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Malicious npm Package Targets Solana Developers and Hijacks Funds
A malicious npm package targets Solana developers, rerouting funds in 2% of transactions to a hardcoded address.
clock-mock
Advanced tools
A mock clock for tests involving timing.
Don't just use setTimeout()
and hope that the timings work out. This
makes tests take forever and be non-deterministic and flaky.
Instead, mock the clock, and explicitly advance it so you can test timing issues precisely and deterministically.
import { Clock } from 'clock-mock'
// this also works:
// const { Clock } = require('clock-mock')
import t from 'tap' // or whatever you use
// the module you wrote that does timing stuff
import { myModuleThatDoesStuffWithTime } from '../index.js'
t.test('test timeouts precisely', t => {
const c = new Clock()
c.enter()
myModuleThatDoesStuffWithTime.scheduleThing('foo', 100)
c.advance(99)
t.equal(myModuleThatDoesStuffWithTime.thingRan('foo'), false)
c.advance(1) // the timeout fired!
t.equal(myModuleThatDoesStuffWithTime.thingRan('foo'), true)
c.exit()
t.end()
})
Patches:
const c = new Clock()
Returns a new Clock instance
c.advance(n)
Advance the clock by n
ms. Use floats for smaller increments of
time.
c.flow(n, step = 5) => Promise<void>
Advance the clock in steps, awaiting a Promise at each step, so that actual asynchronous events can occur, as well as timers.
c.travel(time)
Set the clock to a specific time. Will fire timers that you zoom past.
c.enter()
Mocks all the things in the global space.
Returns exit function, for ease of doing t.teardown(c.enter())
.
c.exit()
Puts all the mocked globals back to their prior state.
c.setTimeout(fn, n = 1)
Schedule a function to be run when the clock has advanced n
ms beyond
the current point.
Only ms granularity.
c.setInterval(fn, n = 1)
Schedule a function to be run when the clock advances each multiple of
n
past the current point.
If multiple steps are advanced at once, for example doing
c.setInterval(fn, 1) ; c.advance(1000)
, then it will only call the
function once. This allows you to simulate clock jitter.
Only ms granularity.
c.setImmediate(fn)
Schedule a function to be run the next time the clock advances by any amount.
c.clearTimeout(timer)
Clear a timeout created by the clock.
c.clearInterval(interval)
Clear an interval created by the clock.
c.now()
Returns the current ms time on the clock.
c.hrtime()
Mock of process.hrtime()
, returning [seconds, nanoseconds]
on the
clock.
c.hrtimeBigint()
Mock of process.hrtime.bigint()
, returning BigInt representation of
current nanosecond time.
FAQs
a mock clock for tests involving timing
We found that clock-mock 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.
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