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Malicious npm Packages Inject SSH Backdoors via Typosquatted Libraries
Socket’s threat research team has detected six malicious npm packages typosquatting popular libraries to insert SSH backdoors.
Nap is an extremely simple REST client for Ruby. It was built to quickly fire off HTTP requests without having to research net/http internals.
gem 'nap'
require 'rest'
require 'json'
response = REST.get('http://twitter.com/statuses/friends_timeline.json', {},
{:username => '_evan', :password => 'buttonscat'}
)
if response.ok?
timeline = JSON.parse(response.body)
puts(timeline.map do |item|
"#{item['user']['name']}\n\n#{item['text']}"
end.join("\n\n--\n\n"))
elsif response.forbidden?
puts "Are you sure you're `_evan' and your password is the name of your cat?"
else
puts "Something went wrong (#{response.status_code})"
puts response.body
end
If you need more control over the Net::HTTP request you can pass a block to all of the request methods.
response = REST.get('http://google.com') do |http_request|
http_request.open_timeout = 15
http_request.set_debug_output(STDERR)
end
To enable the proxy settings in Nap, you can either use the HTTP_PROXY or http_proxy enviroment variable.
$ env HTTP_PROXY=http://rob:secret@192.167.1.254:665 ruby app.rb
Nap defines one top-level and three main error types which allow you to catch a whole range of exceptions thrown by underlying protocol implementations.
In the most basic case you can rescue from the top-level type to warn about fetching problems.
begin
REST.get('http://example.com/pigeons/12')
rescue REST::Error
puts "[!] Failed to fetch Pigeon number 12."
end
Nap couldn't be the shining beacon in the eternal darkness without help from:
For all other great human beings, please visit the GitHub contributors page.
FAQs
Unknown package
We found that nap 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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