Skip to content

[Snyk] Security upgrade @angular-devkit/build-angular from 19.2.20 to 20.0.0#85

Open
Dustin4444 wants to merge 1 commit intomainfrom
snyk-fix-afbc22db68c18ec1cd0bc2dd590c248a
Open

[Snyk] Security upgrade @angular-devkit/build-angular from 19.2.20 to 20.0.0#85
Dustin4444 wants to merge 1 commit intomainfrom
snyk-fix-afbc22db68c18ec1cd0bc2dd590c248a

Conversation

@Dustin4444
Copy link
Owner

snyk-top-banner

Snyk has created this PR to fix 1 vulnerabilities in the pnpm dependencies of this project.

Snyk changed the following file(s):

  • integrations/angular-cli-19/package.json
⚠️ Warning
Failed to update the pnpm-lock.yaml, please update manually before merging.

Vulnerabilities that will be fixed with an upgrade:

Issue Score
high severity Regular Expression Denial of Service (ReDoS)
SNYK-JS-AJV-15274295
  157  

Important

  • Check the changes in this PR to ensure they won't cause issues with your project.
  • Max score is 1000. Note that the real score may have changed since the PR was raised.
  • This PR was automatically created by Snyk using the credentials of a real user.

Note: You are seeing this because you or someone else with access to this repository has authorized Snyk to open fix PRs.

For more information:
🧐 View latest project report
📜 Customise PR templates
🛠 Adjust project settings
📚 Read about Snyk's upgrade logic


Learn how to fix vulnerabilities with free interactive lessons:

🦉 Regular Expression Denial of Service (ReDoS)

@vercel
Copy link

vercel bot commented Feb 15, 2026

The latest updates on your projects. Learn more about Vercel for GitHub.

Project Deployment Actions Updated (UTC)
v0-open-in-v0-0w Error Error Feb 15, 2026 7:05am

@gemini-code-assist
Copy link

Warning

You have reached your daily quota limit. Please wait up to 24 hours and I will start processing your requests again!

@coderabbitai
Copy link

coderabbitai bot commented Feb 15, 2026

Important

Review skipped

Ignore keyword(s) in the title.

Please check the settings in the CodeRabbit UI or the .coderabbit.yaml file in this repository. To trigger a single review, invoke the @coderabbitai review command.

You can disable this status message by setting the reviews.review_status to false in the CodeRabbit configuration file.

Use the checkbox below for a quick retry:

  • 🔍 Trigger review
✨ Finishing touches
🧪 Generate unit tests (beta)
  • Create PR with unit tests
  • Post copyable unit tests in a comment
  • Commit unit tests in branch snyk-fix-afbc22db68c18ec1cd0bc2dd590c248a

Thanks for using CodeRabbit! It's free for OSS, and your support helps us grow. If you like it, consider giving us a shout-out.

❤️ Share

Comment @coderabbitai help to get the list of available commands and usage tips.

@socket-security
Copy link

Warning

Review the following alerts detected in dependencies.

According to your organization's Security Policy, it is recommended to resolve "Warn" alerts. Learn more about Socket for GitHub.

Action Severity Alert  (click "▶" to expand/collapse)
Warn Medium
System shell access: npm commander in module child_process

Module: child_process

Location: Package overview

From: ?npm/commander@2.20.3

ℹ Read more on: This package | This alert | What is shell access?

Next steps: Take a moment to review the security alert above. Review the linked package source code to understand the potential risk. Ensure the package is not malicious before proceeding. If you're unsure how to proceed, reach out to your security team or ask the Socket team for help at support@socket.dev.

Suggestion: Packages should avoid accessing the shell which can reduce portability, and make it easier for malicious shell access to be introduced.

Mark the package as acceptable risk. To ignore this alert only in this pull request, reply with the comment @SocketSecurity ignore npm/commander@2.20.3. You can also ignore all packages with @SocketSecurity ignore-all. To ignore an alert for all future pull requests, use Socket's Dashboard to change the triage state of this alert.

