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Axios compromised on NPM – Malicious versions drop remote access trojan

stepsecurity.io

1934 points by mtud 23 days ago · 893 comments

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bob1029 23 days ago

"Batteries included" ecosystems are the only persistent solution to the package manager problem.

If your first party tooling contains all the functionality you typically need, it's possible you can be productive with zero 3rd party dependencies. In practice you will tend to have a few, but you won't be vendoring out critical things like HTTP, TCP, JSON, string sanitation, cryptography. These are beacons for attackers. Everything depends on this stuff so the motivation for attacking these common surfaces is high.

I can literally count on one hand the number of 3rd party dependencies I've used in the last year. Dapper is the only regular thing I can come up with. Sometimes ScottPlot. Both of my SQL providers (MSSQL and SQLite) are first party as well. This is a major reason why they're the only sql providers I use.

Maybe I am just so traumatized from compliance and auditing in regulated software business, but this feels like a happier way to build software too. My tools tend to stay right where I left them the previous day. I don't have to worry about my hammer or screw drivers stealing all my bitcoin in the middle of the night.

  • rhdunn 23 days ago

    There are several issues with "Batteries Included" ecosystems (like Python, C#/.NET, and Java):

    1. They are not going to include everything. This includes things like new file formats.

    2. They are going to be out of date whenever a standard changes (HTML, etc.), application changes (e.g. SQLite/PostgreSQL/etc. for SQL/ORM bindings), or API changes (DirectX, Vulcan, etc.).

    3. Things like data structures, graphics APIs, etc. will have performance characteristics that may be different to your use case.

    4. They can't cover all nice use cases such as the different libraries and frameworks for creating games of different genres.

    For example, Python's XML DOM implementation only implements a subset of XPath and doesn't support parsing HTML.

    The fact that Python, Java, and .NET have large library ecosystems proves that even if you have a "Batteries Included" approach there will always be other things to add.

    • Groxx 23 days ago

      "Batteries included" means "ossification is guaranteed", yah. "stdlib is where code goes to die" is a fairly common phrase for a reason.

      There's clearly merit to both sides, but personally I think a major underlying cause is that libraries are trusted. Obviously that doesn't match reality. We desperately need a permission system for libraries, it's far harder to sneak stuff in when doing so requires an "adds dangerous permission" change approval.

      • pjmlp 21 days ago

        > "Batteries included" means "ossification is guaranteed", yah. "stdlib is where code goes to die" is a fairly common phrase for a reason.

        Except I rather have ossified batteries that solve my problem, even if not as convinient as more modern alternatives, than not having them at all on a given platform.

      • lokar 22 days ago

        Golang seems to do a good job of keeping the standard library up to date and clean

        • Groxx 22 days ago

          Largely, yes.

          But also everyone sane avoids the built-in http client in any production setting because it has rather severe footguns and complicated (and limited) ability to control it. It can't be fixed in-place due to its API design... and there is no replacement at this point. The closest we got was adding some support for using a Context, with a rather obtuse API (which is now part of the footgunnery).

          There's also a v2 of the json package because v1 is similarly full of footguns and lack of reasonable control. The list of quirks to maintain in v2's backport of v1's API in https://github.com/golang/go/issues/71497 (or a smaller overview here: https://go.dev/blog/jsonv2-exp) is quite large and generally very surprising to people. The good news here is that it actually is possible to upgrade v1 "in place" and share the code.

          There's a rather large list of such things. And that's in a language that has been doing a relatively good job. In some languages you end up with Perl/Raku or Python 2/3 "it's nearly a different language and the ecosystem is split for many years" outcomes, but Go is nowhere near that.

          Because this stuff is in the stdlib, it has taken several years to even discuss a concrete upgrade. For stuff that isn't, ecosystems generally shift rather quickly when a clearly-better library appears, in part because it's a (relatively) level playing field.

          • hu3 22 days ago

            This looks like an ad for batteries included to me.

            Libraries also don't get it right the first time so they increment minor and major versions.

            Then why is it not okay for built-in standard libraries to version their functionality also? Just like Go did with JSON?

            The benefits are worth it judging by how ubiquitous Go, Java and .NET are.

            I'd rather leverage billions of support paid by the likes of Google, Oracle and Microsoft to build libraries for me than some random low bus factor person, prone to be hacked at anytime due to bad security practices.

            Setting up a large JavaScript or Rust project is like giving 300 random people on the internet permission to execute code on my machine. Unless I audit every library update (spoiler: no one does it because it's expensive).

            • TheCoelacanth 22 days ago

              Libraries don't get it right the first time, but there are often multiple competing libraries which allows more experimentation and finding the right abstraction faster.

            • Groxx 22 days ago

              Third party libraries have been avoiding those json footguns (and significantly improving performance) for well over a decade before stdlib got it. Same with logging. And it's looking like it will be over two decades for an even slightly reasonable http client.

              Stuff outside stdlib can, and almost always does, improve at an incomparably faster rate.

              • lokar 22 days ago

                And I think the Go people seem to do a fairly good job of picking out the best and most universal ideas from these outside efforts and folding them in.

              • hu3 21 days ago

                .NET's JSON and their Kestrel HTTP server beg to differ.

                Their JSON even does cross-platform SIMD and their Kestrel stack was top 10/20 on techempower benchmarks for a while without the ugly hacks other frameworks/libs use to get there.

                stdlib is the science of good enough and sometimes it's far above good enough.

            • hoppp 18 days ago

              Rust is especially vulnerable witb Serde included in everything and maintained by 1 perso

          • lokar 22 days ago

            For me, the v2 re-writes, as well as the "x" semi-official repo are a major strength. They tell me there is a trustworthy team working on this stuff, but obviously not everything will always be as great as you might want, but the floor is rising.

            • Groxx 18 days ago

              yea, I like the /x/ repos a fair bit. "first-party but unstable" is an extremely useful area to have, and many languages miss it by only having "first-party stable forever" and "third party". you need an experimentation ground to get good ideas and seek feedback, and keeping it as a completely normal library allows people/the ecosystem to choose versions the same way as any other library.

          • Yokohiii 22 days ago

            Another downside of a large stdlib, is that it can be very confusing. Took my a while how unicode is supposed to work in go, as you have to track down throughout the APIs what are the right things to use. Which is even more annoying because the support is strictly binary and buried everywhere without being super explicit or discoverable.

            • lokar 22 days ago

              I'm not sure I understand. Why would a standard library, a collection of what would otherwise be a bunch of independent libraries, bundled together, be more confusing than the same (or probably more) independent libraries published on their own?

      • nazcan 22 days ago

        100% to libraries having permissions. If I'm using some code to say compute a hash of a byte array, it should not have access to say the filesystem nor network.

    • hvb2 23 days ago

      The goal is not to cover everything, the goal is to cover 90% of the use cases.

      For C#, I think they achieved that.

    • zymhan 23 days ago

      > They are going to be out of date whenever a standard changes (HTML, etc.)

      You might want to elaborate on the "etc.", since HTML updates are glacial.

      • rhdunn 22 days ago

        The HTML "Living Standard" is constantly updated [1-6].

        The PNG spec [7] has been updated several times in 1996, 1998, 1999, and 2025.

        The XPath spec [8] has multiple versions: 1.0 (1999), 2.0 (2007), 3.0 (2014), and 3.1 (2017), with 4.0 in development.

        The RDF spec [9] has multiple versions: 1.0 (2004), and 1.1 (2014). Plus the related specs and their associated versions.

        The schema.org metadata standard [10] is under active development and is currently on version 30.

        [1] https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/HTML/Reference/... (New)

        [2] https://web.dev/baseline/2025 -- popover API, plain text content editable, etc.

        [3] https://web.dev/baseline/2024 -- exclusive accordions, declarative shadow root DOM

        [4] https://web.dev/baseline/2023 -- inert attribute, lazy loading iframes

        [5] https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/HTML/Reference/... (Baseline 2023)

        [6] https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/HTML/Reference/... (2020)

        [7] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/PNG

        [8] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/XPath

        [9] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Resource_Description_Framework

        [10] https://schema.org/

        • cpill 22 days ago

          please! nobody uses Xpath (coz json killed XML), it RDF (semantic web never happened, and one ever 10years is not fast), schema.org (again, nobody cares), PNG: no change in the last 26 years, not fast. the HTML "living standard" :D completely optional and hence not a standard but definition.

          • yusaydat 22 days ago

            Xpath is still used for e2e tests and things like scraping. Especially when there aren't better selectors available.

            • thomasmg 22 days ago

              The point is that you don't need the very latest version. The 20 years old version is enough.

              • rhdunn 22 days ago

                XPath 1.0 is a pain to write queries for. XPath 2.0 adds features that make it easier to write queries. XPath 3.1 adds support for maps, arrays, and JSON.

                And the default Python XPath support is severely limited, not even a full 1.0 implementation. You can't use the Python XPath support to do things like `element[contains(@attribute, 'value')]` so you need to include an external library to implement XPath.

          • rhdunn 22 days ago

            XPath is used in processing XML (JATS and other publishing/standards XML files) and can be used to proces HTML content.

            RDF and the related standards are still used in some areas. If the "Batteries Included" standard library ignores these then those standards will need an external library to support them.

            Schema.org is used by Google and other search engines to describe content on the page such as breadcrumbs, publications, paywalled content, cinema screenings, etc. If you are generating websites then you need to produce schema.org metadata to improve the SEO.

            Did you notice that a new PNG standard was released in 2025 (last year, with a working draft in 2022) adding support for APNG, HDR, and Exif metadata? Yes, it hasn't changed frequently, but it does change. So if you have PNG support in the standard library you need to update it to support those changes.

            And if HTML support is optional then you will need an external library to support it. Hence a "Batteries Included" standard library being incomplete.

          • hoppp 18 days ago

            Its used plenty in legacy systems that are still around.

      • mrits 22 days ago

        glaciers change faster than HTML

    • CommonGuy 23 days ago

      Why would they be out of date? The ecosystems themselves (for example .NET) receives regular updates.

      Yes, they cannot include everything, but enough that you do not _need_ third party packages.

    • mrits 23 days ago

      Python, .NET, and Java are not examples of batteries included.

      Django and Spring

      • spixy 22 days ago

        comparing to Node, .NET is batteries included: built-in Linq vs needing lodash external package, built-in Decimal vs decimal.js package, built-in model validation vs class-validator & class-transformer packages, built-in CSRF/XSRF protection vs csrf-csrf package, I can go on for a while...

      • ytpete 22 days ago

        And in fact wasn't a popular Python library just compromised very recently? See https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=47501426.

        So Python's clearly not "batteries included" enough to avoid this kind of risk.

        • rhdunn 22 days ago

          That's my point. You can have a large standard library like those languages I mentioned, but that isn't going to include everything nor cover every use case, so you'll have external libraries (via PyPi for Python, NuGet for .NET, and Maven for Java/JVM).

      • vovavili 22 days ago

        Python's standard library is definitely much more batteries-included than JavaScript's.

        • la_fayette 22 days ago

          depends, JavaScript in the Browser has many useful things available, which I miss with python, e.g., fetch, which in Python you need a separate package like requests to avoid a clunky API. Java had this issue for long time as well, since Java 11 there is the HttpClient with a convenient API.

  • wongarsu 23 days ago

    > In practice you will tend to have a few, but you won't be vendoring out critical things like HTTP, TCP, JSON, string sanitation, cryptography

    Unless you are Python, where the standard library includes multiple HTTP libraries and everyone installs the requests package anyways.

    Few languages have good models for evolving their standard library, so you end up with lots of bad designs sticking around forever. Libraries are much easier to evolve, giving them the advantage in terms of developer UX and performance.

    • paintbox 23 days ago

      What type of developer chooses UX and performance over security? So reckless.

      I removed the locks from all the doors, now entering/exiting is 87% faster! After removing all the safety equipment, our vehicles have significantly improved in mileage, acceleration and top speed!

      • integralid 23 days ago

        >What type of developer chooses UX and performance over security? So reckless.

        Initially I assumed this is sarcastic, but apparently not. UX and performance is what programmers are paid to do! Making sure UX is good is one of the most important things in programmer job.

        While security is a moving target, a goal, something that can never be perfect, just "good enough" (if NSA wants to hack you, they will). You make it sound like installing third party packages is basically equivalent to a security hole, while in practice the risk is low, especially if you don't overdo it.

        Wild to read extreme security views like that, while at the same time there are people here that run unconstrained AI agents with --dangerous-skip-confirm flags and see nothing wrong with it.

        • toss1 22 days ago

          Even more wild to read that sarcasm about "removing locks from doors for 87% speedup" is considered extreme...

          And yes, we agree that running unconstrained AI agents with --dangerous-skip-confirm flags and seeing nothing wrong with it is insane. Kind of like just advertising for burglars to come open your doors for you before you get home - yeah, it's lots faster to get in (and to move about the house with all your stuff gone).

        • zymhan 23 days ago

          Installing 3rd party packages the way Node and Python devs do regularly _is_ a security hole.

          • fn-mote 22 days ago

            We definitely agree on that. Fortunately some of the 600+ comments here include suggestions of what to do about it.

      • wongarsu 23 days ago

        Better developer UX can directly lead to better safety. "You are holding it wrong" is a frequent source of security bugs, and better UX reduces the ways you can hold it wrong, or at least makes you more likely to hold it the right way

        • lelanthran 22 days ago

          > Better developer UX can directly lead to better safety.

