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Malicious npm Package Targets Solana Developers and Hijacks Funds
A malicious npm package targets Solana developers, rerouting funds in 2% of transactions to a hardcoded address.
For a comprehensive list of examples, check out the API documentation.
To setup your project, follow these steps:
gem install buttercms-ruby
or by adding to your Gemfile
:gem 'buttercms-ruby'
require 'buttercms-ruby'
ButterCMS::api_token = "YourToken"
# Fetch content from test mode (eg. for your staging website)
# ButterCMS::test_mode = true
# Set read timeout (Default is 5.0)
# ButterCMS::read_timeout = 5.0
# Set open timeout (Default is 2.0)
# ButterCMS::open_timeout = 2.0
https://buttercms.com/docs/api/?ruby#pages
params = {page: 1, page_size: 10, locale: 'en', preview: 1, 'fields.headline': 'foo bar', levels: 2} # optional
pages = ButterCMS::Page.list('news', params)
page = ButterCMS::Page.get('news', 'hello-world', params)
pages = ButterCMS::Page.search('query', params)
https://buttercms.com/docs/api/?ruby#retrieve-a-collection
# list each instance of a given collection with meta data for fetching the next page.
params = { page: 1, page_size: 10, locale: 'en', preview: 1, 'fields.headline': 'foo bar', levels: 2 } # optional
ButterCMS::Content.list('collection1', params)
# list instances for multiple collections, this will not return meta data for pagination control.
ButterCMS::Content.fetch(['collection1', 'collection2'], params)
# Test mode can be used to setup a staging website for previewing Collections or for testing content during local development. To fetch content from test mode add the following configuration:
ButterCMS::test_mode = true
https://buttercms.com/docs/api/?ruby#blog-engine
posts = ButterCMS::Post.all({:page => 1, :page_size => 10})
puts posts.first.title
puts posts.meta.next_page
posts = ButterCMS::Post.search("my favorite post", {page: 1, page_size: 10})
puts posts.first.title
post = ButterCMS::Post.find("post-slug")
puts post.title
# Create a Post.
ButterCMS::write_api_token = "YourWriteToken"
ButterCMS::Post.create({
slug: 'blog-slug',
title: 'blog-title'
})
# Update a Post
ButterCMS::Post.update('blog-slug', {
title: 'blog-title-v2'
})
# Create a page
ButterCMS::Page.create({
slug: 'page-slug',
title: 'page-title',
status: 'published',
"page-type": 'page_type',
fields: {
meta_title: 'test meta title'
}
})
# update a Page
ButterCMS::Page.update('page-slug-2', {
status: 'published',
fields: {
meta_title: 'test meta title'
}
})
author = ButterCMS::Author.find("author-slug")
puts author.first_name
category = ButterCMS::Category.find("category-slug")
puts category.name
tags = ButterCMS::Tag.all
p tags
rss_feed = ButterCMS::Feed.find(:rss)
puts rss_feed.data
This client supports automatic fallback to a data store when API requests fail. When a data store is set, on every successful API request the response is written to the data store. When a subsequent API request fails, the client attempts to fallback to the value in the data store. Currently, Redis and YAML Store are supported.
# Use YAMLstore
ButterCMS::data_store = :yaml, "/File/Path/For/buttercms.store"
# Use Redis
ButterCMS::data_store = :redis, ENV['REDIS_URL']
# Use Redis over ssl store
ButterCMS.data_store = :redis_ssl, ENV["REDIS_URL"], { ca_file: "/path/to/ca.crt" }
# Set logger (optional)
ButterCMS::logger = MyLogger.new
View Ruby Blog engine and Full CMS for other examples of using ButterCMS with Ruby.
FAQs
Unknown package
We found that buttercms-ruby 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.
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