Research
Security News
Malicious PyPI Package ‘pycord-self’ Targets Discord Developers with Token Theft and Backdoor Exploit
Socket researchers uncover the risks of a malicious Python package targeting Discord developers.
Source code management utilities for atvise
atscm is a node.js based utility that stores the contents of atvise projects on the file system. This has several benefits to advanced atvise developers:
This module can be installed via atscm-cli.
With atscm-cli installed run atscm init
to create a new atscm project.
Pulling nodes from atvise server
Running atscm pull
will download all nodes from atvise server into the ./src
folder inside your project.
By default only displays, serverside scripts and quickdynamics will be split into their JavaScript and SVG sources. You can specify additional transformers to use in your Project configuration file.
Pushing source files to atvise server
Running atscm push
will update all nodes from the contents of your ./src
folder.
Automatically watching for changes
After running atscm watch
files and atvise server nodes are watched for changes. If a file changes, the file is pushed, if a node changes this node is pulled.
atscm watch
is very useful if you want edit source files in an external editor but still have the ability to use atvise builder's drag and drop functionality.
An atscm project's configuration is stored inside the Atviseproject file inside your project root. See the Atviseproject class reference for available options.
FAQs
Source code management utilities for atvise
We found that atscm demonstrated a not healthy version release cadence and project activity because the last version was released a year ago. It has 2 open source maintainers 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.
Research
Security News
Socket researchers uncover the risks of a malicious Python package targeting Discord developers.
Security News
The UK is proposing a bold ban on ransomware payments by public entities to disrupt cybercrime, protect critical services, and lead global cybersecurity efforts.
Security News
Snyk's use of malicious npm packages for research raises ethical concerns, highlighting risks in public deployment, data exfiltration, and unauthorized testing.