
Security News
Another Round of TEA Protocol Spam Floods npm, But It’s Not a Worm
Recent coverage mislabels the latest TEA protocol spam as a worm. Here’s what’s actually happening.
cpu-features
Advanced tools
A simple binding to Google's cpu_features library for obtaining information about installed CPU(s)
A simple node.js binding to cpu_features for obtaining information about installed CPU(s).
npm install cpu-features
// Generally it's a good idea to just call this once and
// reuse the result since `cpu-features` does not cache
// the result itself.
const features = require('cpu-features')();
console.log(features);
// example output:
// { arch: 'x86',
// brand: 'Intel(R) Core(TM) i7-3770K CPU @ 3.50GHz',
// family: 6,
// model: 58,
// stepping: 9,
// uarch: 'INTEL_IVB',
// flags:
// { fpu: true,
// tsc: true,
// cx8: true,
// clfsh: true,
// mmx: true,
// aes: true,
// erms: true,
// f16c: true,
// sse: true,
// sse2: true,
// sse3: true,
// ssse3: true,
// sse4_1: true,
// sse4_2: true,
// avx: true,
// pclmulqdq: true,
// cx16: true,
// popcnt: true,
// rdrnd: true,
// ss: true } }
FAQs
A simple binding to Google's cpu_features library for obtaining information about installed CPU(s)
The npm package cpu-features receives a total of 3,907,333 weekly downloads. As such, cpu-features popularity was classified as popular.
We found that cpu-features 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.

Security News
Recent coverage mislabels the latest TEA protocol spam as a worm. Here’s what’s actually happening.

Security News
PyPI adds Trusted Publishing support for GitLab Self-Managed as adoption reaches 25% of uploads

Research
/Security News
A malicious Chrome extension posing as an Ethereum wallet steals seed phrases by encoding them into Sui transactions, enabling full wallet takeover.