Security News
Research
Data Theft Repackaged: A Case Study in Malicious Wrapper Packages on npm
The Socket Research Team breaks down a malicious wrapper package that uses obfuscation to harvest credentials and exfiltrate sensitive data.
Note, if you're using @xmpp/client
or @xmpp/component
, you don't need to install @xmpp/xml
.
npm install @xmpp/xml
const xml = require("@xmpp/xml");
const { xml } = require("@xmpp/client");
const { xml } = require("@xmpp/component");
There's 2 methods for writing XML with xmpp.js
const xml = require("@xmpp/xml");
const recipient = "user@example.com";
const days = ["Monday", "Tuesday", "Wednesday"];
const message = xml(
"message",
{ to: recipient },
xml("body", {}, 1 + 2),
xml(
"days",
{},
days.map((day, idx) => xml("day", { idx }, day)),
),
);
If the second argument passed to xml
is a string
instead of an object
, it will be set as the xmlns
attribute.
// both are equivalent
xml("time", "urn:xmpp:time");
xml("time", { xmlns: "urn:xmpp:time" });
/** @jsx xml */
const xml = require("@xmpp/xml");
const recipient = "user@example.com";
const days = ["Monday", "Tuesday"];
const message = (
<message to={recipient}>
<body>{1 + 2}</body>
<days>
{days.map((day, idx) => (
<day idx={idx}>${day}</day>
))}
</days>
</message>
);
Requires a preprocessor such as TypeScript or Babel with @babel/plugin-transform-react-jsx.
The attrs
property is an object that holds xml attributes of the element.
message.attrs.to; // user@example.com
Returns the text value of an element
message.getChild("body").text(); // '3'
Get child element by name.
message.getChild("body").toString(); // '<body>3</body>'
Get child element text value.
message.getChildText("body"); // '3'
Get children elements by name.
message.getChild("days").getChildren("day"); // [...]
Since getChildren
returns an array, you can use JavaScript array methods such as filter and find to build more complex queries.
const days = message.getChild("days").getChildren("day");
// Find Monday element
days.find((day) => day.text() === "Monday");
days.find((day) => day.attrs.idx === 0);
// Find all days after Tuesday
days.filter((day) => day.attrs.idx > 2);
You can get the parent node using the parent property.
console.log(message.getChild("days").parent === message);
You can get the root node using the root method.
console.log(message.getChild("days").root() === message);
The attrs
property is an object that holds xml attributes of the element.
message.attrs.type = "chat";
Object.assign(message.attrs, { type: "chat" });
Set the text value of an element
message.getChild("body").text("Hello world");
Adds text or element nodes to the last position. Returns the parent.
message.append(xml("foo"));
message.append("bar");
message.append(days.map((day) => xml("day", {}, day)));
// <message>
// ...
// <foo/>
// bar
// <day>Monday</day>
// <day>Tuesday</day>
// </message>
Adds text or element nodes to the first position. Returns the parent.
message.prepend(xml("foo"));
message.prepend("bar");
message.prepend(days.map((day) => xml("day", {}, day)));
// <message>
// <day>Tuesday</day>
// <day>Monday</day>
// bar
// <foo/>
// ...
// </message>
Removes a child element.
const body = message.getChild("body");
message.remove(body);
You can embed JSON anywhere but it is recommended to use appropriate semantic.
/** @jsx xml */
// write
message.append(
<myevent xmlns="xmpp:example.org">
<json xmlns="urn:xmpp:json:0">{JSON.stringify(days)}</json>
</myevent>,
);
// read
JSON.parse(
message
.getChild("myevent", "xmpp:example.org")
.getChildText("json", "urn:xmpp:json:0"),
);
See also JSON Containers and Simple JSON Messaging.
@xmpp/xml
include a function to parse XML strings.
⚠ Use with care. Untrusted input or substitutions can result in invalid XML and side effects.
const { escapeXML, escapeXMLText };
const parse = require("@xmpp/xml/lib/parse");
const ctx = parse("<message><body>hello world</body></message>");
ctx.getChildText("body"); // hello world
If you must use with untrusted input, escape it with escapeXML
and escapeXMLText
.
const { escapeXML, escapeXMLText } = require("@xmpp/xml");
const parse = require("@xmpp/xml/lib/parse");
const message = parse(`
<message to="${escapeXML(to)}">
<body>${escapeXMLText(body)}</body>
</message>,
`);
FAQs
XMPP XML for JavaScript
The npm package @xmpp/xml receives a total of 14,073 weekly downloads. As such, @xmpp/xml popularity was classified as popular.
We found that @xmpp/xml 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.
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
Research
The Socket Research Team breaks down a malicious wrapper package that uses obfuscation to harvest credentials and exfiltrate sensitive data.
Research
Security News
Attackers used a malicious npm package typosquatting a popular ESLint plugin to steal sensitive data, execute commands, and exploit developer systems.
Security News
The Ultralytics' PyPI Package was compromised four times in one weekend through GitHub Actions cache poisoning and failure to rotate previously compromised API tokens.