Security News
Research
Data Theft Repackaged: A Case Study in Malicious Wrapper Packages on npm
The Socket Research Team breaks down a malicious wrapper package that uses obfuscation to harvest credentials and exfiltrate sensitive data.
node-json-transform
Advanced tools
A node module for transforming and performing operations on JSON.
A node module for transforming and performing operations on JSON.
npm install node-json-transform --save
var transform = require("node-json-transform").transform;
// or
var { transform } = require("node-json-transform");
var result = transform({
text: "hello"
}, {
item: {
message: "text"
}
});
// result { message: "hello" }
transform (data, map, context)
Parameter | Type | Required | Description |
---|---|---|---|
data | Object, Array | true | The JSON data that you want to transform |
map | Object | true | How you want to tranform it |
context | Object | false | Context to bind to for each item transformation. |
Object or Array based on input.
#####Object If an object is passed in, it will transform the object and return the resulting object.
If an array is passed in, each item will be iterated, transformed, and the entire result will be returned. If no "list" is passed map, it will used the data as is.
{
list: "", // Not required. If there is a sub-attribute in the incoming data that you want to used for tranformation rather than the data itself, you can specify that here. It must point to an array.
item: { // Required. Defines object mapping.
destination: "source" // The destination is the attribute name where source data will be mapped to in the result. The path uses lodash.get function to find a value in the incoming data.
},
remove:['attribute'], // Not required. Specifies an attribute to be removed from each item.
defaults: {} // Not required. Specifies fallback values for attributes if they are missing.
operate:[ // Not required. Runs after object mapping. Modifies the attribute specified in "on".
{
run: "", // Specifices the name of a function to run
on: "" // Specifies the attribute to be passed into the function above as a parameter
}
],
each: function(item){ // Not required. Runs after object mapping and operations. Allows access to each item for manipulation.
return item;
}
}
First we need some data.
var data = {
title : "title1",
description: "description1",
blog: "This is a blog.",
date: "11/4/2013",
extra : {
link : "http://goo.cm"
},
list1:[
{
name:"mike"
}
],
list2:[
{
item: "thing"
}
],
clearMe: "text"
};
The map defines how the output will be structured and which operations to run.
var map = {
item: {
name: "title",
info: "description",
text: "blog",
date: "date",
link: "extra.link",
item: "list1.0.name",
clearMe: "",
fieldGroup: ["title", "extra"]
},
operate: [
{
run: "Date.parse", on: "date"
},
{
run: function(val) { return val + " more info"}, on: "info"
}
],
each: function(item){
item.iterated = true;
return item;
}
};
You can read this as follows:
Run it synchronously
var transform = require("node-json-transform").transform;
var result = transform(data, map);
console.log(result);
... or asynchronously
var transform = require("node-json-transform").transformAsync;
transform(data, map).then((function(result){
console.log(result);
});
The expected output.
[
{
name : "title1",
info: "description1",
text: "This is a blog.",
date: 1383544800000,
link: "http://goo.cm",
info: "mike more info",
clearMe: "",
fieldGroup: ["title1", { link : "http://goo.cm" }],
iterated: true
}
]
var map = {
item: {
id: "id",
sku: "sku",
zero: "zero",
toReplace: "sku",
errorReplace: "notFound",
simpleArray: ["id", "sku","sku"],
complexArray: [ {node: "id"} , { otherNode:"sku" } , {toReplace:"sku"} ],
subObject: {
node1: "id",
node2: "sku",
subSubObject: {
node1: "id",
node2: "sku",
}
},
},
remove: ["unwanted"],
defaults: {
"missingData": true
},
operate: [
{
run: (val) => "replacement",
on: "subObject.subSubObject.node1"
},
{
run: (val) => "replacement",
on: "errorReplace"
},
{
run: (val) => "replacement",
on: "toReplace"
},
{
run: (val) => "replacement",
on: "simpleArray.2"
},
{
run: (val) => "replacement",
on: "complexArray.2.toReplace"
}
]
};
var object = [
{
id: "books",
zero: 0,
sku:"10234-12312",
unwanted: true
}
];
var result = transform(data, map);
The expected output.
