Bump astro from 4.14.6 to 4.15.1 #141
Pull Request #141 Alerts: Complete with warnings
Report | Status | Message |
---|---|---|
PR #141 Alerts | Found 15 project alerts |
Pull request alerts notify when new issues are detected between the diff of the pull request and it's target branch.
Details
🚨 Potential security issues detected. Learn more about Socket for GitHub ↗︎
To accept the risk, merge this PR and you will not be notified again.
Alert | Package | Note | Source | CI |
---|---|---|---|---|
Dynamic require | npm/tinyexec@0.3.0 |
| 🚫 | |
Dynamic require | npm/tinyexec@0.3.0 |
| 🚫 | |
Environment variable access | npm/tinyexec@0.3.0 |
| 🚫 | |
Environment variable access | npm/tinyexec@0.3.0 |
| 🚫 | |
Environment variable access | npm/tinyexec@0.3.0 |
| 🚫 | |
Environment variable access | npm/tinyexec@0.3.0 |
| 🚫 | |
Environment variable access | npm/tinyexec@0.3.0 |
| 🚫 | |
Shell access | npm/tinyexec@0.3.0 |
| 🚫 | |
Filesystem access | npm/magicast@0.3.5 |
| 🚫 |
Next steps
What is dynamic require?
Dynamic require can indicate the package is performing dangerous or unsafe dynamic code execution.
Packages should avoid dynamic imports when possible. Audit the use of dynamic require to ensure it is not executing malicious or vulnerable code.
What is environment variable access?
Package accesses environment variables, which may be a sign of credential stuffing or data theft.
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.
What is shell access?
This module accesses the system shell. Accessing the system shell increases the risk of executing arbitrary code.
Packages should avoid accessing the shell which can reduce portability, and make it easier for malicious shell access to be introduced.
What is filesystem access?
Accesses the file system, and could potentially read sensitive data.
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.
Take a deeper look at the dependency
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 [AT] socket [DOT] dev.
Remove the package
If you happen to install a dependency that Socket reports as Known Malware you should immediately remove it and select a different dependency. For other alert types, you may may wish to investigate alternative packages or consider if there are other ways to mitigate the specific risk posed by the dependency.
Mark a package as acceptable risk
To ignore an alert, reply with a comment starting with @SocketSecurity ignore
followed by a space separated list of ecosystem/package-name@version
specifiers. e.g. @SocketSecurity ignore npm/foo@1.0.0
or ignore all packages with @SocketSecurity ignore-all
@SocketSecurity ignore npm/tinyexec@0.3.0
@SocketSecurity ignore npm/magicast@0.3.5