Warn Medium
Dynamic code execution: npm depd

Eval Type: Function

Location: Package overview

From: ?npm/depd@2.0.0

ℹ Read more on: This package | This alert | What is dynamic code execution?

Next steps: Take a moment to review the security alert above. Review the linked package source code to understand the potential risk. Ensure the package is not malicious before proceeding. If you're unsure how to proceed, reach out to your security team or ask the Socket team for help at support@socket.dev.

Suggestion: Avoid packages that use dynamic code execution like eval(), since this could potentially execute any code.

Mark the package as acceptable risk. To ignore this alert only in this pull request, reply with the comment @SocketSecurity ignore npm/depd@2.0.0. You can also ignore all packages with @SocketSecurity ignore-all. To ignore an alert for all future pull requests, use Socket's Dashboard to change the triage state of this alert.

Warn Medium
Dynamic code execution: npm function-bind

Eval Type: Function

Location: Package overview

From: ?npm/function-bind@1.1.2

ℹ Read more on: This package | This alert | What is dynamic code execution?

Next steps: Take a moment to review the security alert above. Review the linked package source code to understand the potential risk. Ensure the package is not malicious before proceeding. If you're unsure how to proceed, reach out to your security team or ask the Socket team for help at support@socket.dev.

Suggestion: Avoid packages that use dynamic code execution like eval(), since this could potentially execute any code.

Mark the package as acceptable risk. To ignore this alert only in this pull request, reply with the comment @SocketSecurity ignore npm/function-bind@1.1.2. You can also ignore all packages with @SocketSecurity ignore-all. To ignore an alert for all future pull requests, use Socket's Dashboard to change the triage state of this alert.

Warn Medium
Dynamic code execution: npm lodash

Eval Type: Function

Location: Package overview

From: ?npm/lodash@4.17.23

ℹ Read more on: This package | This alert | What is dynamic code execution?

Next steps: Take a moment to review the security alert above. Review the linked package source code to understand the potential risk. Ensure the package is not malicious before proceeding. If you're unsure how to proceed, reach out to your security team or ask the Socket team for help at support@socket.dev.

Suggestion: Avoid packages that use dynamic code execution like eval(), since this could potentially execute any code.

Mark the package as acceptable risk. To ignore this alert only in this pull request, reply with the comment @SocketSecurity ignore npm/lodash@4.17.23. You can also ignore all packages with @SocketSecurity ignore-all. To ignore an alert for all future pull requests, use Socket's Dashboard to change the triage state of this alert.

Warn Medium
Potential typosquat (AI signal): npm parseurl as a typo of parseuri

Did you mean: parseurli

From: ?npm/parseurl@1.3.3

ℹ Read more on: This package | This alert | What is AI-detected potential typosquatting?

Next steps: Take a moment to review the security alert above. Review the linked package source code to understand the potential risk. Ensure the package is not malicious before proceeding. If you're unsure how to proceed, reach out to your security team or ask the Socket team for help at support@socket.dev.

Suggestion: Given the AI system's identification of this package as a potential typosquat, please verify that you did not intend to install a different package. Be cautious, as malicious packages often use names similar to popular ones.

Mark the package as acceptable risk. To ignore this alert only in this pull request, reply with the comment @SocketSecurity ignore npm/parseurl@1.3.3. You can also ignore all packages with @SocketSecurity ignore-all. To ignore an alert for all future pull requests, use Socket's Dashboard to change the triage state of this alert.

Warn Low
Embedded URLs or IPs: npm ansi-regex with https://github.com

URLs: https://github.com

Location: Package overview

From: ?npm/ansi-regex@5.0.1

ℹ Read more on: This package | This alert | What are URL strings?

Next steps: Take a moment to review the security alert above. Review the linked package source code to understand the potential risk. Ensure the package is not malicious before proceeding. If you're unsure how to proceed, reach out to your security team or ask the Socket team for help at support@socket.dev.

