Security News
Node.js EOL Versions CVE Dubbed the "Worst CVE of the Year" by Security Experts
Critics call the Node.js EOL CVE a misuse of the system, sparking debate over CVE standards and the growing noise in vulnerability databases.
@putout/engine-runner
Advanced tools
Run putout plugins.
npm i @putout/engine-runner
Replacer
converts code in declarative way. Simplest possible form, no need to use fix
. Just from
and to
parts.
Simplest replace example:
module.exports.report = () => 'any message here';
module.exports.replace = () => ({
'const a = 1': 'const b = 1',
});
// optional
module.exports.filter = (path) => {
return true;
};
// optional
module.exports.match = () => ({
'const __a = 1': ({__a}) => {
return true;
},
});
// optional
module.exports.exclude = () => [
`const hello = 'world'`,
];
Simplest remove example:
module.exports.report = () => 'debugger should not be used';
module.exports.replace = () => ({
'debugger': '',
});
Templates:
module.exports.report = () => 'any message here';
module.exports.replace = () => ({
'var __a = 1': 'const __a = 1',
});
A couple variables example:
module.exports.report = () => 'any message here';
module.exports.replace = () => ({
'const __a = __b': 'const __b = __a',
});
You can pass a function as object value for more soficticated processing.
Remove node:
module.exports.report = () => 'any message here';
module.exports.replace = () => ({
'for (const __a of __b) __c': ({__a, __b, __c}, path) => {
// remove node
return '';
},
});
Update node:
module.exports.report = () => 'any message here';
module.exports.replace = () => ({
'for (const __a of __array) __c': ({__a, __array, __c}, path) => {
// update __array elements count
path.node.right.elements = [];
return path;
},
});
Update node using template variables:
module.exports.report = () => 'any message here';
module.exports.replace = () => ({
'for (const __a of __array) __c': ({__a, __array, __c}, path) => {
// update the whole node using template string
return 'for (const x of y) z';
},
});
includer
is the most prefarable format of a plugin, simplest to use (after replacer
)
module.exports.report = () => 'debugger statement should not be used';
module.exports.fix = (path) => {
path.remove();
};
module.exports.include = () => [
'debugger',
];
// optional
module.exports.exclude = () => {
};
// optional
module.exports.filter = (path) => {
return true;
};
include
and exclude
returns an array of @babel/types, or code blocks:
const __ = 'hello';
Where __
can be any node. All this possible with help of @putout/compare. Templates format supported in traverse
and find
plugins as well.
Traverse plugins
gives you more power to filter
and fix
nodes you need.
module.exports.report = () => 'debugger statement should not be used';
module.exports.fix = (path) => {
path.remove();
};
module.exports.traverse = ({push}) => {
return {
'debugger'(path) {
push(path);
},
};
};
To keep things during traverse in a safe way listStore
can be used.
module.exports.traverse = ({push, listStore}) => {
return {
'debugger'(path) {
listStore('x');
push(path);
},
Program: {
exit() {
console.log(listStore());
// returns
['x', 'x', 'x'];
// for code
'debugger; debugger; debugger';
},
},
};
};
store
is prefered way of keeping array elements, because of caching of putout
, traverse
init function called only once, and any other way
of handling variables will most likely will lead to bugs.
When you need key-value
storage store
can be used.
module.exports.traverse = ({push, store}) => {
return {
'debugger'(path) {
store('hello', 'world');
push(path);
},
Program: {
exit() {
store();
// returns
['world'];
store.entries();
// returns
[['hello', 'world']];
store('hello');
// returns
'world';
},
},
};
};
Find plugins
gives you all the control over traversing, but it's the slowest format.
Because traversers
not merged in contrast with other plugin formats.
module.exports.report = () => 'debugger statement should not be used';
module.exports.fix = (path) => {
path.remove();
};
module.exports.find = (ast, {push, traverse}) => {
traverse(ast, {
'debugger'(path) {
push(path);
},
});
};
const {runPlugins} = require('@putout/engine-runner');
const {parse} = require('@putout/engin-parser');
const plugins = [{
rule: "remove-debugger",
msg: "", // optional
options: {}, // optional
plugin: {
include: () => ['debugger'],
fix: (path) => path.remove(),
report: () => `debugger should not be used`,
},
}];
const ast = parse('const m = "hi"; debugger');
const places = runPlugins({
ast,
shebang: false, // default
fix: true, // default
fixCount: 1, // default
plugins,
parser: 'babel', // default
});
To see logs, use:
DEBUG=putout:runner:*
DEBUG=putout:runner:fix
DEBUG=putout:runner:find
DEBUG=putout:runner:template
MIT
FAQs
Run 🐊Putout plugins
The npm package @putout/engine-runner receives a total of 12,312 weekly downloads. As such, @putout/engine-runner popularity was classified as popular.
We found that @putout/engine-runner demonstrated a healthy version release cadence and project activity because the last version was released less than a year ago. It has 0 open source maintainers collaborating on the project.
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