          Depends. If you had to add to a Makefile for your dependencies, you sure as hell aren't going to add 5k dependencies manually just to get a function that does $FOO; you'd write it yourself.

          Now, with AI in the mix, there's fewer and fewer reasons to use so many dependencies.

        • skydhash 23 days ago

          Friction is helpful. Putting seatbelts on takes more time than just driving, but it’s way safer for the driver. Current dev practices increase speed, not safety.

      • duskdozer 23 days ago

        "Security" is often more about corporate CYA than improving my actual security as a user, and sometimes in opposition, and there is often blatant disregard for any UX concession at all. The most secure system is fully encrypted with all copies of the encryption key erased.

    • seunosewa 23 days ago

      requests should be in the Python standard library. Hard choices need to be made.

    • ptx 23 days ago

      I'm pretty sure it's really one HTTP library: urllib.request is built on top of http.client. But the very Java-inspired API for the former is awful.

    • nicce 23 days ago

      > Unless you are Python, where the standard library includes multiple HTTP libraries and everyone installs the requests package anyways.

      The amount of time defining same data structures over and over again vs `pip install requests` with well defined data structures.

    • throwaway2037 23 days ago

          >  Few languages have good models for evolving their standard library
      
      Can you name some examples?
      • KajMagnus 22 days ago

        Scala could be one example? When I upgraded to a newer version of the standard library (the Scala 2.13 or Scala 3 collections library), there was a tool, Scalafix [1], that could update my source code to work with the new library. Don't think it was perfect (don't remember), but helpful.

        [1] https://scalacenter.github.io/scalafix/

      • msdz 22 days ago

        Personally I've heard Odin [1] to do a decent job with this, at least from what I've superficially learned about its stdlib and included modules as an "outsider" (not a regular user). It appears to have things like support for e.g. image file formats built-in, and new things are somewhat liberally getting added to core if they prove practically useful, since there isn't a package manager in the traditional sense. Here's a blog post by the language author literally named "Package Managers are Evil" [2]

        (Please do correct me if this is wrong, again, I don't have the experience myself.)

        [1] https://pkg.odin-lang.org/

        [2] https://www.gingerbill.org/article/2025/09/08/package-manage...

  • afavour 23 days ago

    Irony is that Node has no need for Axios, native fetch support has been there for years, so in terms of network requests it is batteries included.

    • fishpen0 23 days ago

      It doesn't matter. We pulled axios out of our codebase, but it still ends up in there as a child or peer from 40 other dependencies. Many from major vendors like datadog, slack, twilio, nx (in the gcs-cache extension), etc...

    • pier25 23 days ago

      People use axios or ky because with fetch you inevitably end up writing a small wrapper on top of it anyway.

      • zachrip 23 days ago

        Fetch has also lacked support for features that xhr has had for over a decade now. For example upload progress. It's slowly catching up though, upload progress is the only thing I'd choose xhr for.

        • apitman 22 days ago

          You can pipe through a TransformStream that counts how many bytes you've uploaded, right?

          • afavour 22 days ago

            That would show how quickly the data is passing into the native fetch call but doesn’t account for kind of internal buffer it might have, network latency etc

          • zachrip 22 days ago

            That is a way to approximate it, though I'd be curious to know the semantics compared to xhr - would they both show the same value at the same network lifecycle of a given byte?

      • afavour 23 days ago

        Some might say the tradeoff of writing a small wrapper is worth it given what’s been demonstrated here.

      • jmull 23 days ago

        In my experience people feel the need to wrap axios too.

        • kube-system 22 days ago

          These are the kind of people I hope AI replaces

          • lukeschlather 22 days ago

            I have never consciously wrapped Axios or fetch, but a cursory search suggests that there was a time when it was impossible for either to force TLS1.3. It's easy to imagine alternate implementations exist for frivolous reasons, but sometimes there are hard security or performance requirements that force you into them.

          • nathancahill 22 days ago

            AI was trained on Axios wrappers, so it's just going to be wrappers all the way down. Look inside any company "API Client" and it's just a branded wrapper around Axios.

    • Chyzwar 21 days ago

      Because native fetch lack retries, error handling is verbose, search and body serialization create ton of boilerplate. I use KY http client, small lib on top of fetch with great UX and trusted maintainer.

    • cyco130 23 days ago

      I'm not sure fetch is a good server-side API. The typical fetch-based code snippet `fetch(API_URL).then(r => r.json())` has no response body size limit and can potentially bring down a server due to memory exhaustion if the endpoint at API_URL malfunctions for some reason. Fine in the browser but to me it should be a no-no on the server.

      • lelanthran 22 days ago

        > I'm not sure fetch is a good server-side API. The typical fetch-based code snippet `fetch(API_URL).then(r => r.json())` has no response body size limit and can potentially bring down a server due to memory exhaustion if the endpoint at API_URL malfunctions for some reason. Fine in the browser but to me it should be a no-no on the server.

        Nor is fetch a good client-side API either; you want progress indicators, on both upload and download. Fetch is a poor API all-round.

      • WorldMaker 22 days ago

        You can pass to `fetch` an `AbortSignal` like `AbortSignal.timeout(5000)` as a simple and easy guard.

        If you also want to guard on size, iterating the `response.body` stream with for/await/of and adding a counter that can `abort()` a manual `AbortSignal` is relatively straightforward, though sounds complicated. You can even do that as a custom `ReadableStream` implementation so that you can wrap it back into `Response` and still use the `response.json()` shortcut. I'm surprised I'm not seeing a standard implementation of that, but it also looks straightforward from MDN documentation [1].

        [1] https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/API/Streams_API...

      • vakrdotme 21 days ago

        Browser fetch can lean on the fact that the runtime environment has hard limits per tab and the user will just close the tab if things get weird. on the server you're right

      • augusto-moura 23 days ago

        Hm, I don't think axios would do much better here. `fetch` is the official replacement for axios. If both are flawed that's another topic

        • cyco130 23 days ago

          Axios has maxContentLength and maxBodyLength options. I would probably go with undici nowadays though (it also has maxResponseSize).

        • nailer 23 days ago

          > `fetch` is the official replacement for axios.

          No. Axios is still maintained. They have not deprecated the project in favor of fetch.

          • augusto-moura 23 days ago

            I'm not saying that axios is unmaintained, I'm saying that if you want something like axios from the standard lib, fetch is the closest thing you get to official

            • nailer 22 days ago

              Sure but Axios determine what the official replacement for Axios is.

          • kube-system 22 days ago

            It's not deprecated, it's obsoleted.

    • zadikian 23 days ago

      Node fetch is relatively new. Wasn't marked stable until 2023, though I've used it since like 2018.

    • augusto-moura 23 days ago

      It doesn't have a need _now_. Axios is more than 10 years old now, and even before axios other libraries did the same utility of making requests easier

    • MBCook 23 days ago

      Browsers too.

      It’s not needed anymore.

  • dec0dedab0de 23 days ago

    Batteries included systems are still susceptible to supply chain attacks, they just move slower so it’s not as attractive of a target.

    I think packages of a certain size need to be held to higher standards by the repositories. Multiple users should have to approve changes. Maybe enforced scans (though with trivy’s recent compromise that wont be likely any time soon)

    Basically anything besides lone developer can decide to send something out on a whim that will run on millions of machines.

    • Drakim 23 days ago

      While technically true, it's so much slower that it's essentially a different thing. Third party packages being attacked is a near daily occurrence. First party attacks happens on the timescale and frequency of decades.

      It's like the difference in protecting your home from burglars and foreign nation soldiers. Both are technically invaders to your home, but the scope is different, and the solutions are different.

    • xienze 22 days ago

      > they just move slower so it’s not as attractive of a target.

      Well, there’s other things. Maven doesn’t allow you to declare “version >= x.y.z” and doesn’t run arbitrary scripts upon pulling dependencies, for one thing. The Java classpath doesn’t make it possible to have multiple versions of the same library at the same time. That helps a lot too.

      NPM and the way node does dependency management just isn’t great. Never has been.

  • zdc1 23 days ago

    The other thing that keeps coming up is the github-code-is-fine-but-the-release-artifact-is-a-trojan issue. It really makes me question if "packages" should even exist in JavaScript, or if we could just be importing standard plain source code from a git repo.

    I understand why this doesn't work well with legacy projects, but it's something that the language could strive towards.

    • embedding-shape 23 days ago

      > I understand why this doesn't work well with legacy projects, but it's something that the language could strive towards.

      Why wouldn't that work well with legacy projects? In fact, the projects I was a part of that I'd call legacy nowadays, was in fact built by copy-and-pasting .js libraries into a "vendor/" directory, and that's how we shipped it as well, this was in the days before Bower (which was the npm of frontend development back in the day), vendoring JS libs was standard practice, before package managers became used in frontend development too.

      Not sure why it wouldn't work, JavaScript is a very moldable language, you can make most things work one way or another :)(

      • crab_galaxy 21 days ago

        `vendor/` folders give me the worst developer PTSD :p

        6 conflicting versions of jquery, and you know every single one of them was monkey patched, cemented into the codebase forever.

    • EMM_386 23 days ago

      This might make things worse not better.

      Yes - the postinstall hook attack vector goes away. You can do SHA pinning since Git's content addressing means that SHA is the hash of the content. But then your "lockfile" equivalent is just... a list of commit SHAs scattered across import statements in your source? Managing that across a real dependency tree becomes a nightmare.

      This is basically what Deno's import maps tried to solve, and what they ended up with looked a lot like a package registry again.

      At least npm packages have checksums and a registry that can yank things.

      • auxiliarymoose 23 days ago

        You can just git submodule in the dependencies. Super easy. Also makes it straightforward to develop patches to send upstream from within your project. Or to replace a dependency with a private fork.

        In my experience, this works great for libraries internal to an organization (UI components, custom file formats, API type definitions, etc.). I don't see why it wouldn't also work for managing public dependencies.

        Plus it's ecosystem-agnostic. Git submodules work just as well for JS as they do for Go, sample data/binary assets, or whatever other dependencies you need to manage.

      • fishpen0 23 days ago

        > But then your "lockfile" equivalent is just... a list of commit SHAs scattered across import statements in your source? Managing that across a real dependency tree becomes a nightmare.

        The irony is that this is actually the current best practice to defend against supply chain attacks in the github actions layer. Pin all actions versions to a hash. There's an entire secondary set of dev tools for converting GHA version numbers to hashes

    • S04dKHzrKT 22 days ago

      This is where attestation/sigstore comes into play. Github has a first-party action for it and I wish more projects would use it. Regarding javascript specifically, I believe npm has builtin support for sigstore.

      * https://docs.github.com/en/actions/concepts/security/artifac...

      * https://www.sigstore.dev/

      * https://github.com/actions/attest

  • cozzyd 23 days ago

    or you don't use a package manager where anyone can just publish a package (i.e. use your system package manager). There is still some risk, but it is much smaller. Like, if xz were distributed by PyPI or NPM, everyone would have been pwned, but instead it was (barely) found.

    It's true that system repos doesn't include everything, but you can create your own repositories if you really need to for a few things. In practice Fedora/EPEL are basically sufficient for my needs. Right now I'm deploying something with yocto, which is a bit more limited in slection, but it's pretty easy to add my own packages and it at least has hashes so things don't get replaced without me noticing (to be fair, I don't know if the security practices of open-embedded recipes are as strong as Fedora...).

    • calvinmorrison 23 days ago

      it's muddying what a package is. A package, or a distro, is the people who slave and labor over packaging, reviewing, deciding on versions to ship, having policies in place, security mailing lists, release schedules, etc.

      just shipping from npm crap is essentially the equivelant of running your production code base against Arch AUR pkgbuilds.

  • mrsmrtss 23 days ago

    Fully agree with this! I think today .NET is probably the most batteries included platform you can get. This means that even if you use third-party libraries, these typically depend only on first-party dependencies, making it much less likely for something shady to sneak in.

    • raddan 23 days ago

      With the notable exception of cross-platform audio.

      • duped 23 days ago

        Not really notable, aiui the only mainstream language with anything like that is JS in the browser

        And for good reason. There are enough platform differences that you have to write your own code on top anyway.

      • exyi 22 days ago

        and cross-platform UI

    • pier25 23 days ago

      Kinda.

      With Bun I use less dependencies from NPM than I used from Nuget with .NET to build minimal apis. For example the pg driver.

    • Imustaskforhelp 23 days ago

      To me, I really like Golang's batteries included platform. I am not sure about .NET though

      • jeswin 23 days ago

        C#'s LINQ (code as data, like LISP) wins over golang for any type of data access. Strongly-typed, language-native queries. Go has its own advantages though.

    • throwaway2037 23 days ago

      Why is .NET more "batteries included" than Java?

    • jeswin 23 days ago

      And now with NativeAOT, you can use C# like go - you don't need to ship the CLR.

  • Lord_Zero 23 days ago

    So, youre on Microsoft then, judging by ScottPlot you write .NET desktop apps. If you use Dapper, you probably use Microsoft.Data.SqlClient, which is... distributed over NuGet and vulnerable to supply chain attack. You may not need many deps as a desktop dev. Modern day line of business apps require a lot more deps. CSVHelper, ClosedXML, AutoMapper, WebOptimizer, NetEscapades.AspNetCore.SecurityHeaders.

