Socket
Socket
Sign inDemoInstall

@lavamoat/allow-scripts

Package Overview
Dependencies
117
Maintainers
6
Versions
21
Alerts
File Explorer

Advanced tools

Install Socket

Detect and block malicious and high-risk dependencies

Install

    @lavamoat/allow-scripts

A tool for running only the dependency lifecycle hooks specified in an allowlist.


Version published
Weekly downloads
8.7K
increased by6.72%
Maintainers
6
Install size
8.21 MB
Created
Weekly downloads
 

Readme

Source

@lavamoat/allow-scripts

A tool for running only the dependency lifecycle hooks specified in an allowlist.

For an overview of LavaMoat tools see the main README

Install

Adds the package to start using it in your project. be sure to include the @lavamoat/ namespace in the package name

yarn add -D @lavamoat/allow-scripts

or

npm i -D @lavamoat/allow-scripts

Setup

yarn allow-scripts setup

or

npx --no-install allow-scripts setup

Warning if @lavamoat/allow-scripts was not installed prior, npx will try to download and run allow-scripts (note no namespace prefix) which is a different package. We suggest adding --no-install to prevent accidents.

Adds a .yarnrc or .npmrc (the latter if package-lock.json is present) to the package, populates this file with the line ignore-scripts true. Immediately after that, adds the dependency @lavamoat/preinstall-always-fail.

Adding this package to a project mitigates the likelihood of accidentally running any lifecycle scripts by throwing an error during the preinstall script execution.

Configure

Automatically generates and writes a configuration into package.json, setting new policies as false by default. Edit this file as necessary.

yarn allow-scripts auto

or

npx --no-install allow-scripts auto

Configuration goes in package.json

{
  "lavamoat": {
    "allowScripts": {
      "keccak": true,
      "core-js": false
    }
  }
}

Note While you can configure all install scripts that you've been running to date as allowed, it's best to limit the number of them in case a package with pre-existing install script gets exploited. To figure out which packages' scripts can be ignored, try can-i-ignore-scripts

Run

Run all lifecycle scripts for the packages specified in package.json

yarn allow-scripts

or

npx --no-install allow-scripts

This is a shorthand for yarn/npx allow-scripts run.

It will fail if it detects dependencies which haven't been set up during configuration of the package. You will be advised to run yarn allow-scripts auto.

Debug

Prints comprehension of configuration and dependencies with lifecycle scripts, specifying allowed and disallowed packages.

yarn allow-scripts list

or

npx --no-install allow-scripts list

Improving your Workflow

Consider adding a setup npm script for all your post-install steps to ensure the running of your allowed scripts. This can be just a regular script (no magic needed!). Also, it is a good place to add other post-processing commands you want to use.

In the future when you add additional post-processing scripts, e.g. patch-package, you can add them to this setup script.

:thought_balloon: You will need to make an effort to remember to run yarn setup instead of just yarn :lotus_position:

{
  "scripts": {
    "setup": "yarn install && yarn allow-scripts && ..."
  }
}

Experimental protection against bin script confusion

Bin script confusion is a new attack where a dependency gets its script to run by declaring executables that end up on the path and later get triggered either by the user or by other programs. More details in npm bin script confusion: Abusing ‘bin’ to hijack ‘node’ command by Socket.dev

To enable protection against bin script confusion, run all of the above allow-scripts commands with the --experimental-bins flag.

What does it do?

  • setup will add a new configuration option to your project package manager RC file to disable linking up bin scripts
  • auto will generate an allowlist of top-level bin scripts allowed for execution
  • run will link up the allowed scripts and replace not allowed scripts with an error

When you attempt to run a bin script not in the allowlist, you will get an error with instructions on how to enable it manually.

FAQs

Last updated on 26 Mar 2024

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.

Install

Related posts

SocketSocket SOC 2 Logo

Product

  • Package Alerts
  • Integrations
  • Docs
  • Pricing
  • FAQ
  • Roadmap

Stay in touch

Get open source security insights delivered straight into your inbox.


  • Terms
  • Privacy
  • Security

Made with ⚡️ by Socket Inc