is making sure that every class-member needs defined access. Please keep in mind that during your unit-tests you can only access the public properties!
Bad:
export class ExampleComponent {
someMethod(): boolean {
// ...
}
}
Good:
export class ExampleComponent {
public someMethod(): boolean {
// ...
}
}
This is making your code more readable. Forcing a newline before return, if there is more than one line in your method.
Bad:
export class ExampleComponent {
// ...
public somePublicMethod(paramOne: boolean, paramTwo: boolean): boolean {
if (paramOne) {
return paramTwo;
}
return paramOne;
}
}
Good:
export class ExampleComponent {
// ...
public somePublicMethod(paramOne: boolean, paramTwo: boolean): boolean {
if (paramOne) {
return paramTwo;
}
return paramOne;
}
/**
* If the return is the ONLY line, you shouldn't add the emptyline
*/
public someOtherPublicMethod(): boolean {
return this._property;
}
}
This is making your code more readable, as it forbids to many empty lines, where they aren't necessary.
This is making your code more readable, by throwing an error if you are defining more than one variable per declaration block.
This is bad, because you don't see in first sight if you are declaring or re-declaring:
const one = 'one',
two = 'two',
three = 'three';
This is more readable:
const one = 'one';
const two = 'two';
const three = 'three';
We are forcing, that parameters and call-signatures always have a typedef. This is leading to easier editing and/or extending, as you always know what the methods need as input, and what they give back.
Bad:
export class ExampleComponent {
// ...
public somePublicMethod(paramOne, paramTwo) {
if (paramOne) {
return paramTwo;
}
return paramOne;
}
}
Good:
export class ExampleComponent {
// ...
public somePublicMethod(paramOne: boolean, paramTwo: boolean): boolean {
if (paramOne) {
return paramTwo;
}
return paramOne;
}
}
We are forcing proper variable-names, to have cleaner code. variables have to
be in camelCase or UPPERCASE, to see directly if one is a variable or a
class or whatever. Also leading underscores are allowed, to name private
properties in classes. The UPPERCASE is forcing us to use const
Bad:
const Some_VariAble = 'something';
Good:
let someVariable = 'something';
const SOMEVARIABLE = 'something';
export class ExampleComponent {
private _property: boolean;
public somePublicMethod(): boolean {
return this._property;
}
}
We make sure that we don't have css inside our stylesheets that isn't used inside the component.
We make sure that everytime an i18n directive is used inside the templates, we also added an i18n-id. This is making your translation-files way more readable.
Bad:
<p>Component Works!</p>
<p i18n>Component Works!</p>
Good:
<p i18n="@@componentWorksMessage">Component Works!</p>
We are forcing that we never use ViewEncapsulation.None in components.
This way we are minimizing the risk of breaking styles outside of the
component we're working on.
We are forcing ChangeDetection.OnPush in components. With this we are
minimizing the risk of a poor performance by too deep and heavy ChangeDetection
loops.
We can help Angular to track which items added or removed by providing a trackBy function. The trackBy function takes the index and the current item as arguments and needs to return the unique identifier for this item.
Its always a good idea to use a trackBy function in *ngFor. With this rule we
make sure that every template-loop is using one!
Bad:
<li *ngFor="let product of products">
<!-- ... -->
</li>
Good:
export class ListProductsComponent {
// ...
public trackByFn(index: number, item: IProduct): string {
return item.id;
}
}
<li *ngFor="let product of products;trackBy: trackByFn">
<!-- ... -->
</li>
FAQs
## How to use
We found that @flagbit/tslint-config demonstrated a not healthy version release cadence and project activity because the last version was released 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.

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