
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.
angular2-locker
Advanced tools
angular2 library for managing session and locker storage, has backup for inmemory if neither are supported
Wrapper around sessionStorage and localStorage for angular2. If both are unavailable will use an in memory storage.
$ npm i --save angular2-locker
import {bootsrap, provide} from 'angular2/core'
import {Locker} from 'angular2-locker'
bootstrap(App, [Locker])
// If you need to specify more you can provide configuration
bootstrap(App, [provide(Locker, {useValue: new Locker({
driverNamespace: 'MyNamespace',
defaultDriverType: Locker.DRIVERS.LOCAL
})})])
class App {
constructor(private locker: Locker) {}
}
####get
locker.get('myKey')
####set
locker.set('myKey', 'value')
locker.set('myKey', {object: 'value'})
####key
locker.set('key', 'value')
locker.key(0) // 'key'
####has
locker.has('key')
####setNamespace
locker.setNamespace('myName')
####useDriver
// for more info on drivers look for static methods
var driver = locker.useDriver(Locker.DRIVERS.LOCAL)
driver.set('keey', 'value')
####remove
locker.remove('key')
####clear
locker.empty()
DRIVERSThese are the types of drivers available. If you try to set it to a driver that is unsupported it will fallback to the memory driver
Types are available under Locker.DRIVERS or import {DRIVERS} from 'angular2-locker'
DRIVERS.SESSION - Session CacheDRIVERS.LOCAL - Local StorageDRIVERS.MEMORY - Memory StorageDRIVERS.COOKIE - CookiesFAQs
angular2 library for managing session and locker storage, has backup for inmemory if neither are supported
We found that angular2-locker 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
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.