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Malicious PyPI Package Exploits Deezer API for Coordinated Music Piracy
Socket researchers uncovered a malicious PyPI package exploiting Deezer’s API to enable coordinated music piracy through API abuse and C2 server control.
axios-rest-resource
Advanced tools
Schema-based HTTP client powered by axios. Built with Typescript. Heavily inspired by AngularJS' $resource.
Schema-based HTTP client powered by axios. Built with Typescript. Heavily inspired by AngularJS' $resource
.
npm i axios-rest-resource axios
Create resource module in your utils folder
// utils/resource.ts
import { ResourceBuilder } from 'axios-rest-resource'
export const resourceBuilder = new ResourceBuilder({
baseURL: 'http://localhost:3000',
})
Using a newly created resource builder create an actual resource
// api/entity1.js
import { resourceBuilder } from 'utils/resource'
export const entity1Resource = resourceBuilder.build('/entity1')
// exports an object
// {
// create: (requestConfig) => axiosPromise // sends POST http://localhost:3000/entity1,
// read: (requestConfig) => axiosPromise // sends GET http://localhost:3000/entity1,
// readOne: (requestConfig) => axiosPromise // sends GET http://localhost:3000/entity1/{id},
// remove: (requestConfig) => axiosPromise // sends DELETE http://localhost:3000/entity1/{id},
// update: (requestConfig) => axiosPromise // sends PUT http://localhost:3000/entity1/{id}
// }
Use your resource whenever you want to make an AJAX call
import { entity1Resource } from 'api/entity1'
const resRead = entity1Resource.read()
// sends GET http://localhost:3000/entity1
// resRead is a Promise of data received from the server
const resReadOne = entity1Resource.readOne({ params: { id } })
// for id = '123'
// sends GET http://localhost:3000/entity1/123
// resReadOne is a Promise of data received from the server
const resCreate = entity1Resource.create({ data })
// for data = { field1: 'test' }
// sends POST http://localhost:3000/entity1 with body { field1: 'test' }
// resCreate is a Promise of data received from the server
const resUpdate = entity1Resource.update({ data, params: { id } })
// for data = { field1: 'test' } and id = '123'
// sends PUT http://localhost:3000/entity1/123 with body { field1: 'test' }
// resUpdate is a Promise of data received from the server
const resRemove = entity1Resource.remove({ params: { id } })
// for id = '123'
// sends DELETE http://localhost:3000/entity1/123
// resRemove is a Promise of data received from the server
axios-rest-resource applies interceptorUrlFormatter interceptor by default. It handles {token} substitution in URLs.
Create resource module in your utils folder
// utils/resource.ts
import { ResourceBuilder } from 'axios-rest-resource'
export const resourceBuilder = new ResourceBuilder({
baseURL: 'http://localhost:3000',
})
Using a newly created resource builder create an actual resource
// api/entity2.js
import { resourceSchemaDefault } from 'axios-rest-resource'
import { resourceBuilder } from 'utils/resource'
export const entity2Resource = resourceBuilder.build('/entity2', {
...resourceSchemaDefault,
doSomething: {
method: 'post',
url: '/do-something',
},
})
// exports an object
// {
// create: (requestConfig) => axiosPromise // sends POST http://localhost:3000/entity2,
// read: (requestConfig) => axiosPromise // sends GET http://localhost:3000/entity2,
// readOne: (requestConfig) => axiosPromise // sends GET http://localhost:3000/entity2/{id},
// remove: (requestConfig) => axiosPromise // sends DELETE http://localhost:3000/entity2/{id},
// update: (requestConfig) => axiosPromise // sends PUT http://localhost:3000/entity2/{id},
// doSomething: (requestConfig) => axiosPromise // sends POST http://localhost:3000/entity2/do-something
// }
Use your resource whenever you want to make an AJAX call
import { entity2Resource } from 'api/entity2'
const resRead = entity2Resource.read()
// sends GET http://localhost:3000/entity2
// resRead is a Promise of data received from the server
const resReadOne = entity2Resource.readOne({ params: { id } })
// for id = '123'
// sends GET http://localhost:3000/entity2/123
// resReadOne is a Promise of data received from the server
const resCreate = entity2Resource.create({ data })
// for data = { field1: 'test' }
// sends POST http://localhost:3000/entity2 with body { field1: 'test' }
// resCreate is a Promise of data received from the server
const resUpdate = entity2Resource.update({ data, params: { id } })
// for data = { field1: 'test' } and id = '123'
// sends PUT http://localhost:3000/entity2/123 with body { field1: 'test' }
// resUpdate is a Promise of data received from the server
const resRemove = entity2Resource.remove({ params: { id } })
// for id = '123'
// sends DELETE http://localhost:3000/entity2/123
// resRemove is a Promise of data received from the server
const resDoSomething = entity2Resource.doSomething()
// sends POST http://localhost:3000/entity2/do-something
// resDoSomething is a Promise of data received from the server
You custom schema does not need to extend default schema if you do not want that
// api/entity.js
import { resourceBuilder } from 'utils/resource'
export const entityResource = resourceBuilder.build('/entity', {
doSomething: {
method: 'post',
url: '/do-something',
},
})
// exports an object
// {
// doSomething: (requestConfig) => axiosPromise // sends POST http://localhost:3000/entity/do-something
// }
Alternatively you can use a partial of a default schema
// api/entity.js
import { resourceSchemaDefault } from 'axios-rest-resource'
import { resourceBuilder } from 'utils/resource'
const { read, readOne } = resourceSchemaDefault
export const entityResource = resourceBuilder.build('/entity', {
read,
readOne,
})
// exports an object
// {
// read: (requestConfig) => axiosPromise // sends GET http://localhost:3000/entity,
// readOne: (requestConfig) => axiosPromise // sends GET http://localhost:3000/entity/{id},
// }
What does ResourceBuilder
do exactly upon creation?
When you call new ResourceBuilder(axiosConfig)
axiosConfig
doesn't have headers.Accept
property it sets it to 'application/json'.axiosConfig
to axios.create
.interceptorUrlFormatter
to request interceptors of the newly created instance of axios.axiosInstance
.Each instance of ResourceBuilder has its own axiosInstance
. It's useful if you want to do something more with your axios instance like adding an interceptor.
import { ResourceBuilder } from 'axios-rest-resource'
import axios, { AxiosInstance } from 'axios'
const resourceBuilder = new ResourceBuilder({
baseURL: 'http://localhost:3000',
})
resourceBuilder.axiosInstance.interceptors.response.use(myCustomResponeInterceptor)
export { resourceBuilder }
FAQs
Schema-based HTTP client powered by axios. Built with Typescript. Heavily inspired by AngularJS' $resource.
The npm package axios-rest-resource receives a total of 31 weekly downloads. As such, axios-rest-resource popularity was classified as not popular.
We found that axios-rest-resource 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.
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.
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