Suggestion: Review all remote URLs to ensure they are intentional, pointing to trusted sources, and not being used for data exfiltration or loading untrusted code at runtime.

Mark the package as acceptable risk. To ignore this alert only in this pull request, reply with the comment @SocketSecurity ignore npm/ansi-regex@5.0.1. You can also ignore all packages with @SocketSecurity ignore-all. To ignore an alert for all future pull requests, use Socket's Dashboard to change the triage state of this alert.

Warn Low
Potential code anomaly (AI signal): npm commander is 100.0% likely to have a medium risk anomaly

Notes: The code is a conventional CLI launcher used to delegate to subcommands located near the main executable. It is not inherently malicious, but it introduces a local execution risk: if subcommand resolution is manipulated (habitual in dev or misconfigured environments), arbitrary code could run. To mitigate, enforce canonical subcommand resolution, restrict to a known whitelist, validate resolved paths, and consider isolating subcommand execution or validating subcommand binaries before execution.

Confidence: 1.00

Severity: 0.60

From: ?npm/commander@2.20.3

ℹ Read more on: This package | This alert | What is an AI-detected potential code anomaly?

Next steps: Take a moment to review the security alert above. Review the linked package source code to understand the potential risk. Ensure the package is not malicious before proceeding. If you're unsure how to proceed, reach out to your security team or ask the Socket team for help at support@socket.dev.

Suggestion: An AI system found a low-risk anomaly in this package. It may still be fine to use, but you should check that it is safe before proceeding.

Mark the package as acceptable risk. To ignore this alert only in this pull request, reply with the comment @SocketSecurity ignore npm/commander@2.20.3. You can also ignore all packages with @SocketSecurity ignore-all. To ignore an alert for all future pull requests, use Socket's Dashboard to change the triage state of this alert.

Warn Low
Filesystem access: npm commander with module fs

Module: fs

Location: Package overview

From: ?npm/commander@2.20.3

ℹ Read more on: This package | This alert | What is filesystem access?

Next steps: Take a moment to review the security alert above. Review the linked package source code to understand the potential risk. Ensure the package is not malicious before proceeding. If you're unsure how to proceed, reach out to your security team or ask the Socket team for help at support@socket.dev.

Suggestion: If a package must read the file system, clarify what it will read and ensure it reads only what it claims to. If appropriate, packages can leave file system access to consumers and operate on data passed to it instead.

Mark the package as acceptable risk. To ignore this alert only in this pull request, reply with the comment @SocketSecurity ignore npm/commander@2.20.3. You can also ignore all packages with @SocketSecurity ignore-all. To ignore an alert for all future pull requests, use Socket's Dashboard to change the triage state of this alert.

Warn Low
Environment variable access: npm depd reads NO_DEPRECATION

Env Vars: NO_DEPRECATION

Location: Package overview

From: ?npm/depd@2.0.0

ℹ Read more on: This package | This alert | What is environment variable access?

Next steps: Take a moment to review the security alert above. Review the linked package source code to understand the potential risk. Ensure the package is not malicious before proceeding. If you're unsure how to proceed, reach out to your security team or ask the Socket team for help at support@socket.dev.

Suggestion: Packages should be clear about which environment variables they access, and care should be taken to ensure they only access environment variables they claim to.

Mark the package as acceptable risk. To ignore this alert only in this pull request, reply with the comment @SocketSecurity ignore npm/depd@2.0.0. You can also ignore all packages with @SocketSecurity ignore-all. To ignore an alert for all future pull requests, use Socket's Dashboard to change the triage state of this alert.

Warn Low
Environment variable access: npm depd reads TRACE_DEPRECATION

Env Vars: TRACE_DEPRECATION

Location: Package overview

From: ?npm/depd@2.0.0

ℹ Read more on: This package | This alert | What is environment variable access?

Next steps: Take a moment to review the security alert above. Review the linked package source code to understand the potential risk. Ensure the package is not malicious before proceeding. If you're unsure how to proceed, reach out to your security team or ask the Socket team for help at support@socket.dev.

