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.
Annotation based documentation for your Ansible roles
This project is based on the idea (and at some parts on the code) of ansible-autodoc by Andres Bott so credits goes to him for his work.
ansible-doctor is a simple annotation like documentation generator based on Jinja2 templates. While ansible-doctor comes with a default template called readme
, it is also possible to write custom templates to customize the output or render the data to other formats like HTML or XML as well.
ansible-doctor is designed to work within a CI pipeline to complete the existing testing and deployment workflow. Releases are available as Python Packages on GitHub or PyPI and as Docker Image on Docker Hub.
The full documentation is available at https://ansible-doctor.geekdocs.de.
Special thanks to all contributors. If you would like to contribute, please see the instructions.
This project is licensed under the GPL-3.0 License - see the LICENSE file for details.
FAQs
Generate documentation from annotated Ansible roles using templates.
We found that ansible-doctor 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.
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.