
Security News
Follow-up and Clarification on Recent Malicious Ruby Gems Campaign
A clarification on our recent research investigating 60 malicious Ruby gems.
Wrap all application processes by eye monitoring tool.
Add this line to your Gemfile:
gem 'capistrano-eye'
And then run:
$ bundle
Add this line to your Capfile
and deploy:restart
will be setup to automatically run after :publishing
is complete:
require 'capistrano/eye'
The following tasks are available: eye:load
, eye:start
, eye:stop
, eye:quit
, eye:restart
, eye:info
If you want the task to run at a different point in your deployment, require capistrano/eye/no_hook
instead of capistrano/eye
and then add your own hook in config/deploy.rb
.
# Capfile
require 'capistrano/eye/no_hook'
# config/deploy.rb
after :some_other_task, :'eye:restart'
set :eye_roles, :app # the role of the server where the eye should be started
set :eye_env, -> { { rails_env: fetch(:stage) } } # capistrano environment
set :eye_application, -> { fetch(:application) } # capistrano application name by default
set :eye_config, -> { "./config/#{fetch(:application)}.eye" } # ./config/eye_application.eye
set :eye_work_dir, -> { release_path } # working directory path for eye
git checkout -b my-new-feature
)git commit -am 'Add some feature'
)git push origin my-new-feature
)FAQs
Unknown package
We found that capistrano-eye 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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