Suggestion: Packages should be clear about which environment variables they access, and care should be taken to ensure they only access environment variables they claim to.

Mark the package as acceptable risk. To ignore this alert only in this pull request, reply with the comment @SocketSecurity ignore npm/depd@2.0.0. You can also ignore all packages with @SocketSecurity ignore-all. To ignore an alert for all future pull requests, use Socket's Dashboard to change the triage state of this alert.

Warn Low
Publisher changed: npm encodeurl is now published by blakeembrey instead of dougwilson

New Author: blakeembrey

Previous Author: dougwilson

From: ?npm/encodeurl@2.0.0

ℹ Read more on: This package | This alert | What is new author?

Next steps: Take a moment to review the security alert above. Review the linked package source code to understand the potential risk. Ensure the package is not malicious before proceeding. If you're unsure how to proceed, reach out to your security team or ask the Socket team for help at support@socket.dev.

Suggestion: Scrutinize new collaborator additions to packages because they now have the ability to publish code into your dependency tree. Packages should avoid frequent or unnecessary additions or changes to publishing rights.

Mark the package as acceptable risk. To ignore this alert only in this pull request, reply with the comment @SocketSecurity ignore npm/encodeurl@2.0.0. You can also ignore all packages with @SocketSecurity ignore-all. To ignore an alert for all future pull requests, use Socket's Dashboard to change the triage state of this alert.

Warn Low
Potential code anomaly (AI signal): npm function-bind is 100.0% likely to have a medium risk anomaly

Notes: The code is a standard Function.prototype.bind polyfill implementation. It carefully handles this binding, constructor behavior, and argument binding without introducing observable malicious behavior. The dynamic Function constructor is used as part of a legitimate polyfill technique and does not indicate an attack by itself in this context.

Confidence: 1.00

Severity: 0.60

From: ?npm/function-bind@1.1.2

ℹ Read more on: This package | This alert | What is an AI-detected potential code anomaly?

Next steps: Take a moment to review the security alert above. Review the linked package source code to understand the potential risk. Ensure the package is not malicious before proceeding. If you're unsure how to proceed, reach out to your security team or ask the Socket team for help at support@socket.dev.

Suggestion: An AI system found a low-risk anomaly in this package. It may still be fine to use, but you should check that it is safe before proceeding.

Mark the package as acceptable risk. To ignore this alert only in this pull request, reply with the comment @SocketSecurity ignore npm/function-bind@1.1.2. You can also ignore all packages with @SocketSecurity ignore-all. To ignore an alert for all future pull requests, use Socket's Dashboard to change the triage state of this alert.

Warn Low
Embedded URLs or IPs: npm isexe

URLs: meow.cat, mine.cat, ours.cat

Location: Package overview

From: ?npm/isexe@2.0.0

ℹ Read more on: This package | This alert | What are URL strings?

Next steps: Take a moment to review the security alert above. Review the linked package source code to understand the potential risk. Ensure the package is not malicious before proceeding. If you're unsure how to proceed, reach out to your security team or ask the Socket team for help at support@socket.dev.

Suggestion: Review all remote URLs to ensure they are intentional, pointing to trusted sources, and not being used for data exfiltration or loading untrusted code at runtime.

Mark the package as acceptable risk. To ignore this alert only in this pull request, reply with the comment @SocketSecurity ignore npm/isexe@2.0.0. You can also ignore all packages with @SocketSecurity ignore-all. To ignore an alert for all future pull requests, use Socket's Dashboard to change the triage state of this alert.

Warn Low
Potential code anomaly (AI signal): npm isexe is 100.0% likely to have a medium risk anomaly

Notes: The code appears to be a legitimate cross-platform helper to check executability, with optional Promise support and special handling for EACCES permission errors. The masking of EACCES via ignoreErrors or by catching and suppressing errors should be documented for security-conscious users, but no malware or data leakage is evident within this fragment. Recommend clarifying ignoreErrors semantics and documenting behavior to reduce surprise in secure environments.