    Yes less deps people need the better but it doesn't fix trhe core problem. Sharing and distrib uting code is a key tenant of being able to write modern code.

  • tliltocatl 23 days ago

    I agree that dependencies are a liability, but, sadly, "batteries included" didn't work out for Python in practice (i. e. how do I even live without numpy? No, array aren't enough).

    • jcgl 23 days ago

      To the extend that Python is indeed "batteries included," that seems true. But just how "batteries included" is it? I'd argue that its batteries are pretty limited. Exhibit A: everybody uses the third-party requests instead of the stdlib urllib. Exhibit B: http.server isn't a production-ready webserver, so people use Flask or something beefier.

      I'd contrast Python with Go, which has an amazing stdlib for the domains that Go targets. This last part is key--Go has a more focused scope than Python, and that makes it easier for its stdlib to succeed.

      • 12_throw_away 22 days ago

        > http.server isn't a production-ready webserver, so people use Flask [...]

        Nit, but relevant nit: Flask is also not a production-grade webserver. You could say it is also missing batteries ... and those batteries are often missing batteries too. Which is why you don't deploy flask, you deploy flask on top of gunicorn on top of nginx. It's missing batteries all the way down (or at least 3 levels down).

        • jcgl 21 days ago

          Appreciate the nit. Had no idea that Flask wasn't production-grade. Yeesh.

          I really don't miss this part of the Python world. When I started on backend stuff ~10 years ago, the morass of runtime stuff for Python webservers felt bewildering. uWSGI? FastCGI? Gunicorn? Twisted? Like you say, missing batteries all the way down, presumably due to async/GIL related pains.

          Then you step into the Go world and it's just the stdlib http package.

          Anyway, ranting aside, batteries included is a real thing, and it's great. Python just doesn't have it.

      • seunosewa 23 days ago

        We could have different Python package bundles: Python base. Python webdev. Python desktop.

  • junon 23 days ago

    This is a rather superlative and tunnel vision, "everything is a nail because I'm a hammer" approach. The truth is this is an exceedingly difficult problem nobody has adequately solved yet.

    • bbkane 23 days ago

      I think the AI tooling is, if not completely solving sandboxing, at least making the default much better by asking you every time they want to do something and providing files to auto-approve certain actions.

      Package managers should do the same thing

      • hectdev 23 days ago

        Another layer of AI tooling is the cost of spinning up your own version of some libraries is lowered and can be made hyper specific to your needs rather than pulling in a whole library with features you'll never use.

        • lelanthran 22 days ago

          > Another layer of AI tooling is the cost of spinning up your own version of some libraries is lowered and can be made hyper specific to your needs rather than pulling in a whole library with features you'll never use.

          Tell me about it. Using AI Chatbots (not even agents), I got a MVP of a packaging system[1] to my liking (to create packages for a proprietary ERP system) and an endpoint-API-testing tool, neither of which require a venv or similar to run.

          ------------------------------

          [1] Okay, all it does now is create, sign, verify and unpack packages. There's a roadmap file for package distribution, which is a different problem.

      • nailer 23 days ago

        > at least making the default much better by asking you every time they want to do something

        Really? I thought 'asking you every time they want to do something' was called 'security fatigue' and generally considered to be a bad thing. Yes you can concatenate files in the current project, Claude.

        • bbkane 23 days ago

          Yes it has to be combined with a robust way to allowlist actions you trust

          • nailer 23 days ago

            Oddly, since I wrote that Claude 'auto' mode just landed and I built something with it (instead of 'dangeously skip') and it's working.

  • gedy 23 days ago

    > "Batteries included" ecosystems are the only persistent solution to the package manager problem.

    The irony in this case is that axios is not really needed now given that fetch is part of the JS std lib.

  • raincole 23 days ago

    Different programmers have very different ideas about what is "all the functionality you typically need."

  • troad 23 days ago

    What are some examples of batteries-included languages that folk around here really feel productive in and/or love? What makes them so great, in your opinion?

    (Leaving aside thoughts on language syntax, compile times, tooling etc - just interested in people's experiences with / thoughts on healthy stdlibs)

    • pyjarrett 23 days ago

      These are the big ones I use, specifically because of the standard libraries:

      Python (decent standard library) - It's pretty much everywhere. There's so many hidden gems in that standard library (difflib, argparse, shlex, subprocess, cmd)

      C#/F# (.NET)

      C# feels so productive because of how much is available in .NET Core, and F# gets to tag along and get it all for free too. With C# you can compile executables down to bundle the runtime and strip it down so your executables are in the 15 MiB range. If you have dotnet installed, you can run F# as scripts.

      • troad 23 days ago

        These are definitely some good thoughts, thanks!

        Do you worry at all about the future of F#? I've been told it's feeling more and more like a second-class citizen on .NET, but I don't have much personal experience.

        • pyjarrett 23 days ago

          I used to, but the knowledge of .NET seems mostly transferrable to C#. It's super useful to do `dotnet fsi` and then work out the appropriate .NET calls in the F# repl.

          • troad 21 days ago

            That's a really good point, thank you. I'm running Elixir in prod right now, so F# would be up my alley.

            As someone with all the memory of a fruit fly, I love a good REPL when I'm trying to recall the various magic incantations that make the computer go.

    • bbkane 23 days ago

      Go is well known for its large and high quality std lib

      • philipwhiuk 23 days ago

        Go didn't even have versioning for dependencies for ages, so CVE reporting was a disaster.

        And there's plenty of libraries you'll have to pull to get a viable product.

    • Quothling 23 days ago

      I work in a NIS2 compliance sector, and we basically use Go and Python for everything. Go is awesome, Python isn't as such. Go didn't always come with the awesome stllib that it does today, which is likely partly why a lot of people still use things like Gin for web frameworks rather than simply using the standard library. Having worked with a lot of web frameworks, the one Go comes with is nice and easy enough to extend. Python is terrible, but on the plus side it's relatively easy to write your own libraries with Python, and use C/Zig to do so if you need it. The biggest challenges for us is that we aren't going to write a better MSSQL driver than Microsoft, so we use quite a bit of dependencies from them since we are married with Azure. These live in a little more isolation than what you might expect, so they aren't updated quite as often as many places might. Still, it's a relatively low risk factor that we can accept.

      Our React projects are the contrast. They live in total and complete isolation, both in development and in production. You're not going to work on React on a computer that will be connected to any sort of internal resources. We've also had to write a novel's worth of legal bullshit explaining how we can't realistically review every line of code from React dependencies for compliance.

      Anyway, I don't think JS/TS is that bad. It has a lot of issues, but then, you could always have written your own wrapper ontop of Node's fetch instead of using Axios. Which I guess is where working in the NIS2 compliance sector makes things a little bit different, because we'd always chose to write the wrapper instead of using one others made. With the few exceptions for Microsoft products that I mentioned earlier.

      • troad 22 days ago

        This is really interesting, thanks for sharing. Great food for thought.

        Being tightly coupled with MS already, did you ever explore .NET?

        • Quothling 22 days ago

          We used to have some C# but we moved away from it to have fewer languages and because it was a worse fit for us than Go and Python. I'm not sure .NET would really give us any advantages though. Microsoft treats most major languages as first class citizens in Azure, and since we build everything to be sort of platform agnostic, we wouldn't have the tie-ins that you could have with .NET. I'm not saying it would be fun to switch cloud, but all our services are build so that there is a decoupled "adapter" between our core logic and Azure. We use a lot of Azure functions as an example, but they run in container apps on a managed k8s, so the Azure function part is really just an ingress that could be swapped for anything else.

          It's been a while since I worked with an "actual" function app in Azure. We did have a few .NET ones that weren't using containers. At the time they were pretty good, but today I'm not sure what the benefit over a managed container envrionment with container apps would be. Similarily with sqlserver. We use it because of governance and how it ties into data factory and I guess fabric, but we don't use ORM's so something like Entity Framework wouldn't really be something we'd benefit from with .NET.

          I think the only thing we couldn't realistically replace and get something similar is the governance, but that's more to do with how Management Groups, Policies, Subscriptions and EntraID works than anything else.

          Eventuallyt everything will probably be Python and then C/Zig for compute heavy parts. Not because Python is great, it's terrible, but it's what everyone uses. We're an energy company and with the internal AI tools we've made widely available we now have non-SWE employees writing code. It's Business Intelligence, it's Risk analysys, it's powerplant engineers, it's accountants. They're all working with AI code in their sandboxed environments and it's all Python. Since some of it actually turns out to generate great value, it's better for us (and the business) if our SWE teams can easily take over when "amateur hour" needs to meet operational compliance for the more "serious" production envrionments. I put things in "'s because I'm still not entirely sure how to express this. A lot of what gets build is great, and would have never been build without AI because we don't have the man power, but it's usually some pretty bad software. Which is fine, until it isn't.

          • troad 22 days ago

            Thanks for taking the time, I really appreciate the insights.

  • rendaw 22 days ago

    This just moves the trust from one group to another. Now the standard library/language maintainers need to develop/maintain more high quality software. So either they get overworked and burn out, don't address issues, fail to update things or they recruit more people who need to be trusted. Then they are responsible for doing the validation that you should have done. Are they better equipped to do that? Maybe they go, oh hey, Axios is popular and widely trusted, let's make it an official library and bring the maintainers into the fold... wait isn't this exactly where we started?

    What process did you trust the standard library/language maintainers in the first place? How do they differ from any other major library vendor?

  • resonious 21 days ago

    I agree with you and follow the same principles myself, but JavaScript already has HTTP, and yet everyone still uses Axios. So the problem isn't that JS doesn't have batteries, it's that people don't want to use them for some reason.

    I'm guessing it's similar to the tragedy of the commons phenomenon. When things are freely available people tend to overuse or carelessly use them. NPM is just too easy to use. If a package offers a 1% ergonomics increase over a builtin function, many folks will just go for it because it costs them nothing (well, it seems to cost them nothing).

  • fireant 22 days ago

    While it's true that the packages are first party, .NET still relies on packages to distribute code that's not directly inside the framework. You still probably transiently depend on `Microsoft.Extensions.Hosting.Abstractions ` for example - if the process for publishing this package was compromised, you'd still get owned.

  • EGreg 22 days ago

    Not at all. We simply need M-of-N auditors to sign off on major releases of things. And the package managers need to check this (the set of auditors can be changed, same as browser PKI for https) before pulling things down.

    That's the system we have in our Safebox ecosystem

  • TZubiri 23 days ago

    But javascript is batteries included in this case, you can use xmlhttprequest or fetch

  • invaliduser 23 days ago

    For a lot of code, I switched to generating code rather than using 3rd party libraries. Things like PEG parsers, path finding algorithms, string sanitizers, data type conversion, etc are very conveniently generated by LLMs. It's fast, reduces dependencies, and feels safer to me.

    • troad 23 days ago

      Ah, so you've traded the possibility of bad dependencies for certainty.

    • tzs 23 days ago

      Or find the best third party library and copy the code from a widely used version that has been out long enough to have been well tested into your source tree.

      The problem is not third party libraries. It is updating third party libraries when the version you have still works fine for your needs.

      • estebank 23 days ago

        Don't do this. Use a package manager that let's you specify a specific version to pin against. Vendoring side steps most automated tooling that can warn you about vulnerabilities. Vendoring is a signal that your tooling is insufficient, 99% of the time.

        • gjadi 23 days ago

          Vendoring means you don't have to fetch the internet for every build, that you can work offline, that you're not at the mercy of the oh-so-close-99.999 availability, that it will keep on working in 10 years, and probably other advantages.

          If your tooling can pull a dependency from the internet, it could certainly check if more recent version from a vendored one is available.

          • everforward 22 days ago

            This is only true if you aren’t internally mirroring those packages.

            Most places I’ve worked have Artifactory or something like it sitting between you and actual PyPI/npm/etc. As long as someone has pulled that version at some point before the internet goes out, it’ll continue to work after.

            • kjok 22 days ago

              And this is exactly why we see noise on HN/Reddit when a supply-chain cyberattack breaks out, but no breach is ever reported. Enterprises are protected by internal mirroring.

          • estebank 22 days ago

            Is there any package manager incapable of working offline?

            • lelanthran 22 days ago

              > Is there any package manager incapable of working offline?

              I think you've identified the problem here: package management and package distribution are two different problems. Both tools have possibilities for exploits, but if they are separate tools then the surface area is smaller.

              I'm thinking that the package distribution tool maintains a local system cache of packages, using keys/webrings/whatever to verify provenance, while the package management tool allows pinning, minver/maxver, etc.

  • binsquare 23 days ago

    yep!

    This is exactly the world I'm working towards with packaging tooling with a virtual machine i.e. electron but with virtual machines instead so the isolation aspect comes by default.

  • jaikechen 22 days ago

    I think stay vigilant is better than trust anything.

  • gib444 23 days ago

    What kind of apps do you build / industry etc?

  • christophilus 23 days ago

    Honestly, you can get pretty far with just Bun and a very small number of dependencies. It’s what I love most about Bun. But, I do agree with you generally. .NET is about as good as I’ve ever seen for being batteries included. I just hate the enterprisey culture that always seems to pervade .NET shops.

    • bob1029 23 days ago

      I agree about the culture. If I take my eye off the dev team for too long, I'll come back and we'll be using entity framework and a 20 page document about configuring code cleanup rules in visual studio.

  • philipwhiuk 23 days ago

    Language churn makes this problem worse.

