Research
Security News
Quasar RAT Disguised as an npm Package for Detecting Vulnerabilities in Ethereum Smart Contracts
Socket researchers uncover a malicious npm package posing as a tool for detecting vulnerabilities in Etherium smart contracts.
couchdb-bulk2
Advanced tools
This is a little command line tool meant to eat line seperated JSON (CouchDB documents) on stdin and POSTing them to the _bulk_docs endpoint of a CouchDB server.
This is a fork from couchdb-bulk, with the following modifications:
npm install -g couchdb-bulk2
couchdb-bulk2 url [file]
The [file]
argument is optional, if its missing (or if its '-'), input is expected to be piped via stdin
Example:
cat ./test/fixtures/docs.ndjson | couchdb-bulk2 http://localhost:5984/testdb
// OR
couchdb-bulk2 http://localhost:5984/testdb ./test/fixtures/docs.ndjson
couchdb-bulk2
expects the input to be line seperated JSON.
See http://jsonlines.org for more info on this format.
Each line should be a single doc:
{ "_id": "one" }
{ "_id": "two" }
{ "_id": "three" }
This newline-delimited JSON format can easily be obtained from a JSON document containing an array of docs using a tool such as jq
cat view_reponse.json | jq -c '.docs[]' | couchdb-bulk2 http://localhost:5984/testdb
FAQs
Pipe newline-delimited JSON into CouchDB
The npm package couchdb-bulk2 receives a total of 0 weekly downloads. As such, couchdb-bulk2 popularity was classified as not popular.
We found that couchdb-bulk2 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.
Research
Security News
Socket researchers uncover a malicious npm package posing as a tool for detecting vulnerabilities in Etherium smart contracts.
Security News
Research
A supply chain attack on Rspack's npm packages injected cryptomining malware, potentially impacting thousands of developers.
Research
Security News
Socket researchers discovered a malware campaign on npm delivering the Skuld infostealer via typosquatted packages, exposing sensitive data.