Confidence: 1.00

Severity: 0.60

From: ?npm/isexe@2.0.0

ℹ Read more on: This package | This alert | What is an AI-detected potential code anomaly?

Next steps: Take a moment to review the security alert above. Review the linked package source code to understand the potential risk. Ensure the package is not malicious before proceeding. If you're unsure how to proceed, reach out to your security team or ask the Socket team for help at support@socket.dev.

Suggestion: An AI system found a low-risk anomaly in this package. It may still be fine to use, but you should check that it is safe before proceeding.

Mark the package as acceptable risk. To ignore this alert only in this pull request, reply with the comment @SocketSecurity ignore npm/isexe@2.0.0. You can also ignore all packages with @SocketSecurity ignore-all. To ignore an alert for all future pull requests, use Socket's Dashboard to change the triage state of this alert.

Warn Low
Filesystem access: npm isexe with module fs

Module: fs

Location: Package overview

From: ?npm/isexe@2.0.0

ℹ Read more on: This package | This alert | What is filesystem access?

Next steps: Take a moment to review the security alert above. Review the linked package source code to understand the potential risk. Ensure the package is not malicious before proceeding. If you're unsure how to proceed, reach out to your security team or ask the Socket team for help at support@socket.dev.

Suggestion: If a package must read the file system, clarify what it will read and ensure it reads only what it claims to. If appropriate, packages can leave file system access to consumers and operate on data passed to it instead.

Mark the package as acceptable risk. To ignore this alert only in this pull request, reply with the comment @SocketSecurity ignore npm/isexe@2.0.0. You can also ignore all packages with @SocketSecurity ignore-all. To ignore an alert for all future pull requests, use Socket's Dashboard to change the triage state of this alert.

Warn Low
Environment variable access: npm isexe reads PATHEXT

Env Vars: PATHEXT

Location: Package overview

From: ?npm/isexe@2.0.0

ℹ Read more on: This package | This alert | What is environment variable access?

Next steps: Take a moment to review the security alert above. Review the linked package source code to understand the potential risk. Ensure the package is not malicious before proceeding. If you're unsure how to proceed, reach out to your security team or ask the Socket team for help at support@socket.dev.

Suggestion: Packages should be clear about which environment variables they access, and care should be taken to ensure they only access environment variables they claim to.

Mark the package as acceptable risk. To ignore this alert only in this pull request, reply with the comment @SocketSecurity ignore npm/isexe@2.0.0. You can also ignore all packages with @SocketSecurity ignore-all. To ignore an alert for all future pull requests, use Socket's Dashboard to change the triage state of this alert.

Warn Low
Embedded URLs or IPs: npm lodash

URLs: https://travis-ci.org/lodash-archive/lodash-cli

Location: Package overview

From: ?npm/lodash@4.17.23

ℹ Read more on: This package | This alert | What are URL strings?

Next steps: Take a moment to review the security alert above. Review the linked package source code to understand the potential risk. Ensure the package is not malicious before proceeding. If you're unsure how to proceed, reach out to your security team or ask the Socket team for help at support@socket.dev.

Suggestion: Review all remote URLs to ensure they are intentional, pointing to trusted sources, and not being used for data exfiltration or loading untrusted code at runtime.

Mark the package as acceptable risk. To ignore this alert only in this pull request, reply with the comment @SocketSecurity ignore npm/lodash@4.17.23. You can also ignore all packages with @SocketSecurity ignore-all. To ignore an alert for all future pull requests, use Socket's Dashboard to change the triage state of this alert.

