
Security News
Follow-up and Clarification on Recent Malicious Ruby Gems Campaign
A clarification on our recent research investigating 60 malicious Ruby gems.
You've seen Getopt::Long, OptionParser, Rake, Thor? What the world needs now is one more command-line parser. Arbitrarily deeply nested subcommands (lazily loaded), colors, manpage generation, usage syntax generation, option-parsing adapter interface.[^maybe]
You've seen Getopt::Long, OptionParser, Thor? What the world needs now is one more command-line parser. This serves as a backend command line parser that passes the option-parsing portion of it off to OptionParser, Trollop, or any other option-parser that has an adapter[^adapter]. But the parts it does do are really exciting: It features arbitrarily deeply nested subcommands, optionally colorized help screens with smart formatting, automatically generated usage syntaxes, manpage generation[^maybe2], lazy-loading of subcommands, and (get this:) you can turn your command line app into a web app. (is processing a form then displaying a record really that different from CLI that does the same?)[^maybe3]
These and more exciting features guarantee that what everyone's been saying will be true: that 2011 will indeed be the year for command-line interfaces.
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We found that optparse-lite 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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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.