unplugin / unplugin-icons

🤹 Access thousands of icons as components on-demand universally.
https://www.npmjs.com/package/unplugin-icons
MIT License
3.65k stars 131 forks source link

feat: add `strict` option for resolver #327

Closed genffy closed 2 months ago

genffy commented 7 months ago

Description

Fix for #326 ,more details see issuecomment-1812853123

Linked Issues

https://github.com/unplugin/unplugin-icons/issues/326

Additional context

stackblitz[bot] commented 7 months ago

Review PR in StackBlitz Codeflow Run & review this pull request in StackBlitz Codeflow.

genffy commented 7 months ago

emmm, the most of changes were effect by those commands

pnpm run lint-fix
pnpm run test # not pass
vitest -u # update snapshot for pass test
pnpm run typecheck
socket-security[bot] commented 6 months ago

New and removed dependencies detected. Learn more about Socket for GitHub ↗︎

Package New capabilities Transitives Size Publisher

🚮 Removed packages: npm/typescript@5.4.5

View full report↗︎

socket-security[bot] commented 2 months ago

🚨 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 NoteSource
Install scripts npm/@sveltejs/kit@2.5.7
  • Install script: postinstall
  • Source: node postinstall.js
  • orphan: npm/@sveltejs/kit@2.5.7

View full report↗︎

Next steps

What is an install script?

Install scripts are run when the package is installed. The majority of malware in npm is hidden in install scripts.

Packages should not be running non-essential scripts during install and there are often solutions to problems people solve with install scripts that can be run at publish time 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/@sveltejs/kit@2.5.7