    Frankly inventing a new language is irresponsible these days unless you build on-top of an existing ecosystem because you need to solve all these problems.

  • pier25 23 days ago

    I agree. Got downvoted a lot the other day for proposing Node should solve fundamental needs.

  • commandlinefan 23 days ago

    > "Batteries included" ecosystems are the only persistent solution

    Or write your own stuff. Yes, that's right, I said it. Even HTTP. Even cryptography. Just because somebody else messed it up once doesn't mean nobody should ever do it. Professional quality software _should_ be customized. Professional developers absolutely can and should do this and get it right. When you use a third-party HTTP implementation (for example), you're invariably importing more functionality than you need anyway. If you're just querying a REST service, you don't need MIME encoding, but it's part of the HTTP library anyway because some clients do need it. That library (that imports all of its own libraries) is just unnecessary bloat, and this stuff really isn't that hard to get right.

    • lelanthran 22 days ago

      > When you use a third-party HTTP implementation (for example), you're invariably importing more functionality than you need anyway. If you're just querying a REST service, you don't need MIME encoding, but it's part of the HTTP library anyway because some clients do need it. That library (that imports all of its own libraries) is just unnecessary bloat, and this stuff really isn't that hard to get right.

      This post is modded down (I think because of the "roll your own crypto vibe", which I disagree with), but this is actually spot on the money for HTTP.

      The surface area for HTTP is quite large, and your little API, which never needed range-requests, basic-auth, multipart form upload, etc suddenly gets owned because of a vulnerability in one of those things you not only never used, you also never knew existed!

      "Surface area" is a problem, reducing it is one way to mitigate.

      • commandlinefan 22 days ago

        > the "roll your own crypto vibe", which I disagree with

        Again, you run into the attack surface area here. Think about the Heartbleed vulnerability. It was a vulnerability in the DTLS implementation of OpenSSL, but it affected every single user, including the 99% that weren't using DTLS.

        Experienced developers can, and should, be able to elide things like side-channel attacks and the other gotchas that scare folks off of rolling their own crypto. The right solution here is better-defined, well understood acceptance criteria and test cases, not blindly trusting something you downloaded from the internet.

        • lelanthran 22 days ago

          The reason I disagree about crypto is because:

          1. It's really really hard to verify that you have not left a vulnerability in (for a good time, try figuring out all the different "standards" needed in x509), but, more importantly,

          2. You already have options for a reduced attack surface; You don't need to use OpenSSL just for TLS, you can use WolfSSL (I'm very happy with it, actually). You don't need WolfSSL just for public/private keys signing+encryption, use libsodium. You don't need libsodium just for bcrypt password hashing, there's already a single function to do that.

          With crypto, you have some options to reduce your attack surface. With HTTP you have few to none; all the HTTP libs take great care to implement as much of the specification as possible.

          • commandlinefan 22 days ago

            > "standards" needed in x509

            That's actually not really crypto, though - that's writing a parser (for a container that includes a lot of crypto-related data). And again... if you import a 3rd-party x.509 parser and you only need DER but not BER, you've got unnecessary bloat yet again.

    • iknowstuff 23 days ago

      > Even cryptography

      Good luck

h4ch1 23 days ago

I can't even imagine the scale of the impact with Axios being compromised, nearly every other project uses it for some reason instead of fetch (I never understood why).

Also from the report:

> Neither malicious version contains a single line of malicious code inside axios itself. Instead, both inject a fake dependency, plain-crypto-js@4.2.1, a package that is never imported anywhere in the axios source, whose only purpose is to run a postinstall script that deploys a cross-platform remote access trojan (RAT)

Good news for pnpm/bun users who have to manually approve postinstall scripts.

  • beart 23 days ago

    > nearly every other project uses it for some reason instead of fetch (I never understood why).

    Fetch wasn't added to Node.js as a core package until version 18, and wasn't considered stable until version 21. Axios has been around much longer and was made part of popular frameworks and tutorials, which helps continue to propagate it's usage.

    • seer 23 days ago

      Also it has interceptors, which allow you to build easily reusable pieces of code - loggers, oauth, retriers, execution time trackers etc.

      These are so much better than the interface fetch offers you, unfortunately.

      • reactordev 23 days ago

        You can do all of that in fetch really easily with the init object.

           fetch('https://api.example.com/data', {
          headers: {
            'Authorization': 'Bearer ' + accessToken
          }
        })
        • zdragnar 23 days ago

          There are pretty much two usage patterns that come up all the time:

          1- automatically add bearer tokens to requests rather than manually specifying them every single time

          2- automatically dispatch some event or function when a 401 response is returned to clear the stale user session and return them to a login page.

          There's no reason to repeat this logic in every single place you make an API call.

          Likewise, every response I get is JSON. There's no reason to manually unwrap the response into JSON every time.

          Finally, there's some nice mocking utilities for axios for unit testing different responses and error codes.

          You're either going to copy/paste code everywhere, or you will write your own helper functions and never touch fetch directly. Axios... just works. No need to reinvent anything, and there's a ton of other handy features the GP mentioned as well you may or may not find yourself needing.

          • arghwhat 23 days ago

            Interceptors are just wrappers in disguise.

                const myfetch = async (req, options) => {
                    let options = options || {};
                    options.headers = options.headers || {};
                    options.headers['Authorization'] = token;
                
                    let res = await fetch(new Request(req, options));
                    if (res.status == 401) {
                        // do your thing
                        throw new Error("oh no");
                    }
                    return res;
                }
            
            Convenience is a thing, but it doesn't require a massive library.
            • nailer 23 days ago

              That fetch requires so many users to rewrite the same code - that was already handled well by every existing node HTTP client- says something about the standards process.

              • arghwhat 23 days ago

                It could also be trivially written for XMLHttpRequest or any node client if needed. Would be nice if they had always been the same, but oh well - having a server and client version isn't that bad.

                Because it is so few lines it is much more sensible to have everyone duplicate that little snippet manually than import a library and write interceptors for that...

                (Not only because the integration with the library would likely be more lines of code, but also because a library is a significantly liability on several levels that must be justified by significant, not minor, recurring savings.)

                • nailer 23 days ago

                  > Because it is so few lines it is much more sensible to have everyone duplicate that little snippet manually

                  Mine's about 100 LOC. There's a lot you can get wrong. Having a way to use a known working version and update that rather than adding a hundred potentially unnecessary lines of code is a good thing. https://github.com/mikemaccana/fetch-unfucked/blob/master/sr...

                  > import a library and write interceptors for that...

                  What you suggesting people would have to intercept? Just import a library you trust and use it.

                  • arghwhat 22 days ago

                    Your wrapper does do a bunch of extra things that aren't necessary, but pulling in a library here is a far greater maintenance and security liability than writing those 100 lines of trivial code for the umpteenth time.

                    So yes you should just write and keep those lines. The fact that you haven't touched that file in 3 years is a great anecdotal indicator of how little maintenance such a wrapper requires, and so the primary reason for using a library is non-existent. Not like the fetch API changes in any notable way, nor does the needs of the app making API calls, and as long as the wrapper is slim it won't get in the way of an app changing its demands of fetch.

                    Now, if we were dealing with constantly changing lines, several hundred or even thousand lines, etc., then it would be a different story.

                  • reactordev 23 days ago

                    But you said so yourself they are necessary… otherwise you would just use fetch. This reasoning is going around in circles.

                    • nailer 23 days ago

                      Why the 'but'? Where is the circular reasoning? What are you suggesting we have to intercept?

                      - Don't waste time rewriting and maintaining code unecessarily. Install a package and use it.

                      - Have a minimum release age.

                      I do not know what the issue is.

            • pixel_popping 23 days ago

              but it does for massive DDoS :p

          • rjmunro 23 days ago

            > Likewise, every response I get is JSON.

            fetch responses have a .json() method. It's literally the first example in MDN: https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/API/Fetch_API/U...

            It's literally easier than not using JSON because I have to think about if I want `repsponse.text()` or `response.body()`.

          • abluecloud 23 days ago

            that's such a weak argument. you can write about 20 lines of code to do exactly this without requiring a third party library.

          • anon7000 23 days ago

            Helper functions seem trivial and not like you’re reimplementing much.

            • creshal 23 days ago

              Don't be silly, this is the JS ecosystem. Why use your brain for a minute and come up with a 50 byte helper function, if you can instead import a library with 3912726 dependencies and let the compiler spend 90 seconds on every build to tree shake 3912723 out again and give you a highly optimized bundle that's only 3 megabytes small?

          • sayamqazi 23 days ago

            > usage patterns

            IMO interceptors are bad. they hide what might get transformed with the API call at the place it is being used.

            > Likewise, every response I get is JSON. There's no reason to manually unwrap the response into JSON every time.

            This is not true unless you are not interfacing with your own backends. even then why not just make a helper that unwraps as json by default but can be passed an arg to parse as something else

          • hiccuphippo 23 days ago

            One more use case for Axios is it automatically follows redirects, forwarding headers, and more importantly, omiting or rewriting the headers that shouldn't be forwarded for security reasons.

            • reactordev 23 days ago

              fetch automatically follows redirects, fetch will forward your headers, omitting or rewriting headers is how security breaks… now a scraper got through because it’s masquerading as Chrome.

        • mhio 23 days ago

          What does an interceptor in the RequestInit look like?

      • meekins 23 days ago

        It also supports proxies which is important to some corporate back-end scenarios

    • nedt 23 days ago

      Before that we had node-fetch. If you already use a dependency why not one that's pretty much what will come natively to every JS runtime soon.

      • zarzavat 23 days ago

        The fetch API is designed for browsers. It's not designed for servers. Fetch may work for a particular use case on the server, it may not. Servers have needs over and above what a browser allows the client to do.

        • nedt 22 days ago

          Now I'm curious, because we have a big server side code base using fetch(). What are you using that doesn't work with fetch? Especially since axios nowadays has a fetch adapter.

    • zadikian 22 days ago

      Right. Though I would've used the built in xhr then. Not going to install a dep just to make http calls.

  • PunchyHamster 23 days ago

    > I can't even imagine the scale of the impact with Axios being compromised, nearly every other project uses it for some reason instead of fetch (I never understood why).

    You can remember this answer for every time you ask same question again:

    "Coz whatever else/builtin was before was annoying enough for common use cases"

  • TZubiri 23 days ago

    >(I never understood why).

    Because axios existed before the builtin fetch, and so there's a lot of stackoverflow answers explaining how to use fetch, and the llm models are trained on that, so they will write axios requests instead of fetch

  • benoau 23 days ago

    > (I never understood why).

    I spent two years trying to get it out of a project that began long after Axios had become redundant but it's very hard to go back and challenge decisions like this because every business priority is aligned against this kind of work.

    I expect libraries built on top of fetch will be the next to be compromised, because why would you use fetch without an arbitrary layer of syntactic sugar...

    • pyrolistical 22 days ago

      There was never the business value. But now remember this axios case and use it as ammo for the next issue. Just don’t abuse it

  • eviks 23 days ago

    > Good news for pnpm/bun users who have to manually approve postinstall scripts.

    Would they not have approved it for earlier versions? But also wouldn't the chance of addition automatic approval be high (for such a widely used project)?

    • arcfour 23 days ago

      The prompt would be to approve the new malicious package (plain-crypto-js)'s scripts, too, which could tip users off that something was fishy. If they were used to approving one for axios and the attackers had just overwrote axios's own instead of making a new package, it would probably catch people out.

    • bpev 23 days ago

      Assuming axios didn't have a postinstall script before, it wouldn't have been approved for a previous version. If you ignore it, you ignore it, but postinstall scripts are relatively rare in npm deps, so it would seem a bit out of place when the warning pops up.

    • h4ch1 23 days ago

      Can't speak for other devs but I like to read postinstall scripts or at least put them through an LLM if they're too hard to grok.

      It's also a little context dependent, for example if I was using Axios and I see a prompt to run the plain-crypto-js postinstall script, alarm bells would instantly ring, which would at least make me look up the changelog to see why this is happening.

      In most cases I don't even let them run unless something breaks/doesn't work as expected.

postalcoder 23 days ago

PSA: npm/bun/pnpm/uv now all support setting a minimum release age for packages.

I also have `ignore-scripts=true` in my ~/.npmrc. Based on the analysis, that alone would have mitigated the vulnerability. bun and pnpm do not execute lifecycle scripts by default.

Here's how to set global configs to set min release age to 7 days:

  ~/.config/uv/uv.toml
  exclude-newer = "7 days"

  ~/.npmrc
  min-release-age=7 # days
  ignore-scripts=true
  
  ~/Library/Preferences/pnpm/rc
  minimum-release-age=10080 # minutes
  
  ~/.bunfig.toml
  [install]
  minimumReleaseAge = 604800 # seconds
(Side note, it's wild that npm, bun, and pnpm have all decided to use different time units for this configuration.)

If you're developing with LLM agents, you should also update your AGENTS.md/CLAUDE.md file with some guidance on how to handle failures stemming from this config as they will cause the agent to unproductively spin its wheels.

  • friendzis 23 days ago

    > (Side note, it's wild that npm, bun, and pnpm have all decided to use different time units for this configuration.)

    First day with javascript?

    • notpushkin 23 days ago

      You mean first 86,400 seconds?

      • x0x0 23 days ago

        You have to admire the person who designed the flexibility to have 87239 seconds not be old enough, but 87240 to be fine.

