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Supply Chain Attack on Rspack npm Packages Injects Cryptojacking Malware
A supply chain attack on Rspack's npm packages injected cryptomining malware, potentially impacting thousands of developers.
cheap-di-react
Advanced tools
Integration of cheap-di into React via React.context
There is simple logger.
logger.ts
export abstract class Logger {
abstract debug(message: string): void;
}
export class ConsoleLogger extends Logger {
constructor(private prefix: string) {
super();
}
debug(message: string) {
console.log(`${this.prefix}: ${message}`);
}
}
export class AnotherConsoleLogger extends Logger {
debug(message: string) {
console.log(message);
}
}
Use it in react
components.tsx
import {
Provider,
OneTimeProvider,
} from 'cheap-di-react';
import { Logger, ConsoleLogger } from './logger';
const RootComponent = () => {
return (
<>
<Provider
// will update dependencies on each render
dependencies={[
dr => dr.registerType(ConsoleLogger).as(Logger).with('my message'),
]}
// shortcut for dependencies={[ dr => dr.registerType(AnotherConsoleLogger) ]}
self={[AnotherConsoleLogger]}
>
<ComponentA/>
</Provider>
<OneTimeProvider
// will use initial dependecies (it uses useMemo under hood)
dependencies={[
dr => dr.registerType(ConsoleLogger).as(Logger).with('my message'),
]}
// will use initial self dependecies (it uses useMemo under hood)
self={[AnotherConsoleLogger]}
>
<ComponentA/>
</OneTimeProvider>
</>
);
};
const ComponentA = () => {
const logger = use(Logger);
logger.debug('bla-bla-bla');
return 'my layout';
};
const ComponentB = () => {
const logger = use(AnotherConsoleLogger); // because we registered it as self
logger.debug('bla-bla-bla');
return 'my layout';
};
If you mark your service as @stateful
(or @singleton
), Provider will create instance of the service and configures
it fields (with Object.defineProperties), those fields changes (reassign) will trigger Provider
rerender throw
React.Context
, and service consumers will receive field update.
Difference between @singleton
and @stateful
that for @singleton
there will be created only one instance for entire
Provider tree, and for @stateful
there will be created different instance per each Provider that register this type.
stateful
import { OneTimeProvider, use, stateful } from 'cheap-di-react';
@stateful
class MyStateful {
message: string = 'initial';
}
const RootComponent = () => {
return (
<OneTimeProvider self={[MyStateful]}>
<LoadComponent message="level 1"/>
<ReadComponent/>
<OneTimeProvider self={[MyStateful]}>
<LoadComponent message="level 2"/>
<ReadComponent/>
</OneTimeProvider>
</OneTimeProvider>
);
};
const LoadComponent = ({ message }: { message: string }) => {
const myStateful = use(MyStateful);
return (
<button onClick={() => { myStateful.message = message; }}/>
);
};
const ReadComponent = () => {
const myStateful = use(MyStateful);
return (
<span>
{myStateful.message}
</span>
);
};
singleton
import { singleton } from 'cheap-di';
import { OneTimeProvider, use } from 'cheap-di-react';
@singleton
class MySingleton {
data: string[] = ['initial'];
async loadData() {
this.data = await Promise.resolve(['some']);
}
}
const RootComponent = () => {
return (
<OneTimeProvider self={[MySingleton]}>
<Component/>
</OneTimeProvider>
);
};
const Component = () => {
const mySingleton = use(MySingleton);
useEffect(() => {
(async () => {
await mySingleton.loadData();
})();
}, []);
return (
<div>
{mySingleton.data.map(text => (
<span key={text} style={{ color: 'blue' }}>
{text}
</span>
))}
</div>
);
};
You can configure your services with more classic-way - when your class know nothing about how and where it will be used.
stateful
import { OneTimeProvider, use } from 'cheap-di-react';
class MyStateful {
message: string = 'initial';
}
const RootComponent = () => {
return (
<OneTimeProvider dependencies={[ dr => dr.registerType(MyStateful) ]}>
<LoadComponent message="level 1"/>
<ReadComponent/>
<OneTimeProvider dependencies={[ dr => dr.registerType(MyStateful) ]}>
<LoadComponent message="level 2"/>
<ReadComponent/>
</OneTimeProvider>
</OneTimeProvider>
);
};
singleton
import { OneTimeProvider, use } from 'cheap-di-react';
class MySingleton {
data: string[] = ['initial'];
async loadData() {
this.data = await Promise.resolve(['some']);
}
}
const RootComponent = () => {
return (
<OneTimeProvider dependencies={[ dr => dr.registerType(MySingleton).asSingleton() ]}>
<Component/>
</OneTimeProvider>
);
};
But remember, if you want to use auto resolving your dependencies with typescript reflection, you need
"emitDecoratorMetadata": true,
in tsconfig.ts
and any class-decorator for your service-class (read more in
cheap-di
README.md)
FAQs
Dependency injection based on cheap-di for using in React components with React Context
The npm package cheap-di-react receives a total of 43 weekly downloads. As such, cheap-di-react popularity was classified as not popular.
We found that cheap-di-react 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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