
Security News
Another Round of TEA Protocol Spam Floods npm, But It’s Not a Worm
Recent coverage mislabels the latest TEA protocol spam as a worm. Here’s what’s actually happening.
@ignored/hardhat-js-toolbox
Advanced tools
This is a sample Hardhat plugin written in TypeScript. Creating a Hardhat plugin can be as easy as extracting a part of your config into a different file and publishing it to npm.
This sample project contains an example on how to do that, but also comes with many more features:
To start working on your project, just run
npm install
Make sure to read our Plugin Development Guide to learn how to build a plugin.
Running npm run test will run every test located in the test/ folder. They
use mocha and chai,
but you can customize them.
We recommend creating unit tests for your own modules, and integration tests for the interaction of the plugin with Hardhat and its dependencies.
All of Hardhat projects use prettier and tslint.
You can check if your code style is correct by running npm run lint, and fix
it with npm run lint:fix.
Just run npm run build ️👷
This README describes this boilerplate project, but won't be very useful to your plugin users.
Take a look at README-TEMPLATE.md for an example of what a Hardhat plugin's
README should look like.
Take a look at the migration guide!
FAQs
Hardhat TypeScript plugin boilerplate
We found that @ignored/hardhat-js-toolbox 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.

Security News
Recent coverage mislabels the latest TEA protocol spam as a worm. Here’s what’s actually happening.

Security News
PyPI adds Trusted Publishing support for GitLab Self-Managed as adoption reaches 25% of uploads

Research
/Security News
A malicious Chrome extension posing as an Ethereum wallet steals seed phrases by encoding them into Sui transactions, enabling full wallet takeover.