        • dspillett 23 days ago

          Probably went with the simplest implementation, if starting from the current “seconds since epoch” value. Let the user do any calculations needed to translate three days into that measurement.

          It also efficiently annoys the most people at once: those what want hours will complain if they set it to days, thought that want days will complain if hours are used. By using minutes or seconds you can wind up both segments while not offend those who rightly don't care because they can cope with a little arithmetic :)

          Though doing what sleep(1) does would be my preference: default to seconds but allow m/h/d to be added to change that.

          • Xirdus 23 days ago

            I'm old enough to remember computers being pitched as devices that can do tedious math for us. Now we have to do tedious math for them apparently.

            • dspillett 23 days ago

              Hence the way I would do it (and have for other purposes), as stated in my final sentence. Have the human state the intent and convert to your own internally preferred units as needed.

            • moralestapia 23 days ago

              Hey that's a great joke, you made me spill my morning home-brewed kombucha.

              I'm going to steal that one for my JavaScript monthly developers meetup.

              Is it ok if I attribute it to "Xirdus on Hacker News"?

            • darepublic 23 days ago

              I'm sure you would like to memorize all kinds of API instead of having something idiot proof and straightforward

              • Xirdus 22 days ago

                As if `minimumReleaseAge` in `[install]` section of `.bunfig.toml` doesn't require the same kind of memorization.

            • OJFord 22 days ago

              No no no, see now we just say "computer! do tedious math!", and it will do some slightly different math for us and compliment us on having asked it to do so.

          • fc417fc802 23 days ago

            The one true unit of time is hexadecimal encoded nanoseconds since the unix epoch. (I'm only half joking because I actually have authored code that used that before.)

        • zelphirkalt 23 days ago

          I actually think it is not too bad a design, because seconds are the SI base unit for time. Putting something like "x days" requires additional parsing steps and therefore complexity in the implementation. Either knowing or calculating how many seconds there are in a day can be expected of anyone touching a project or configuration at this level of detail.

          • wongarsu 23 days ago

            Seconds are also unambiguous. Depending on your chosen definition, "X days" may or may not be influenced by leap seconds and DST changes.

            I doubt anyone cares about an hour more or less in this context. But if you want multiple implementations to agree talking about seconds on a monotonic timer is a lot simpler

            • woodruffw 23 days ago

              Could you explain what you mean re: ambiguity? I understand why “calendar units” like months are ambiguous, but minutes, hours, days, and weeks all have fixed durations (which is why APIs like Python’s `timedelta` allows them).

              • nightpool 23 days ago

                The minute between December 31, 2016 23:59 and January 1st 2017 is 61 seconds, not 60 seconds. The hour that contains that minute is 3601 seconds, the day that contains that hour is 43201 seconds, etc. If you assume a fixed duration and simply multiply by 43200, your math will be wrong compared to the rest of the world.

                Daylight savings time makes a day take 23 hours or 25 hours. That makes a week take 7254000 seconds or 7261200 seconds. Etc.

                • woodruffw 23 days ago

                  That’s what I mean by calendar units. These aren’t issues if you don’t try to apply durations to the “real” calendar.

                  (This is all in the context of cooldowns, where I’m not convinced the there’s any real ambiguity risk by allowing the user to specify a duration in day or hour units rather than seconds. In that context a day is exactly 24 hours, regardless of what your local savings time rules are.)

                  • wongarsu 23 days ago

                    "exactly 24 hours" could still be anywhere between 86399 and 86401 seconds, depending on leap seconds. At least if by an hour you mean an interval of 60 minutes, because a minute that contains a leap second will have either 59 or 61 seconds.

                    You could specify that for the purposes of cooldowns you want "hour" to mean an interval of 3600 seconds. But that you have to specify that should illustrate how ambiguous the concept of an hour is. It's not a useless concept by any means and I far prefer to specify duration in hours and days, but you have to spend a sentence or two on defining which definition of hours and days you are using. Or you don't and just hope nobody cares enough about the exact cooldown duration

                    • hunter2_ 22 days ago

                      If you say "wait 1 day without using a calendar+locale" then the duration is unambiguously 86400s, but if you say "wait 1 day using a calendar+locale" or "wait until this time tomorrow" then the duration is ambiguous until you've incorporated rules like leap/DST. I think GP's point is that "wait 1 day" unambiguously defaults to the former, and you disagree, but perhaps it's a reasonable default.

                      • woodruffw 22 days ago

                        Yep, this is exactly my point. Durations are abstract spans of "stopwatch time," they don't adhere to local times or anything else we use as humans to make time more useful to us. In that context there's no real ambiguity to using units like hours/days/weeks (but not months, etc.) because they have unambiguous durations.

                        • hunter2_ 18 days ago

                          Now you've got me wondering something: if a "stopwatch month" can't exist since everyone agrees that different months have different durations (and therefore you must select one like "the month of January" to know how long to run the stopwatch), isn't there an argument that a "stopwatch year" has the same need to select one since everyone agrees that different years have different day counts (unless we mean a solar year in seconds, not quantized to the nearest day, but that's probably a Bad Default)?

                          The collective human decision to make days-per-year vary (requiring leap rules to calculate days) seems similar to the collective human decision to make days-per-month vary (requiring month names to calculate days). So if we say a "stopwatch year" suffers the same fate as the "stopwatch month" then it's a slippery slope to saying the "stopwatch minute" is no different than a "stopwatch year" (requiring leap rules to calculate seconds) even if, for all practical purposes, it seems exempt.

                          I guess this is why we make "second" the SI unit, and none of our human-convenience rules mess with the duration of a second. A leap second changes the duration of a minute (and above), and a leap year changes the duration of a month (and above). Which, oddly enough, demonstrates an inconsistency: we ought to say "leap day" instead of "leap year" if the thing being added will follow the word "leap."

                • _alternator_ 23 days ago

                  Leap seconds are their own nightmare. UNIX time ignores them, btw, so that the unix epoch is 86400*number of days since 1/1/1970 + number of seconds since midnight. The behavior at the instance of a leap second is undefined.

                  • adrianN 23 days ago

                    Undefined behavior is worse than complicated defined behavior imo.

                  • oasisbob 23 days ago

                    That's a good way of describing that. It's far too easy to pretend UNIX timestamps would correspond to a stopwatch counting from 1/1/1970.

              • jon-wood 23 days ago

                In the UK last Sunday was 23 hours long because we switched to BST, and occasionally leap seconds will result in a minute being something other 60 seconds.

                • extraduder_ire 23 days ago

                  No it wasn't. The country instantaneously changed timezones from UTC+0 to UTC+1 (called something else locally), it was no different to any other timezone change from e.g. physically moving into another timezone.

            • myhf 23 days ago

              exploiting the ambiguity in date formats by releasing a package during a leap second

            • sverhagen 23 days ago

              I came here to argue the opposite. Expressing it in seconds takes away questions about time zones and DST.

              I think you're incorrect to say that second are also ambiguous. Maybe what you mean is that days are more practical, but that seems very much a personal preference.

              • friendzis 23 days ago

                I understand the [flawed] reasoning behind "x seconds from now is going to be roughly now() + x on this particular system", but how does defining the cooldown from an external timestamp save you from dealing with DST and other time shenanigans? In the end you are comparing two timestamps and that comparison is erroneous without considering time shenanigans

              • pavel_lishin 23 days ago

                I think you misread the comment you're replying to.

          • rolux 23 days ago

            > seconds are the SI base unit for time

            True. But seconds are not the base unit for package compromises coming to light. The appropriate unit for that is almost certainly days.

          • PunchyHamster 23 days ago

            that kind of complexity is always worth it. Every single time. It's user time that you're saving and it also makes config clearer for readers and cuts out on "too many/little zeroes on accident" errors

            It's just library for handling time that 98% of the time your app will be using for something else.

            • x0x0 23 days ago

              I find it best when I need a calculator to understand security settings. 604800 here we come

        • raverbashing 23 days ago

          This is the difference between thinking about the user experience and thinking just about the technical aspect

        • scoutt 23 days ago

          Well, you have 1000000 microseconds in between. That's a big threshold.

      • pwillia7 23 days ago

        wait what if we start on a day DST starts or ends????

    • gib444 23 days ago

      OP should be glad a new time unit wasn't invented

      • friendzis 23 days ago

        Workdays! Think about it, if you set the delay in regular days/seconds the updated dependency can get pulled in on a weekend with only someone maybe on-call.

        (Hope your timezones and tzdata correctly identifies Easter bank holiday as non-workdays)

        • berkes 23 days ago

          > Workdays!

          This is javascript, not Java.

          In JavaScript something entirely new would be invented, to solve a problem that has long been solved and is documented in 20+ year old books on common design patterns. So we can all copy-paste `{ or: [{ days: 42, months: 2, hours: "DEFAULT", minutes: "IGNORE", seconds: null, timezone: "defer-by-ip" }, { timestamp: 17749453211*1000, unit: "ms"}]` without any clue as to what we are defining.

          In Java, a 6000LoC+ ecosystem of classes, abstractions, dependency-injectables and probably a new DSL would be invented so we can all say "over 4 Malaysian workdays"

          • whatisthiseven 23 days ago

            But you know that Java solution will continue working even after we no longer use the Gregorian Calendar, the collapse and annexation of Malaysia to some foreign power, and then us finally switching to a 4-day work week; so it'd be worth it.

            • nesarkvechnep 23 days ago

              It probably won’t work correctly from the get go. But it can be debugged everywhere so that’s good.

              • berkes 23 days ago

                ... and since it was architectured to allow runtime injection-patching of events before they hit the enterprise-service-bus, everyone using this library must first set fourteen ENV vars in their profile, and provide a /etc/java/springtime/enterprise-workday-handling/parse-event-mismatch.jar.patch. Which should fix the bug for you.

                You can find the patch files for your OSs by registering at Oracle with a J3EE8.4-PatchLibID (note, the older J3EE16-PatchLib-ids aren't compatible), attainable from your regional Oracle account-manager.

                • xorcist 23 days ago

                  And least one of those environment can contain template strings that are expanded with arguments from request headers when run under popular enterprise java frameworks, and by way of the injection patching could hot load arbitrary code in runtime.

                  A joke should be funny though, not just a dry description of real life, so let's leave it at that. We've already taken it too far.

                • hluska 23 days ago

                  This isn’t even remotely funny.

          • PunchyHamster 23 days ago

            In before someone thinks it's a joke, the most commonly used logging library in Java had LDAP support in format scripts enabled by default" (which resulted, of course in CVE)

          • mikeryan 23 days ago

            JavaScript Temporal. Not sure knowing what a "workday" is in each timezone is in it's scope but it's the much needed and improved JS, date API (granted with limited support to date)

            https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/JavaScript/Refe...

          • myhf 23 days ago

            There's an extra digit in your timestamp.

            • berkes 15 days ago

              Ah but you don't know how far in the future I intended it to be :)

        • yohannesk 23 days ago

          And we also need localization. Each country can have their own holidays

          • rolandog 23 days ago

            And we need groups of locales for teams that are split across multiple locations; e.g.:

              new_date = add_workdays(
                workdays=1.5,
                start=datetime.now(),
                regions=["es", "mx", "nl", "us"],
              )
            • mewpmewp2 23 days ago

              Hopefully "es" will have Siesta support too.

            • zdc1 23 days ago

              Might be better to calculate them separately for each locale and then tie-break with your own approach (min/max/avg/median/etc.)

          • wongarsu 23 days ago

            Don't forget about regional holidays, which might follow arbitrary borders that don't match any of the official subdivisions of the country. Or may even depend on the chosen faith of the worker

        • ecshafer 23 days ago

          When I worked in Finance our internal Date extension did actually have Workdays that took into account Stock Market and Bank Holidays.

          • tsukikage 23 days ago

            …now imagine a list of instruments, some of which have durations specified in days/weeks/months (problems already with the latter) and some in workdays, and the user just told your app to display it sorted by duration.

          • matltc 23 days ago

            I tried to write this function in Power Query (Excel hell). Gave up after an hour or so.

          • brunoarueira 23 days ago

            Me too, it was just a constant filled with bank holidays for the next 6 years

        • sverhagen 23 days ago

          Why would it get pulled in over the weekend? What automatic deployments are you running if there also isn't a human working to get it out?

          Do you run automatic dependency updates over the weekend? Wouldn't you rather do that during fully-staffed hours?

        • dspillett 23 days ago

          Nah, working hours and make global assumptions of 0900-1230/1330-1730, M-F, and have an overly convoluted way to specify what working ours actually are in the relevant location(s).

      • ghurtado 23 days ago

        If we're taking suggestions, I'd like to propose "parsec" (not to be confused with the unit of distance of the same name)

        That way Han Solo can make sense in the infamous quote.

        EDIT: even Gemini gets this wrong:

        > In Star Wars, a parsec is a unit of distance, not time, representing approximately 3.26 light-years

        • latexr 23 days ago

          > That way Han Solo can make sense in the infamous quote.

          They explained it in the Solo movie.

          https://www.reddit.com/r/MovieDetails/comments/ah3ptm/solo_a...

          • binarymax 23 days ago

            Making a whole movie just to retcon the parsec misuse in Ep IV was a choice

            • latexr 23 days ago

              They made a movie to make money. I doubt anyone holding the purse strings cared one iota if that bit were corrected or not. It’s not really a retcon either because they didn’t change anything.

