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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.
dapparatus
Advanced tools
reusable dapp components in react: metamask, automatic gas, transaction ui, event parers etc...
After building out a handful of Dapps in React, I decided to carve out all the common components and provide them in an NPM package.
Should help get a Dapp up and running quickly so you can focus on your functionality, not wrestling with the blockchain and ethereum network.
Watch the demo video using Dapparatus over in the Clevis repo.
A good example and development walkthrough is nifties-vs-nfties.
npm install --save dapparatus
import { Metamask, Gas, ContractLoader, Transactions, Events, Scaler, Blockie, Address, Button } from "dapparatus"
const METATX = {
endpoint:"http://0.0.0.0:10001/",
contract:"0xf5bf6541843D2ba2865e9aeC153F28aaD96F6fbc",
//accountGenerator: "//account.metatx.io",
}
const WEB3_PROVIDER = 'http://0.0.0.0:8545'
<Dapparatus
config={{
DEBUG:false,
requiredNetwork:['Unknown','Rinkeby'],
hide:false
}}
metatx={METATX}
fallbackWeb3Provider={new Web3.providers.HttpProvider(WEB3_PROVIDER)}
onUpdate={(state)=>{
console.log("metamask state update:",state)
if(state.web3Provider) {
state.web3 = new Web3(state.web3Provider)
this.setState(state)
}
}}
/>
If you are using paper wallets or other methods to pass in a private key to dapparatus:
<PrivateKeyCatcher newPrivateKey={(pk)=>{
this.setState({newPrivateKey:pk})
}}/>
Looks for injected web3 and provides an interface to the rest of the components. Also displays a nice HUD for users to see what account is logged in, what network they are on, and how much Ethereum they have.
<Metamask
/*config={{DEBUG: false, requiredNetwork:['Ropsten'], hide:false}}*/
onUpdate={(state)=>{
console.log("metamask state update:",state)
if(state.web3Provider) {
state.web3 = new Web3(state.web3Provider)
this.setState(state)
}
}}
/>
Keeps track of the best gas price in gwei and delivers it to other components.
<Gas
onUpdate={(state)=>{
console.log("Gas price update:",state)
this.setState(state,()=>{
console.log("GWEI set:",this.state)
})
}}
/>
Displays transactions and blocks as progress bars and provides a tx function to make calling smart contract functions and sending transactions easier and more transparent to the user.
<Transactions
account={account}
gwei={gwei}
web3={web3}
block={block}
avgBlockTime={avgBlockTime}
etherscan={etherscan}
onReady={(state)=>{
//loads in tx() function
// use to send transactions: tx(contracts.YOURCONTRACT.YOURFUNCTION(),GASLIMIT)
console.log("Transactions component is ready:",state)
this.setState(state)
}}
/>
Loads your contracts published from Clevis into this.state.contracts.
Note: Contracts must first be injected into the /src folder by running clevis test publish
or clevis test full
.
<ContractLoader
key="ContractLoader"
config={{DEBUG:true}}
web3={web3}
require={path => {return require(`${__dirname}/${path}`)}}
onReady={(contracts,customLoader)=>{
console.log("contracts loaded",contracts)
this.setState({
customLoader: customLoader,
contracts:contracts,
},()=>{
console.log("Contracts Are Ready:",this.state.contracts)
})
}}
/>
You can then use the customLoader to load dynamic contracts using the ABI from current contracts:
let lootTokenContract = this.state.customLoader("LootToken",lootTokenAddress)
Listens for events and parses down the chain. Use an id field for unique keys so it will only fire the onUpdate function when a new event is detected. Provide a filter object to filter indexed fields.
<Events
config={{hide:false}}
contract={contracts.Nifties}
eventName={"Create"}
block={block} <-------- current block number!
id={"_id"}
filter={{_owner:account}}
onUpdate={(eventData,allEvents)=>{
console.log("EVENT DATA:",eventData)
this.setState({events:allEvents})
}}
/>
Renders an address with the blockie (identicon) and the current balance in Eth.
<Address
{...this.state}
address={contracts.SomeContract._address}
/>
Renders a button
<Button color={"green"} size={"2"} onClick={()=>{
//do some transaction on button click
tx(contracts.SomeContract.someFunction(someArgument),(receipt)=>{
//when the transaction goes through you'll have a receipt here
})
}}>
Send
</Button>
Renders an identicon for an address
<Blockie
address={someEthereumAddress}
config={{size:3}}
/>
Scales components based on a target screen width vs actual screen width. Get your Dapp looking awesome on mobile.
<Scaler config={{startZoomAt:1000,origin:"50px 50px",adjustedZoom:1.3}}>
<img style={{position:"absolute",left:10,top:10,maxHeight:120,margin:10}} src={titleImage}/>
</Scaler>
Ether Jam Jam is a demo app I built that uses Dapparatus for meta transactions:
FAQs
reusable dapp components in react: metamask, automatic gas, transaction ui, event parers etc...
The npm package dapparatus receives a total of 7 weekly downloads. As such, dapparatus popularity was classified as not popular.
We found that dapparatus 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.
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