Warn Low
Embedded URLs or IPs: npm lodash

URLs: _.map, _.at, _.gt, _.lt, _.property, _.rest, https://bugs.webkit.org/show_bug.cgi?id=156034, http://ecma-international.org/ecma-262/7.0/#sec-samevaluezero, http://ecma-international.org/ecma-262/7.0/#sec-ecmascript-function-objects-call-thisargument-argumentslist, https://mdn.io/Array/slice, https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Empty_set, https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vacuous_truth, https://mdn.io/Structured_clone_algorithm, https://mdn.io/Number/isFinite, http://ecma-international.org/ecma-262/7.0/#sec-tolength, http://www.ecma-international.org/ecma-262/7.0/#sec-ecmascript-language-types, https://mths.be/he, https://mathiasbynens.be/notes/ambiguous-ampersands, http://wonko.com/post/html-escaping, http://requirejs.org/docs/errors.html#mismatch, https://lodash.com/, https://css-tricks.com/debouncing-throttling-explained-examples/, https://npms.io/search?q=ponyfill., http://www.html5rocks.com/en/tutorials/developertools/sourcemaps/#toc-sourceurl, https://developer.chrome.com/extensions/sandboxingEval, https://github.com/olado/doT, http://ecma-international.org/ecma-262/7.0/#sec-patterns, http://ecma-international.org/ecma-262/7.0/#sec-template-literal-lexical-components, https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Combining_Diacritical_Marks, https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Combining_Diacritical_Marks_for_Symbols, https://mathiasbynens.be/notes/javascript-unicode, http://eev.ee/blog/2015/09/12/dark-corners-of-unicode/, http://ecma-international.org/ecma-262/7.0/#sec-object.prototype.tostring, https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Exponentiation_by_squaring, https://mdn.io/clearTimeout, https://github.com/jashkenas/underscore/pull/1247, https://bugs.chromium.org/p/v8/issues/detail?id=90, https://es5.github.io/#x13.2.2, https://mdn.io/round#Examples, http://www.ecma-international.org/ecma-262/7.0/#sec-regexp.prototype.tostring, http://ecma-international.org/ecma-262/7.0/#sec-object.keys, https://bugs.chromium.org/p/v8/issues/detail?id=2070, https://mdn.io/setTimeout, https://mdn.io/Array/reverse, https://mdn.io/iteration_protocols#iterator, https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fisher-Yates_shuffle, http://peter.michaux.ca/articles/lazy-function-definition-pattern, http://ecma-international.org/ecma-262/7.0/#sec-properties-of-the-map-prototype-object, https://mdn.io/rest_parameters, http://www.ecma-international.org/ecma-262/7.0/#sec-function.prototype.apply, https://mdn.io/spread_operator, https://mdn.io/Number/isInteger, https://mdn.io/Number/isNaN, https://mdn.io/isNaN, https://www.npmjs.com/package/babel-polyfill, https://mdn.io/Number/isSafeInteger, http://www.ecma-international.org/ecma-262/7.0/#sec-tointeger, https://mdn.io/Object/assign, https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Letter_case#Special_case_styles, https://es5.github.io/#x15.1.2.2, https://mdn.io/String/replace, https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Snake_case, https://mdn.io/String/split, https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Letter_case#Stylistic_or_specialised_usage, https://lodash.com/custom-builds, https://mdn.io/toLowerCase, https://mdn.io/toUpperCase

Location: Package overview

From: ?npm/lodash@4.17.23

ℹ Read more on: This package | This alert | What are URL strings?

Next steps: Take a moment to review the security alert above. Review the linked package source code to understand the potential risk. Ensure the package is not malicious before proceeding. If you're unsure how to proceed, reach out to your security team or ask the Socket team for help at support@socket.dev.

Suggestion: Review all remote URLs to ensure they are intentional, pointing to trusted sources, and not being used for data exfiltration or loading untrusted code at runtime.

Mark the package as acceptable risk. To ignore this alert only in this pull request, reply with the comment @SocketSecurity ignore npm/lodash@4.17.23. You can also ignore all packages with @SocketSecurity ignore-all. To ignore an alert for all future pull requests, use Socket's Dashboard to change the triage state of this alert.