          • slavik81 23 days ago

            That had more or less been the explanation in the books for decades, and even in George Lucas' notes from 1977:

            > It's a very simple ship, very economical ship, although the modifications he made to it are rather extensive – mostly to the navigation system to get through hyperspace in the shortest possible distance (parsecs).

        • slowmovintarget 23 days ago

          Parallax arc-second -> distance.

          For Star Wars, they retconned it to mean he found the shortest possible route through dangerous space, so even for Han Solo's quote, it's still distance.

        • inopinatus 23 days ago

          It was already fine, because it’s a metric defined on a submanifold of relativistic spacetime.

      • cyrusmg 23 days ago

        N multiplications of dozen-second

    • vasco 23 days ago

      To me it sounds safer to have different big infra providers with different delays, otherwise you still hit everyone at the same time when something does inevitably go undetected.

      And the chances of staying undetected are higher if nobody is installing until the delay time ellapses.

      It's the same as not scheduling all cronjobs to midnight.

  • superjan 23 days ago

    About the use of different units: next time you choose a property name in a config file, include the unit in the name. So not “timeout” but “timeoutMinutes”.

    • s1mn 23 days ago

      Yes!! This goes for any time you declare a time interval variable. The number of times I've seen code changes with a comment like "Turns out the delay arg to function foo is in milliseconds, not seconds".

    • layer8 23 days ago

      Or require the value to specify a unit.

      • mort96 23 days ago

        At that point, you're making all your configuration fields strings and adding another parsing step after the json/toml/yaml parser is done with it. That's not ideal either; either you write a bunch of parsing code (not terribly difficult but not something I wanna do when I can just not), or you use some time library to parse a duration string, in which case the programming language and time library you happen to use suddenly becomes part of your config file specification and you have to exactly re-implement your old time handling library's duration parser if you ever want to switch to a new one or re-implement the tool in another language.

        I don't think there are great solutions here. Arguably, units should be supported by the config file format, but existing config file formats don't do that.

        • notpushkin 23 days ago

          TOML has a datetime type (both with or without tz), as well as plain date and plain time:

            start_at = 2026-05-27T07:32:00Z  # RFC 3339
            start_at = 2026-05-27 07:32:00Z  # readable
          
          We should extend it with durations:

            timeout = PT15S  # RFC 3339
          
          And like for datetimes, we should have a readable variant:

            timeout = 15s   # can omit "P" and "T" if not ambiguous, can use lowercase specifiers
          
          Edit: discussed in detail here: https://github.com/toml-lang/toml/issues/514
          • iririririr 23 days ago

            great, now attackers can also target all the libraries to enable all that complexity in npm too.

        • dxdm 23 days ago

          > adding another parsing step after the json/toml/yaml parser is done with it. That's not ideal either

          I'd argue that it is ideal, in the sense that it's the sweet spot for a general config file format to limit itself to simple, widely reusable building blocks. Supporting more advanced types can get in the way of this.

          Programs need their own validation and/or parsing anyway, since correctness depends on program-specific semantics and usually only a subset of the values of a more simply expressed type is valid. That same logic applies across inputs: config may come from files, CLI args, legacy formats, or databases, often in different shapes. A single normalization and validation path simplifies this.

          General formats must also work across many languages with different type systems. More complex types introduce more possible representations and therefore trade-offs. Even if a file parser implements them correctly (and consistently with other such parsers), it must choose an internal form that may not match what a program needs, forcing extra, less standard transformation and adding complexity on both sides for little gain.

          Because acceptable values are defined by the program, not the file, a general format cannot fully specify them and shouldn’t try. Its role is to be a medium and provide simple, human-usable (for textual formats), widely supported types, avoid forcing unnecessary choices, and get out of the way.

          All in all, I think it can be more appropriate for a program to pick a parsing library for a more complex type, than to add one consistently to all parsers of a given file format.

        • layer8 23 days ago

          Another parsing step is the common case. Few parameters represent untyped strings where all characters and values are valid. For numbers as well, you often have a limited admissible range that you have to validate for. In the present case, you wouldn’t allow negative numbers, and maybe wouldn’t allow fractional numbers. Checking for a valid number isn’t inherently different from checking for a regex match. A number plus unit suffix is a straightforward regex.

    • weird-eye-issue 23 days ago

      timeoutMs is shorter ;)

      You guys can't appreciate a bad joke

  • flanbiscuit 23 days ago

    Pnpm did this first but I’m glad to see all the others follow suit

    For anyone wondering, you need to be on npm >= 11.10.0 in order to use it. It just became available Feb 11 2026

    https://github.com/npm/cli/releases/tag/v11.10.0

  • powerpixel 23 days ago

    Is there a way to do that per repo for these tools ? We all know how user sided configuration works for users (they usually clean it whenever it goes against what they want to do instead of wondering why it blocks their changes :))

    • ZeWaka 23 days ago

      At least with npm, you can have a .npmrc per-repo

    • figmert 22 days ago

      Fairly sure every single one has a repo level config that you can add these settings to. Others have pointed out the pnpm and npm, and I bunfig can also be repo level.

    • pas 23 days ago

      pnpm does global + per-repo

  • cxr 23 days ago

    > PSA: npm/bun/pnpm/uv now all support setting a minimum release age for packages.

    The solution is not moar toolz. That's the problem—this crazy mindset that the problems endemic to bad tooling have a solution in the form of complementing them with another layer, rather than fewer.

    Git and every sane SCM already allow you to manage your source tree without jumping through a bunch of hoops to go along with wacky overlay version control systems like the one that the npmjs.com crew designed, centering around package.json as a way to do an end-run around Git. You don't need to install and deploy anything containing never-before-seen updates just because the NodeJS influencer–developers say that lockfiles are the Right Way to do things. (It's not.)

    Opting in to being vulnerable to supply chain attacks is a choice.

    <https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=46006471>

    <https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=46360308>

  • cowl 23 days ago

    min release age to 7 days about patch releases exposes you to the other side of the coin, you have an open 7 days window on zero-day exploits that might be fixed in a security release

    • CGamesPlay 23 days ago

      The packages that are actually compromised are yanked, but I assume you're talking about a scenario more like log4shell. In that case, you can just disable the config to install the update, then re-enable in 7 days. Given that compromised packages are uploaded all the time and zero-day vulnerabilities are comparatively less common, I'd say it's the right call.

      • robertfw 23 days ago

        `uv` has per-package overrides, I imagine there may be similar in other managers

    • tytho 23 days ago

      At least with pnpm, you can specify minimumReleaseAgeExclude, temporarily until the time passes. I imagine the other package managers have similar options.

      [1]: https://pnpm.io/settings#minimumreleaseageexclude

    • n_e 23 days ago

      I haven't checked, but it would be surprising that the min-release-age applies to npm audit and equivalent commands

    • aetherspawn 23 days ago

      Not really an issue though right because virtually none of these have lasted more than 1-2 days before being discovered?

    • ksnssjsjsj 23 days ago

      Out of the frying pan and into the frier.....

    • freedomben 23 days ago

      Exactly what I thought too when I read this...

      Urgent fix, patch released, invisible to dev team cause they put in a 7 day wait. Now our app is vulnerable for up to 7 days longer than needed (assuming daily deploys. If less often, pad accordingly). Not a great excuse as to why the company shipped an "updated" version of the app with a standing CVE in it. "Sorry we were blinded to the critical fix because set an arbitrary local setting to ignore updates until they are 7 days old". I wouldn't fire people over that, but we'd definitely be doing some internal training.

  • sspiff 23 days ago

    It's wild that none of these are set by default.

    I know 90% of people I've worked with will never know these options exist.

    • po1nt 23 days ago

      That would likely mean same amount of people get the vulnerability, just 7 days later.

      • user34283 23 days ago

        The compromised packages were removed from the registry within hours.

        • brabel 23 days ago

          Because everyone got updates immediately. If the default was 7 days, almost no one would get updates immediately but after 7 days, and now someone only finds about after 7 days. Unless there is a poor soul checking packages as they are published that can alert the registry before 7 days pass, though I imagine very few do that and hence a dedicated attacker could influence them to not look too hard.

          • Leherenn 23 days ago

            If I remember correctly, in all the recent cases it was picked up by automated scanning tools in a few hours, not because someone updated the dependency, checked the code and found the issue.

            So it looks like even if no one actually updates, the vast majority of the cases will be caught by automated tools. You just need to give them a bit of time.

    • zelphirkalt 23 days ago

      If everyone or a majority of people sets these options, then I think issues will simply be discovered later. So if other people run into them first, better for us, because then the issues have a chance of being fixed once our acceptable package/version age is reached.

  • xenophonf 23 days ago

    Where in the pnpm documentation does it say that it ignores scripts by default?

    From https://pnpm.io/cli/install#--ignore-scripts:

    > Default: *false*

    • moebrowne 23 days ago

      Weird. The config also appears to default to `false`

      https://pnpm.io/settings#ignorescripts

      • simonkagedal 22 days ago

        This page describes the behavior, "disables the automatic execution of postinstall scripts in dependencies":

        https://pnpm.io/supply-chain-security

        While this explicitly calls out "postinstall", I'm pretty sure it affects other such lifecycle scripts like preinstall in dependencies.

        The --ignore-scripts option will ignore lifecycle scripts in the project itself, not just dependencies. And it will ignore scripts that you have previously allowed (using the "allowBuilds" feature).

  • mhio 23 days ago

    and for yarn berry

        ~/.yarnrc.yml
        npmMinimalAgeGate: "3d"
  • dt3ft 23 days ago

    And when you actually need a super hot fix for a 0-day, you will need to revert this and keep it that way for some time to then go back to minimum age.

    While this works, we stillneed a permanent solution which requires a sort of vetting process, rather than blindly letting everything through.

  • robrain 23 days ago

    mise has an option as well (note the caveats though):

    https://mise.jdx.dev/configuration/settings.html#install_bef...

    And homebrew has discussed it, kinda sorta:

    https://github.com/Homebrew/brew/issues/21129

  • ashishb 23 days ago

    Run npm/pnpm/bun/uv inside a sandbox.

    There is no reason to let random packages have full access to your machine

    • bbkane 23 days ago

      Sandboxing by to default world be really nice. One of the things I really appreciate about Claude Code is its permissions model

  • jdxcode 23 days ago
  • paulddraper 23 days ago

    Everyone has forgotten standard ISO 8601 durations and invented their own syntax.

  • aorth 19 days ago

    What version of npm has this? This isn't working for me on npm 11.6.2 (Node v24):

      ~/.npmrc
      min-release-age=7 # days
  • cvak 23 days ago

    I think the npm doesn't support end of line comments, so

      ~/.npmrc
      min-release-age=7 # days 
    
    actually doesn't set it at all, please edit your comment.

    EDIT: Actually maybe it does? But it's weird because

    `npm config list -l` shows: `min-release-age = null` with, and without the comment. so who knows ¯\_(ツ)_/¯

    • cvak 23 days ago

      ok, it works, only the list function shows it as null...

  • XYen0n 23 days ago

    If everyone avoids using packages released within the last 7 days, malicious code is more likely to remain dormant for 7 days.

    • otterley 23 days ago

      What do you base that on? Threat researchers (and their automated agents) will still keep analyzing new releases as soon as they’re published.

      • mike_hearn 23 days ago

        Their analysis was triggered by open source projects upgrading en-masse and revealing a new anomalous endpoint, so, it does require some pioneers to take the arrows. They didn't spot the problem entirely via static analysis, although with hindsight they could have done (missing GitHub attestation).

        • narrator 23 days ago

          A security company could set up a honeypot machine that installs new releases of everything automatically and have a separate machine scan its network traffic for suspicious outbound connections.

          • mike_hearn 23 days ago

            The problem is what counts as suspicious. StepSecurity are quite clear in their post that they decide what counts as anomalous by comparing lots of open source runs against prior data, so they can't figure it out on their own.

      • PunchyHamster 23 days ago

        The fact threat researchers and especially their automated agents are not all that good at their jobs

        • zwily 23 days ago

          Those threat researchers and their autonomous agents caught this axios release.

      • staticassertion 23 days ago

        > What do you base that on?

        The entire history of malware lol

        • otterley 23 days ago

          Can you elaborate? Why do you believe that motivated threat hunters won’t continue to analyze and find threats in new versions of open source software in the first week after release?

          • staticassertion 23 days ago

            Attackers going "low and slow" when they know they're being monitored is just standard practice.

            > Why do you believe that motivated threat hunters won’t continue to analyze and find threats in new versions of open source software in the first week after release?

            I'm sure they will, but attackers will adapt. And I'm really unconvinced that these delays are really going to help in the real world. Imagine you rely on `popular-dependency` and it gets compromised. You have a cooldown, but I, the attacker, issue "CVE-1234" for `popular-dependency`. If you're at a company you now likely have a compliance obligation to patch that CVE within a strict timeline. I can very, very easily pressure you into this sort of thing.

            I'm just unconvinced by the whole idea. It's fine, more time is nice, but it's not a good solution imo.

    • cozzyd 23 days ago

      that's why people are telling others to use 7 days but using 8 days themselves :)

    • jmward01 23 days ago

      I suspect most packages will keep a mix of people at 7 days and those with no limit. That being said, adding jitter by default would be good to these features.

      • Barbing 23 days ago

        >adding jitter by default would be good

        This became evident, what, perhaps a few years ago? Probably since childhood for some users here but just wondering what the holdup is. Lots of bad press could be avoided, or at least a little.

