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.
Rome is a formatter, linter, bundler, and more for JavaScript, TypeScript, JSON, HTML, Markdown, and CSS.
Rome is designed to replace Babel, ESLint, webpack, Prettier, Jest, and others.
Rome unifies functionality that has previously been separate tools. Building upon a shared base allows us to provide a cohesive experience for processing code, displaying errors, parallelizing work, caching, and configuration.
Rome has strong conventions and aims to have minimal configuration. Read more about our project philosophy.
Rome is written in Rust.
Rome has first-class IDE support, with a sophisticated parser that represents the source text in full fidelity and top-notch error recovery.
Rome is MIT licensed and moderated under the Contributor Covenant Code of Conduct.
Check out our homepage to learn more about Rome, or directly head to the Getting Started guide if you want to start using Rome.
Browse Rome's internal Rust API Documentation if you're interested to learn more about how Rome works.
12.1.3
rome lsp-proxy
should accept the global CLI options #4505nursery
were enabled when the "nursery": {}
object
was defined #4479useHookAtTopLevel
caused to returning call expressions of a hook.FAQs
Rome is a toolchain for the web: formatter, linter and more
The npm package rome receives a total of 10,687 weekly downloads. As such, rome popularity was classified as popular.
We found that rome demonstrated a not healthy version release cadence and project activity because the last version was released a year ago. It has 2 open source maintainers 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.