Warn Low
Potential code anomaly (AI signal): npm lodash is 100.0% likely to have a medium risk anomaly

Notes: This is a legitimate template compiler implementation that uses dynamic code generation (Function constructor) and optional 'with' scope. It is not malicious by intent in the provided fragment, but it exposes typical high-risk behaviors: arbitrary code execution via evaluate delimiters, potential XSS from unescaped interpolation, and broader attack surface if untrusted templates or imports are used. Use only with trusted templates or ensure strict delimiter/escaping policies. No evidence of backdoor, exfiltration, or obfuscated malicious payloads found in the provided code.

Confidence: 1.00

Severity: 0.60

From: ?npm/lodash@4.17.23

ℹ Read more on: This package | This alert | What is an AI-detected potential code anomaly?

Next steps: Take a moment to review the security alert above. Review the linked package source code to understand the potential risk. Ensure the package is not malicious before proceeding. If you're unsure how to proceed, reach out to your security team or ask the Socket team for help at support@socket.dev.

Suggestion: An AI system found a low-risk anomaly in this package. It may still be fine to use, but you should check that it is safe before proceeding.

Mark the package as acceptable risk. To ignore this alert only in this pull request, reply with the comment @SocketSecurity ignore npm/lodash@4.17.23. You can also ignore all packages with @SocketSecurity ignore-all. To ignore an alert for all future pull requests, use Socket's Dashboard to change the triage state of this alert.

Warn Low
Publisher changed: npm merge-stream is now published by stevemao instead of shinnn

New Author: stevemao

Previous Author: shinnn

From: ?npm/merge-stream@2.0.0

ℹ Read more on: This package | This alert | What is new author?

Next steps: Take a moment to review the security alert above. Review the linked package source code to understand the potential risk. Ensure the package is not malicious before proceeding. If you're unsure how to proceed, reach out to your security team or ask the Socket team for help at support@socket.dev.

Suggestion: Scrutinize new collaborator additions to packages because they now have the ability to publish code into your dependency tree. Packages should avoid frequent or unnecessary additions or changes to publishing rights.

Mark the package as acceptable risk. To ignore this alert only in this pull request, reply with the comment @SocketSecurity ignore npm/merge-stream@2.0.0. You can also ignore all packages with @SocketSecurity ignore-all. To ignore an alert for all future pull requests, use Socket's Dashboard to change the triage state of this alert.

Warn Low
Filesystem access: npm require-directory with module fs

Module: fs

Location: Package overview

From: ?npm/require-directory@2.1.1

ℹ Read more on: This package | This alert | What is filesystem access?

Next steps: Take a moment to review the security alert above. Review the linked package source code to understand the potential risk. Ensure the package is not malicious before proceeding. If you're unsure how to proceed, reach out to your security team or ask the Socket team for help at support@socket.dev.

Suggestion: If a package must read the file system, clarify what it will read and ensure it reads only what it claims to. If appropriate, packages can leave file system access to consumers and operate on data passed to it instead.

Mark the package as acceptable risk. To ignore this alert only in this pull request, reply with the comment @SocketSecurity ignore npm/require-directory@2.1.1. You can also ignore all packages with @SocketSecurity ignore-all. To ignore an alert for all future pull requests, use Socket's Dashboard to change the triage state of this alert.

Warn Low
Embedded URLs or IPs: npm semver

URLs: 1.2.3.4, https://semver.org/, SemVer.compare

Location: Package overview

From: ?npm/semver@7.7.4

ℹ Read more on: This package | This alert | What are URL strings?

Next steps: Take a moment to review the security alert above. Review the linked package source code to understand the potential risk. Ensure the package is not malicious before proceeding. If you're unsure how to proceed, reach out to your security team or ask the Socket team for help at support@socket.dev.

Suggestion: Review all remote URLs to ensure they are intentional, pointing to trusted sources, and not being used for data exfiltration or loading untrusted code at runtime.

Mark the package as acceptable risk. To ignore this alert only in this pull request, reply with the comment @SocketSecurity ignore npm/semver@7.7.4. You can also ignore all packages with @SocketSecurity ignore-all. To ignore an alert for all future pull requests, use Socket's Dashboard to change the triage state of this alert.