    • DimmieMan 23 days ago

      They’re usually picked up by scanners by then.

    • bakugo 23 days ago

      > If everyone avoids using packages released within the last 7 days

      Which will never even come close to happening, unless npm decides to make it the default, which they won't.

    • Aurornis 23 days ago

      Most people won’t.

      7 days gives ample time for security scanning, too.

    • 3abiton 23 days ago

      This highly depends on the detection mechanism.

  • WD-42 23 days ago

    Props to uv for actually using the correct config path jfc what is “bunfig”

  • melroy89 22 days ago

    `~/Library/Preferences/pnpm/rc` reads like is MacOS.. I'm using Linux...?

  • umko21 23 days ago

    The config for uv won't work. uv only supports a full timestamp for this config, and no rolling window day option afaik. Am I crazy or is this llm slop?

    • ad3xyz 23 days ago

      https://docs.astral.sh/uv/concepts/resolution/#dependency-co...

      > Define a dependency cooldown by specifying a duration instead of an absolute value. Either a "friendly" duration (e.g., 24 hours, 1 week, 30 days) or an ISO 8601 duration (e.g., PT24H, P7D, P30D) can be used.

      • umko21 23 days ago

        My bad. This works for per project configuration, but not for global user configuration.

        • woodruffw 23 days ago

          It should work for global configuration too, please file an issue if you’re observing otherwise.

          (Make sure you’re on a version that actually supports relative times, please!)

          • sbarre 23 days ago

            This is what tripped me up. I added that config and then got this error:

            error: Failed to parse: `.config/uv/uv.toml` Caused by: TOML parse error at line 1, column 17 | 1 | exclude-newer = "7 days" | ^^^^^^^^ failed to parse year in date "7 days": failed to parse "7 da" as year (a four digit integer): invalid digit, expected 0-9 but got

            I was on version 0.7.20, so I removed that line, ran "uv self update" and upgraded to 0.11.2 and then re-added the config and it works fine now.

            • woodruffw 23 days ago

              Yeah, that error message isn’t ideal on older versions, but unfortunately there’s no way to really address that. But I’m glad it’s working for you on newer versions.

              • sbarre 23 days ago

                For what it's worth the error made sense enough to me that I figured I needed to upgrade. :-)

        • js2 23 days ago

          I think it should work at the user config level too:

          > If project-, user-, and system-level configuration files are found, the settings will be merged, with project-level configuration taking precedence over the user-level configuration, and user-level configuration taking precedence over the system-level configuration.

          https://docs.astral.sh/uv/concepts/configuration-files/

  • imhoguy 23 days ago

    Good luck with any `npm audit` in a pipeline. Sometimes you have to pull the latest release because the previous one had a critical vulnerability.

  • antihero 23 days ago

    npm is claiming this doesn’t exist

himata4113 23 days ago

I recommend everyone to use bwrap if you're on linux and alias all package managers / anything that has post build logic with it.

I have bwrap configured to override: npm, pip, cargo, mvn, gradle, everything you can think of and I only give it the access it needs, strip anything that is useless to it anyway, deny dbus, sockets, everything. SSH is forwarded via socket (ssh-add).

This limits the blast radius to your CWD and package manager caches and often won't even work since the malware usually expects some things to be available which are not in a permissionless sandbox.

You can think of it as running a docker container, but without the requirement of having to have an image. It is the same thing flatpak is based on.

As for server deployments, container hardening is your friend. Most supply chain attacks target build scripts so as long as you treat your CI/CD as an untrusted environment you should be good - there's quite a few resources on this so won't go into detail.

Bonus points: use the same sandbox for AI.

Stay safe out there.

  • captn3m0 23 days ago

    This only works for post-install script attacks. When the package is compromised, just running require somewhere in your code will be enough, and that runs with node/java/python and no bwrap.

    • himata4113 23 days ago

      node is also sandboxed within bwrap I have sandbox -p node if I have to give node access to other folders, I also have sandbox -m to define custom mountpoints if necessary and UNSAFE=1 as a last resort which just runs unsandboxed.

  • mixedbit 23 days ago

    Check also https://github.com/wrr/drop which is a higher-level tool than bwrap. It allows you to make such isolated sandboxes with minimal configuration.

    • stratos123 23 days ago

      This looks nice but I wouldn't trust a very fresh tool to do security correctly.

      As a higher-level alternative to bwrap, I sometimes use `flatpak run --filesystem=$PWD --command=bash org.freedesktop.Platform`. This is kind of an abuse of flatpaks but works just fine to make a sandbox. And unlike bwrap, it has sane defaults (no extra permissions, not even network, though it does allow xdg-desktop-portal).

      • OJFord 22 days ago

        Shame it's not a bit more mature, it does look like more the sort of thing I want. I use firejail a bit, but it's a bit awkward really.

        To be honest - and I can't really believe I'm saying it - what I really want is something more like Android permissions. (Except more granular file permissions, which Android doesn't do at all well.) Like: start with nothing, app is requesting x access, allow it this time; oh alright fine always allow it. Central place to manage it later. Etc.

  • kanbankaren 23 days ago

    I think firejail is a much more flexible security sandbox than bwrap. It also comes with pre-defined profiles

    • himata4113 23 days ago

      bwrap is as secure as you want it to be which I think is the primary advantage over anything else.

  • mxmlnkn 23 days ago

    I like the idea of bubblewrap, but my pain point is that it is work to set it up correctly with bind mounts and forwarding necessary environment variables to make the program actually work usefully. Could you share your pip bwrap configuration? It sounds useful.

  • ashishb 23 days ago

    I wrote a Docker-based sandbox [1] for myself last year to control the blast radius of such malicious packages.

    https://github.com/ashishb/amazing-sandbox

  • vips7L 23 days ago

    AFAIK maven doesn’t support post install logic like npm does. You have to explicitly optin with build plugins. It doesn’t let any arbitrary dependency run code on your machine.

    • himata4113 23 days ago

      some post processors have chains to execution (ex: lombok)

      • vips7L 23 days ago

        You explicitly opt in by using a compiler plugin. Merely having it as a dependency, like in npm, doesn’t mean it can run code at build time.

  • micw 23 days ago

    > SSH is forwarded via socket

    Maybe I misunderstood this point. But the ssh socket also gives access to your private keys, so I see no security gain in that point. Better to have a password protected key.

    • himata4113 23 days ago

      It's so your private key is not stolen, but you're right passphrase protected keys win anyway. I use hardware keys so this isn't a problem for me to begin with.

  • johntash 23 days ago

    Do you have a recommendation for something like bwrap but for macos? I've been trying to use bwrap more on my servers when I remember.

    • himata4113 23 days ago

      unfortunately not, but there is work being done to support overlays properly I think?

woodruffw 23 days ago

There’s a recurrent pattern with these package compromises: the attacker exfiltrates credentials during an initial phase, then pivots to the next round of packages using those credentials. That’s how we saw them make the Trivy to LiteLLM leap (with a 5 day gap), and it’ll almost certainly be similar in this case.

The solution to this is twofold, and is already implemented in the primary ecosystems being targeted (Python and JS): packagers should use Trusted Publishing to eliminate the need for long lived release credentials, and downstreams should use cooldowns to give security researchers time to identify and quarantine attacks.

(Security is a moving target, and neither of these techniques is going to work indefinitely without new techniques added to the mix. But they would be effective against the current problems we’re seeing.)

  • paustint 23 days ago

    In this case, the author's NPM account was taken over, email address changed to one the attacker controls, and the package was manually published.

    Since the attacker had full control of the NPM account, it is game over - the attacker can login to NPM and could, if they wanted, configure Trusted Publishing on any repo they control.

    Axios IS using trusted publishing, but that didn't do anything to prevent the attack since the entire NPM account was taken over and config can be modified to allow publishing using a token.

    • staticassertion 23 days ago

      Yeah, NPM should be enforcing 2FA and likely phishing resistant 2FA for some packages/ this should be a real control, issuing public audit events for email address changes, and publish events should include information how it was published (trusted publishing, manual publish, etc).

      • efilife 22 days ago

        https://docs.npmjs.com/configuring-two-factor-authentication

        > Important: Publishing to npm requires either: Two-factor authentication (2FA) enabled on your account, OR A granular access token with bypass 2FA enabled

      • erikerikson 23 days ago

        Instead they took away TOTP as a factor.

        Scaling security with the popularity of a repo does seem like a good idea.

        • mayhemducks 23 days ago

          Are there downsides to doing this? This was my first thought - though I also recognize that first thoughts are often naive.

          • staticassertion 23 days ago

            You don't want "project had X users so it's less safe" to suddenly transition into "now this software has X*10 users so it has to change things", it's disruptive.

          • erikerikson 23 days ago

            TOTP although venerable was better than no second factor at all.

        • moebrowne 23 days ago

          TOTP isn't phishing resistant

          • erikerikson 23 days ago

            No it's not but it's better than nothing. Don't let the perfect be the enemy of the good.

            • staticassertion 22 days ago

              It's not much better than nothing. It basically solves "I reused my password across sites" exclusively, that's it. If you're going to go through the effort of TOTP, it seems odd that you wouldn't just use a unique password.

              If you use a unique password it's questionable if it adds any value at all. Perhaps in very niche situations like "password authentication is itself vulnerable due to a timing attack/ bug" or some such thing... but we've rarely seen that in the wild.

              • erikerikson 22 days ago

                I disagree.

                I use a password manager and systemically use long random passwords. An attacker would need to compromise my password manager, phish me, wrench me, or compromise the site the credential is associated with to get that.

                Using local only TOTP (no cloud storage or portability for me, by choice) they would have to additionally phish me, wrench me, compromise my phone, or compromise my physical security to get the code.

                None of these are easy except the wrench which is high risk. My password manager had standard features which make me more phishing resistant, and together they are more challenging than either apart. For example the fact that my password manager will not fill in the password on a non associated site means I am much less likely to fill in a TOTP code on an inappropriate site. Though there are vulnerable scenarios they aren't statistically relevant in the wild and the bar is higher regardless.

                Now I happen to have a FIDO key which I use for my higher security contexts but I'm a fairly low value target and npm isn't one of my high security contexts. TOTP improves my security stance generally and removing it from npmjs.org weakened my security stance there.

                • staticassertion 22 days ago

                  I'm confused. All an attacker has to do is phish you to get your password and TOTP.

                  TOTP would cover cases like a compromised password manager or a reused password. That's it, right?

                  • erikerikson 22 days ago

                    My password manager, as is standard for most of them, will not fill or show a password if the URL bring visited doesn't match the credential. Thus, a credential not showing is a huge red flag. The workflow is pretty standardized so any deviation is a big red flag.

                    Maybe you can be more specific about the attack flow you are imagining and how it will work technically to bypass my controls.

                    To answer your question, no and I provided details. It literally provides a second, non portable factor with a different vulnerability surface.

                    • staticassertion 21 days ago

                      > My password manager, as is standard for most of them, will not fill or show a password if the URL bring visited doesn't match the credential. Thus, a credential not showing is a huge red flag. The workflow is pretty standardized so any deviation is a big red flag.

                      I agree.

                      > Maybe you can be more specific about the attack flow you are imagining and how it will work technically to bypass my controls.

                      Can you be more specific about the attack that your password manager doesn't solve that your TOTP does? The attack I'm suggesting is already solved by your password manager.

                      • erikerikson 21 days ago

                        I've believe I've already written that but it is that my password manager gets compromised. It is not perfectly secure and has failure points. Given that it is separate from the second factor a successful attack against the password manager still leaves an attacker unable to login without a separate compromise of my TOTP code. Of course that can also be compromised but two compromises is strictly more difficult than one.

                        • staticassertion 21 days ago

                          Right, so it's "password manager is compromised" or "password is reused", right? I'm pretty skeptical of these mattering relative to phishing, which is radically more common.

        • staticassertion 23 days ago

          TOTP seems effectively useless for npm so that seems fine to me

    • dboreham 23 days ago

      One wonders if Microsoft/npm.js should allow new packages to be published immediately following an account email address change? I mean changes to email address are already recognized as potential attack vectors, so emails are sent to the old address warning of potential account take over. But this seems to have been done at night, so the warning email would not be seen yet. Even so a new package could be published and served to the world immediately. Unless I misunderstand something about the facts this would indicate an extreme lack of imagination in the people at Microsoft who already went through several cycles of hardening the service against supply chain poisoning attacks.

    • woodruffw 23 days ago

      Well, that sucks! It’ll be interesting to learn how they obtained a valid second factor or 2FA bypass; that will inform the next round of defenses here.

  • mday-edamame 22 days ago

    There's another element to the solution here: runtime behavioral analysis. No matter how completely the maintainer's credentials are compromised, no matter how well the malware is concealed, it still has to act like malware (in the case of LiteLLM, credential harvesting, in this case a remote-access Trojan). It's possible to detect the behavior, rather than relying on supply-chain integrity.

    We built a free tool that runs local behavior analysis on your machine, it's caught every supply-chain attack in the last couple weeks: https://www.producthunt.com/products/axios-litellm-detector

  • paulpauper 23 days ago

    Was this an drive-by/auto-install attack?

  • MattDaEskimo 23 days ago

    There are solutions, the problem is almost always discipline.

    • woodruffw 23 days ago

      I don’t know what this means. Discipline is good, but I think you need to have good tools/primitives in place to help people exercise discipline.

