
Research
NPM targeted by malware campaign mimicking familiar library names
Socket uncovered npm malware campaign mimicking popular Node.js libraries and packages from other ecosystems; packages steal data and execute remote code.
oxc-resolver
Advanced tools
See
index.d.ts
for resolveSync
and ResolverFactory
API.resolve(directory, specifier)
- resolve specifier
at an absolute path to a directory
.
directory
An absolute path to a directory where the specifier is resolved against.
For CommonJS modules, it is the __dirname
variable that contains the absolute path to the folder containing current module.
For ECMAScript modules, it is the value of import.meta.url
.
Behavior is undefined when given a path to a file.
specifier
The string passed to require
or import
, i.e. require("specifier")
or import "specifier"
import assert from 'assert';
import path from 'path';
import resolve, { ResolverFactory } from './index.js';
// `resolve`
assert(resolve.sync(process.cwd(), './index.js').path, path.join(cwd, 'index.js'));
// `ResolverFactory`
const resolver = new ResolverFactory();
assert(resolver.sync(process.cwd(), './index.js').path, path.join(cwd, 'index.js'));
FAQs
Oxc Resolver Node API
The npm package oxc-resolver receives a total of 504,103 weekly downloads. As such, oxc-resolver popularity was classified as popular.
We found that oxc-resolver demonstrated a healthy version release cadence and project activity because the last version was released less than a year ago. It has 1 open source maintainer collaborating on the project.
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