Warn Low
Filesystem access: npm y18n with module fs

Module: fs

Location: Package overview

From: ?npm/y18n@5.0.8

ℹ Read more on: This package | This alert | What is filesystem access?

Next steps: Take a moment to review the security alert above. Review the linked package source code to understand the potential risk. Ensure the package is not malicious before proceeding. If you're unsure how to proceed, reach out to your security team or ask the Socket team for help at support@socket.dev.

Suggestion: If a package must read the file system, clarify what it will read and ensure it reads only what it claims to. If appropriate, packages can leave file system access to consumers and operate on data passed to it instead.

Mark the package as acceptable risk. To ignore this alert only in this pull request, reply with the comment @SocketSecurity ignore npm/y18n@5.0.8. You can also ignore all packages with @SocketSecurity ignore-all. To ignore an alert for all future pull requests, use Socket's Dashboard to change the triage state of this alert.

Warn Low
Embedded URLs or IPs: npm yargs-parser

URLs: http://127.0.0.1:8080/package.json

Location: Package overview

From: ?npm/yargs-parser@21.1.1

ℹ Read more on: This package | This alert | What are URL strings?

Next steps: Take a moment to review the security alert above. Review the linked package source code to understand the potential risk. Ensure the package is not malicious before proceeding. If you're unsure how to proceed, reach out to your security team or ask the Socket team for help at support@socket.dev.

Suggestion: Review all remote URLs to ensure they are intentional, pointing to trusted sources, and not being used for data exfiltration or loading untrusted code at runtime.

Mark the package as acceptable risk. To ignore this alert only in this pull request, reply with the comment @SocketSecurity ignore npm/yargs-parser@21.1.1. You can also ignore all packages with @SocketSecurity ignore-all. To ignore an alert for all future pull requests, use Socket's Dashboard to change the triage state of this alert.

Warn Low
Filesystem access: npm yargs-parser with module fs

Module: fs

Location: Package overview

From: ?npm/yargs-parser@21.1.1

ℹ Read more on: This package | This alert | What is filesystem access?

Next steps: Take a moment to review the security alert above. Review the linked package source code to understand the potential risk. Ensure the package is not malicious before proceeding. If you're unsure how to proceed, reach out to your security team or ask the Socket team for help at support@socket.dev.

Suggestion: If a package must read the file system, clarify what it will read and ensure it reads only what it claims to. If appropriate, packages can leave file system access to consumers and operate on data passed to it instead.

Mark the package as acceptable risk. To ignore this alert only in this pull request, reply with the comment @SocketSecurity ignore npm/yargs-parser@21.1.1. You can also ignore all packages with @SocketSecurity ignore-all. To ignore an alert for all future pull requests, use Socket's Dashboard to change the triage state of this alert.

Warn Low
Environment variable access: npm yargs-parser

Location: Package overview

From: ?npm/yargs-parser@21.1.1

ℹ Read more on: This package | This alert | What is environment variable access?

Next steps: Take a moment to review the security alert above. Review the linked package source code to understand the potential risk. Ensure the package is not malicious before proceeding. If you're unsure how to proceed, reach out to your security team or ask the Socket team for help at support@socket.dev.

Suggestion: Packages should be clear about which environment variables they access, and care should be taken to ensure they only access environment variables they claim to.

Mark the package as acceptable risk. To ignore this alert only in this pull request, reply with the comment @SocketSecurity ignore npm/yargs-parser@21.1.1. You can also ignore all packages with @SocketSecurity ignore-all. To ignore an alert for all future pull requests, use Socket's Dashboard to change the triage state of this alert.

See 2 more rows in the dashboard

View full report

Sign up for free to join this conversation on GitHub. Already have an account? Sign in to comment

Labels

None yet

Projects

None yet

Development

Successfully merging this pull request may close these issues.

2 participants