[
{
id: "books",
sku: "10234-12312",
zero: 0,
toReplace: "replacement",
errorReplace: "replacement",
simpleArray: [
"books",
"10234-12312",
"replacement"
],
complexArray: [
{
node: "books"
},
{
otherNode: "10234-12312"
},
{
toReplace: "replacement"
}
],
subObject: {
node1: "books",
node2: "10234-12312",
subSubObject: {
node1: "replacement",
node2: "10234-12312"
}
},
missingData: true
]
var data = [
{
id: "books0",
zero: 0,
sku: "00234-12312",
subitems: [
{ subid: "0.0", subsku: "subskuvalue0.0" },
{ subid: "0.1", subsku: "subskuvalue0.1" }
]
}, {
id: "books1",
zero: 1,
sku: "10234-12312",
subitems: [
{ subid: "1.0", subsku: "subskuvalue1.0" },
{ subid: "1.1", subsku: "subskuvalue1.1" }
]
}
];
var baseMap = {
item : {
"myid": "id",
"mysku": "sku",
"mysubitems": "subitems"
},
operate: [
{
run: function(ary) {
return transform(ary, nestedMap);
},
on: "mysubitems"
}
]
};
var nestedMap = {
"item" : {
"mysubid": "subid",
"mysubsku": "subsku"
}
};
var result = transform(data, baseMap);
The expected output.
[
{
"myid": "books0",
"mysku": "00234-12312",
"mysubitems": [
{ "mysubid": "0.0", "mysubsku": "subskuvalue0.0" },
{ "mysubid": "0.1", "mysubsku": "subskuvalue0.1"}
]
},
{
"myid": "books1",
"mysku": "10234-12312",
"mysubitems": [
{ "mysubid": "1.0", "mysubsku": "subskuvalue1.0" },
{ "mysubid": "1.1", "mysubsku": "subskuvalue1.1" }
]
}
]
First we need some data.
var data = [
{
title : "title1",
description: "description1"
}
];
The map defines how the output will be structured and which operations to run.
var map = {
item: {
name: "title",
info: "description"
},
operate: [
{
run: function(val, context) { return val + " more info for" + context.type},
on: "info"
}
],
each: function(item, index, collection, context){
item.type = context.type;
return item;
}
};
Run it
var context = { type: "my-type" };
var result = transform(data, map, context);
console.log(result);
The expected output.
[
{
name : "title1",
info: "description1 more info for my-type",
type: "my-type"
}
]
Enjoy!
1.1.1 Omit undefined keys from the results.
1.1.0 New functional transform() interface. Object support. Updated documentation.
1.0.21 Uses loadash _get() for source traversal
1.0.20 Correct documentation
1.0.19 Update examples
1.0.18 Introducing transformAsync which returns a promise.
1.0.17 Ensure transform always returns an array
1.0.16 ES5 compatibility
1.0.15 Add support for a context object that is passed through to the operate.run and each functions.
1.0.14 Add support for default values via "defaults" definition. Add support for removing attributes via the "remove" definition.
1.0.13 Update code examples.
1.0.12 Fixed readme formatting.
1.0.11 Adding support for next object and nested array references.
1.0.10 Make each compatible with other options.
1.0.9 Updated the changelog.
1.0.8 Added each functionality to the map.
1.0.7 Updated Readme for multiple operations.
1.0.6 Accepted pull request form ooskapenaar. You can now use custom functions as operators.
1.0.5 Accepted pull request from jaymedavis. You can now pass an array directly and leave "list" undefined.
1.0.4 Added the ability to group fields into arrays
1.0.3 Added the ability to clear and set field by passing an empty string in the map.
(The MIT License)
Copyright (c) 2014 Michael Bosworth
Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to any person obtaining a copy of this software and associated documentation files (the "Software"), to deal in the Software without restriction, including without limitation the rights to use, copy, modify, merge, publish, distribute, sublicense, and/or sell copies of the Software, and to permit persons to whom the Software is furnished to do so, subject to the following conditions:
The above copyright notice and this permission notice shall be included in all copies or substantial portions of the Software.
THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED "AS IS", WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO THE WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY, FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE AND NONINFRINGEMENT. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE AUTHORS OR COPYRIGHT HOLDERS BE LIABLE FOR ANY CLAIM, DAMAGES OR OTHER LIABILITY, WHETHER IN AN ACTION OF CONTRACT, TORT OR OTHERWISE, ARISING FROM, OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE SOFTWARE OR THE USE OR OTHER DEALINGS IN THE SOFTWARE.
FAQs
A node module for transforming and performing operations on JSON.
We found that node-json-transform 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
Research
The Socket Research Team breaks down a malicious wrapper package that uses obfuscation to harvest credentials and exfiltrate sensitive data.
Research
Security News
Attackers used a malicious npm package typosquatting a popular ESLint plugin to steal sensitive data, execute commands, and exploit developer systems.
Security News
The Ultralytics' PyPI Package was compromised four times in one weekend through GitHub Actions cache poisoning and failure to rotate previously compromised API tokens.