
Security News
Follow-up and Clarification on Recent Malicious Ruby Gems Campaign
A clarification on our recent research investigating 60 malicious Ruby gems.
=
_ _
( )_ ( )
)
(_ (_ . ) )
_
( )
_ . ( ` ) . )
( _ ) (, ( ,))
( ( ,)
_ _ ___ _ _ ___ _
( ` )_ / __| |___ _ _ __| |/ __|_ _ _____ __ ____| |
( ) `) | (__| / _ \ || / _` | (__| '_/ _ \ V V / _` |
(_ (_ . _) _) \___|_\___/\_,_\__,_|\___|_| \___/\_/\_/\__,_|
_
( )
_, _ . ( ` ) . )
( ( _ )_ (_, _( ,_)_)
(_(_ _(_ ,)
~ CloudCrowd ~
* Parallel processing for the rest of us
* Write your scripts in Ruby
* Works with Amazon EC2 and S3
* split -> process -> merge
* As easy as `gem install cloud-crowd`
Well-suited for:
* Generating or resizing images.
* Encoding video.
* Running text extraction or OCR on PDFs.
* Migrating a large file set or database.
* Web scraping.
~ Documentation ~
Wiki: http://wiki.github.com/documentcloud/cloud-crowd
Rdoc: http://rdoc.info/projects/documentcloud/cloud-crowd
~ Getting started ~
# Install the gem.
>> sudo gem install cloud-crowd
# Install the CloudCrowd configuration files to a location of your choosing.
>> crowd install ~/config/cloud-crowd
# Now, you can use the full complement of `crowd` commands from inside of
# this configuration directory. To see the available commands:
>> crowd --help
# Edit the configuration files to your satisfaction, add AWS credentials,
# and then load the CloudCrowd schema into your configured database.
>> cd ~/config/cloud-crowd
>> mate config.yml
>> mate database.yml
>> [create the database you just configured...]
>> crowd load_schema
# Write your actions, and install them into the 'actions' subdirectory.
# CloudCrowd comes with a few default actions as an example.
# To launch the central server (make sure that you include its location
# in config.yml):
>> crowd server
# The configuration folder also includes 'config.ru', which can be used by
# any Rack-compliant webserver to run your central server.
# Then, to launch a node of workers:
>> crowd node
# To spin up remote nodes, install the 'cloud-crowd' gem and copy over
# your configuration directory. Run `crowd node`, and the remote machines
# will register with the central server, becoming available for processing.
# At this point you can visit your Operations Center at localhost:9173 to
# view all of your nodes, ready for action.
FAQs
Unknown package
We found that cloud-crowd demonstrated a not healthy version release cadence and project activity because the last version was released a year ago. It has 3 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
A clarification on our recent research investigating 60 malicious Ruby gems.
Security News
ESLint now supports parallel linting with a new --concurrency flag, delivering major speed gains and closing a 10-year-old feature request.
Research
/Security News
A malicious Go module posing as an SSH brute forcer exfiltrates stolen credentials to a Telegram bot controlled by a Russian-speaking threat actor.