Security News
pnpm 10.0.0 Blocks Lifecycle Scripts by Default
pnpm 10 blocks lifecycle scripts by default to improve security, addressing supply chain attack risks but sparking debate over compatibility and workflow changes.
A poor man's module namespacing solution for the browser.
defuse.def('foo.bar', function(exports) {
exports.baz = function() { return 'qux'; }
});
console.log(defuse.use('foo.bar').baz());
For simple projects, I sometimes don't need the power offered by module loaders, bundlers or similar tools, and would prefer to just have a way of namespacing the project's modules, as opposed to a complete solution for require
ing and using everything, vendor libraries included.
Browserify is really awesome, my only reason for not using it for every browser-based project is that I have yet to find a nice way of testing browserified projects using phantomjs. For projects that don't use the DOM, or projects which make sense both in node and the browser, browserify is perfect. The tests can be done from node, and each module to be tested can simply be require
d. Things aren't as simple when phantomjs is involved. Short of writing a very awkward require
utility available in the tests, we need to test each module using the entire browserified bundle. This makes writing tests a bit more difficult, since the stack traces are less useful than if the modules were still separate files.
There are several namespacing patterns commonly used in browser-based projects that are simple enough to use without needing to bring in yet another library. For example:
// thing.js
(function(exports) { ... })(window.thing = {});
// subthing.js
(function(exports) { ... })(window.thing.subthing = {});
The problem with simply using those patterns is that you end up needing to add each new script to the list of scripts to be concatenated in your Gruntfile/makefile/whatever you use. Simply using a glob pattern like *.js
is out of the question, since ordering matters (for eg, subthing.js
uses things defined in thing.js
, so it needs to appear after thing.js
). This isn't a major problem, so most people just live with it. What I really wanted was to avoid implicit dependencies amongst scripts (one of the things AMD solves), but boilerplate-free and as simple to use as CommonJS. defuse is my attempt at this, by only loading a module when you use
it for the first time, as opposed to when it is def
ined (lazy loading), but in a way that feels (to me) closer to CommonJS.
defuse.def(name, loader)
Defines a module.
defuse.def('foo.bar', function(exports) {
exports.baz = function() { return 'qux'; }
});
defuse.use(name)
Returns the exports of a defined module.
console.log(defuse.use('foo.bar').baz());
defuse.undef(name)
Undefines a module.
defuse.undef('foo.bar');
defuse.pollute()
Assigns defuse's api methods to the global namespace. Excludes itself, unpollute
and exports
. If you would like these methods available globally out of the box, use the defuse-global.js
or defuse-global.min.js
builds.
defuse.pollute();
// we can now do this:
def('foo.bar', function() { ... });
use('foo.bar');
defuse.unpollute()
Restore properties the global object had and remove properties that the global object did not have before pollute
.
def = 'tones'
defuse.pollute();
def('foo.bar', function() { ... });
defuse.unpollute();
console.log(def);
// => 'tones'
defuse.exports()
Returns a shallow copy of the defuse api. Useful for mixing in. Excludes itself, pollute
and unpollute
.
_.mixin(defuse.exports());
// we can now do this:
_.def('foo.bar', function() { ... });
_.use('foo.bar');
FAQs
A poor man's module namespacing solution for the browser
We found that defuse 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
pnpm 10 blocks lifecycle scripts by default to improve security, addressing supply chain attack risks but sparking debate over compatibility and workflow changes.
Product
Socket now supports uv.lock files to ensure consistent, secure dependency resolution for Python projects and enhance supply chain security.
Research
Security News
Socket researchers have discovered multiple malicious npm packages targeting Solana private keys, abusing Gmail to exfiltrate the data and drain Solana wallets.