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Malicious npm Package Targets Solana Developers and Hijacks Funds
A malicious npm package targets Solana developers, rerouting funds in 2% of transactions to a hardcoded address.
@plumier/validator
Advanced tools
Convert object into classes match with TypeScript type annotation
TypedConverter uses several performance optimization, first it traverse Type properties using efficient properties traversal then compiles TypeScript types into optimized object graph contains functions for conversion.
Performance compared to Joi
Test Type Sec
Joi - Type conversion 17.62
Joi - Validation 61.67
TypedConverter - Type conversion 7.29
TypedConverter - Validation 23.51
To run benchmark:
yarn install
yarn benchmark
import reflect from "@plumier/reflect"
import { createValidator, val } from "@plumier/validator"
@reflect.parameterProperties()
class User {
constructor(
@val.email()
public email:string,
public name:string,
@val.before()
public dateOfBirth:Date,
public isActive:boolean
){}
}
// create validation function
const validate = createValidator(User)
// this configuration will result the same
// const validate = createValidator({ type: User })
// validate raw value
const user = validate({
email: "john.doe@gmail.com", name: "John Doe",
dateOfBirth: "1991-1-2", isActive: "true"
})
// create validation function for array
const validate = createValidator([User])
// validate raw value
const user = validate([{
email: "john.doe@gmail.com", name: "John Doe",
dateOfBirth: "1991-1-2", isActive: "true"
}, {
email: "jane.deane@gmail.com", name: "Jane Deane",
dateOfBirth: "1994-1-2", isActive: "false"
},
])
createValidator
good to have a shared validator configuration, but for single usage its better to use the validate
function.
import reflect from "@plumier/reflect"
import { validate, val } from "@plumier/validator"
@reflect.parameterProperties()
class User {
constructor(
@val.email()
public email:string,
public name:string,
@val.before()
public dateOfBirth:Date,
public isActive:boolean
){}
}
// pass the Type as the second parameter
const user = validate({
email: "john.doe@gmail.com", name: "John Doe",
dateOfBirth: "1991-1-2", isActive: "true"
}, User)
// can be passed as option too
// const user = validate(<raw value>, { type: User })
Useful when converting data from url encoded, where single value could be a single array.
const b = await convert("1", { type: [Number], guessArrayElement: true }) // -> result = [1]
Note that, when the type passed to the configuration is of type Array, providing single value will guessed as Array.
Visitors executed after conversion process traverse through properties / array element. Invocation can be multiple and run in sequence the last sequence will execute the converter. Visitors work like Plumier middleware
Signature of Visitor is like below:
type Visitor = (invocation: VisitorInvocation) => VisitorResult
Visitor is a function receive two parameters value
and invocation
.
invocation
next invocationExample:
import { createValidation, Result, VisitorInvocation } from "@plumier/validator"
const olderThanEightTeen = (i: VisitorInvocation) => {
if (i.type === Number && i.value < 18)
return Result.error(i.path, "Must be older than 18")
else
return i.proceed()
}
const validate = createValidation({ type: Number, visitors: [olderThanEightTeen] })
const result = validate("40") // { value: 40 }
const other = validate("12") // { issues: [{path: "", messages: ["Must be older than 18"]}] }
FAQs
Plumier validator and type converter module
The npm package @plumier/validator receives a total of 23 weekly downloads. As such, @plumier/validator popularity was classified as not popular.
We found that @plumier/validator 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.
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