      (The classic example being passwords: we wouldn’t need MFA is everybody just “got good” and used strong/unique passwords everywhere. But that’s manifestly unrealistic, so instead we use our discipline budget on getting people to use password managers and phishing-resistant MFA.)

      • MattDaEskimo 23 days ago

        Really? You don't know the difference between having a door lock, and using it?

        MFA is typically enforced by organizations, forcing discipline. Individual usage of MFA is dramatically lower

vsgherzi 23 days ago

Not to beat a dead horse but I see this again and again with dependencies. Each time I get more worried that the same will happen with rust. I understand the fat std library approach won’t work but I really still want a good solution where I can trust packages to be safe and high quality.

  • pier25 23 days ago

    If the fat std library is not viable you can only increase security requirements.

    Axios has like 100M downloads per week. A couple of people with MFA should have to approve changes before it gets published.

    • cromka 23 days ago

      This is the actual answer: stupid cost saving creating an operational risk.

    • Barbing 23 days ago

      At least then they will have to pay off a dev or something, changes their economic calculus and is additionally illegal

  • rectang 23 days ago

    Hosting curated dependencies is a commercially valuable service. Eventually an economy arises where people pay vendors to vet packages.

    • anthk 23 days ago

      Linux distros and BSD ports did that since the 90's. When Linux distros had barely a PM or just tarballs, Infomagic sold 4 CD full of libre software. When I had no internet at home, back in the day I bought 3 DVD's of Debian Sarge for 20 euros, about $20. A bargain, it was the price of a hard-cover best seller book.

      GB's of libre software, graphical install, 2.6 kernel, KDE3 desktop, very light on my Athlon 2000 with 256MB of RAM. It was incredible compared to what you got with Windows XP and 120 Euro per seat. Nonfree software and almost empty.

      And, well, if for instance I could get read only, ~16TB durable USB drive with tons of Guix packages offline (in a two yearly basis with stable releases) for $200 I would buy them in the spot.

      You would say that $200 for a distro it's expensive, but for what it provides, if you are only interested in libre gaming and tools, they amount you save can be huge. I've seen people spend $400 in Steam games because of the Holyday sales...

    • goodpoint 23 days ago

      It's what linux distributions do.

    • tankenmate 23 days ago

      It already exists; cloudsmith

  • a-french-anon 23 days ago

    Why wouldn't the "fat std" thing work? Yes it's hard to design properly, both in scope and actual design (especially for an unstandardized language still moving fast), but throwing the towel and punting the problem to the "free market" of uncurated public repos is even worse.

    It's what we call in France "la fête du slip".

    PS: that's one reason I try to use git submodules in my Common Lisp projects instead of QuickLisp, because I really see the size of my deptree this way.

    • hypeatei 23 days ago

      Fat std library mistakes/warts would likely result in third party packages being used anyway.

      • a-french-anon 23 days ago

        Not necessarily, but let's agree that some design faults would happen: you still get the option to use the solid, boring and slightly rusty std instead of another 100 dependencies from the supply chain supermarket.

        At work, we're happy with Python's included batteries when we need to make scripts instead of large programs.

      • wolvesechoes 23 days ago

        So it provides another option, and in worst case it doesn't make situation worse than it is right now?

        Yeah, pretty bad idea.

    • junon 23 days ago

      Because fat std is rigid, impractical, and annoying.

      • grey-area 23 days ago

        In practice (e.g. Go) it’s actually pretty good and infinitely preferable to third party everything.

      • majorbugger 23 days ago

        Yeah, it's annoying to have good support for dates in Java since 2014, instead of only getting it now like in JS.

      • PunchyHamster 23 days ago

        Works just fine in Go.

      • dboreham 23 days ago

        I think we found the constituency that led to the present sorry situation.

        • junon 23 days ago

          That's rather rude.

          If you're referring to my packages on npm, I joined way late to that game. This was also ~15 years ago.

  • Joeri 23 days ago

    NPM should have a curation mechanism, via staff review or crowdsourcing, where versions of popular packages are promoted to a stable set, like linux distros do. I would only use curated versions if they had such a thing.

  • brigandish 23 days ago

    An alternative:

    - copy the dependencies' tests into your own tests

    - copy the code in to your codebase as a library using the same review process you would for code from your own team

    - treat updates to the library in the same way you would for updates to your own code

    Apparently, this extra work will now not be a problem, because we have AI making us 10x more efficient. To be honest, even without AI, we should've been doing this from the start, even if I understand why we haven't. The excuses are starting to wear thin though.

    • pjc50 23 days ago

      Just going to put features on hold for a month while I review the latest changes to ffmpeg.

      • brigandish 22 days ago

        As you should. Also, the constant complaint from devs on these very boards is that quality and security are relegated behind new features that are often described as useless but pushed by management.

        Are you in management?

    • tick_tock_tick 23 days ago

      I don't know where you've worked but a hostile and intelligent actor or internal red team would succeed under each of those cases at every job I've worked at.

      • bitwank 23 days ago

        Good to know. Where were the places you worked at?

      • Hackbraten 23 days ago

        Defending against a targeted attack is difficult, yes. But these recent campaigns were all directed at everyone. Auditing and inspecting your dependencies does absolutely help thwart that because there will always be people who don't.

      • brigandish 22 days ago

        They succeeded in poisoning the whole supply chain and making everyone distrust package management to a degree never seen before, and people who aren't reviewing their dependencies are already getting hit. You seem to suggest that we all accept that.

        That attitude might be the reason why the places you've worked would be under threat. The places I've worked would also be under threat, because several of my colleagues had that attitude, and this is why red teaming works.

wps 23 days ago

Genuinely how are you supposed to make sure that none of the software you have on your system pulls this in?

It’s things like this that make me want to swap to Qubes permanently, simply as to not have my password manager in the same context as compiling software ever.

  • semi-extrinsic 23 days ago

    We run everything NPM related inside Apple containers, and are looking to do the same with Python and Rust soon. Bwrap on Linux does the same.

    I like to think of it like working with dangerous chemicals in the lab. Back in the days, people were sloppy and eventually got cancer. Then dangers were recognized and PPE was developed and became a requirement.

    We are now at the stage in software development where we are beginning to recognizing the hazards and developing + mandating use of proper PPE.

    A couple of years ago, pip started refusing to install packages outside of a virtualenv. I'm guessing/hoping package managers will start to have an opt-in flag you can set in a system-wide config file, such that they refuse to run outside of a sandbox.

    • mike_hearn 23 days ago

      The problem is that package managers are a distraction. You have to sandbox everything or else it doesn't work. These attacks use post-install hooks for convenience but nothing would have stopped them patching axios itself and just waiting for devs to run the app on their local workstation. So you end up needing to develop in a fully sandboxed environment.

      • semi-extrinsic 23 days ago

        They are not a distraction when they are also the command runners.

      • PunchyHamster 23 days ago

        Yeah the whole rush on "post-run hooks bad" isn't really adding all that much to security.

        Like congratulations, your dev was compromised whole 10 minutes later after he ran code.

    • f311a 22 days ago

      What are you using that utilizes Apple containers?

  • jjice 23 days ago

    While it's not perfect, pinning specific versions and managing all updates directly has been a solid solution for my team. Things can of course still slip through, but we're never vulnerable to these just because there was a new package release and we opted into it by default.

    Updating packages takes longer, but we try to keep packages to a minimum so it ends up not being that big deal.

  • PhilipRoman 23 days ago

    This sounds like satire but isn't - I just make sure the nodejs/npm packages don't exist on my system. I've yet to find a crucial piece of software that requires it. As much as I love that cute utility that turns maps into ascii art, it's not exactly sqlite in terms of usefulness.

    • whywhywhywhy 23 days ago

      Bit ridiculous to dismiss the most popular programming languages packaging repo as silly toys.

      • PhilipRoman 23 days ago

        I don't deny that node/npm is useful for building servers, devtools for JS development itself, etc. but as an end user I haven't encountered anything useful which requires having it on my machine.

        • habinero 23 days ago

          Ok? So you don't code in that language?

          You still have multiple programming languages preinstalled on your OS, no matter which one it is.

a13n 22 days ago

Rejecting any packages newer than X days is one nice control, but ultimately it'd be way better to maintain an allowlist of which packages are allowed to run scripts.

Unfortunately npm is friggen awful at this...

You can use --ignore-scripts=true to disable all scripts, but inevitably, some packages will absolutely need to run scripts. There's no way to allowlist specific scripts to run, while blocking all others.

There are third-party npm packages that you can install, like @lavamoat/allow-scripts, but to use these you need to use an entirely different command like `npm setup` instead of the `npm install` everyone is familiar with.

This is just awful in so many ways, and it'd be so easy for npm to fix.

  • philipwhiuk 22 days ago

    pnpm and bun have approved lists.

    npm is just dragging it's feet - and stuff like this is why people moved to pnpm, yarn and bun in the first place.

tkel 23 days ago

JS package managers (pnpm, bun) now will ignore postinstall scripts by default. Except for npm, it still runs them for legacy reasons.

You should probably set your default to not run those scripts. They are mostly unnecessary.

  ~/.npmrc :
  ignore-scripts=true

83M weekly downloads!
jadar 23 days ago

How much do you want to bet me that the credential was stolen during the previous LiteLLM incident? At what point are we going to have to stop using these package managers because it's not secure? I've got to admit, it's got me nervous to use Python or Node.js these days, but it's really a universal problem.

  • rybosome 23 days ago

    > it’s got me nervous to use Python or Node.js these days

    My feelings precisely. Min package age (supported in uv and all JS package managers) is nice but I still feel extremely hesitant to upgrade my deps or start a new project at the moment.

    I don’t think this is going to stabilize any time soon, so figuring out how to handle potentially compromised deps is something we will all need to think about.

    • Tazerenix 23 days ago

      NPM only gained minimum package age in February of this year, and still doesn't support package exclusions for internal packages.

      https://github.com/npm/cli/pull/8965

      https://github.com/npm/cli/issues/8994

      Its good that that they finally got there but....

      I would be avoiding npm itself on principle in the JS ecosystem. Use a package manager that has a history of actually caring about these issues in a timely manner.

      • jadar 23 days ago

        It almost doesn't matter, because you can get pwned by a transitive dependency. If someone doesn't have the same scruples as you have, you're still at risk.

        • inbx0 23 days ago

          minimumReleaseAge and lockfiles also pin down transitive dependencies.

    • arcfour 23 days ago

      PNPM makes you approve postinstall scripts instead of running them by default, which helps a lot. Whenever I see a prompt to run a postinstall script, unless I know the package normally has one & what it does, I go look it up before approving it.

      (Of course I could still get bitten if one of the packages I trust has its postinstall script replaced.)

      • erikerikson 23 days ago

        How does this stance work with your CICD?

        • jadar 23 days ago

          I suppose you would have to commit your node_modules, or otherwise cache your setup so that all prerequesite modules are built and ready to install without running post-install scripts?

  • crimsonnoodle58 23 days ago

    More like the Trivy incident (which led to the compromise of LiteLLM).

  • supernes 23 days ago

    There are ways to limit the blast radius, like running them in ephemeral rootless containers with only the project files mounted.

socketcluster 23 days ago

I've been advocating to minimize the number of dependencies for some time now. Once you've maintained an open source project for several years, you start to understand the true cost of dependencies and you actually start to pay attention to the people behind the libraries. Popularity doesn't necessarily mean reliable or trustworthy or secure.

  • Bridged7756 23 days ago

    I'll agree with that, and you would think it's common sense for any competent engineer, but for many people it's just an afterthought. Including senior and lead engineers. General matters like security are a political liaison, how can you raise the alarm/advocate for critical security improvements as an IC without making people around and above you look bad? How can you justify time invested into these things without raising the alarm? At the same time, you can't just ignore glaring security holes. It's a fine line to walk, and actually being realistic about the possibilities has found me nothing but enmity from peers and superiors due to it seeming like I'm throwing them under the bus.

    In general, management was to see progress. I've come to find that technical details like these are an afterthought for most engineers, so far as the deadlines are being met.

    It's one of these things that are under the water, tech side jobs. Everyone has to be on board, if your peers don't give a fuck you're just an annoyance and will be swimming counter-current.

    • socketcluster 22 days ago

      Can relate. It's like; if you're less rigorous than the CTO, they would think you're incompetent. If you're more rigorous than the CTO, they would think you're overly pedantic; not pragmatic enough.

  • ezekg 23 days ago

    Agree. This is one of the major takeaways I've had from writing Go over the years -- which is even a Go proverb [0], "a little copying is better than a little dependency." Fortunately, LLMs make writing your own implementations of little dependencies super easy too.

    [0]: https://go-proverbs.github.io/

  • noveltyaccount 22 days ago

    I started a project on Expo recently and my god, a thousand dependencies later, it was running.

strogonoff 23 days ago

Essential steps to minimise your exposure to NPM supply chain attacks:

— Run Yarn in zero-installs mode (or equivalent for your package manager). Every new or changed dependency gets checked in.

— Disable post-install scripts. If you don’t, at least make sure your package manager prompts for scripts during install, in which case you stop and look at what it’s going to run.

— If third-party code runs in development, including post-install scripts, try your best to make sure it happens in a VM/container.

— Vet every package you add. Popularity is a plus, recent commit time is a minus: if you have this but not that, keep your eyes peeled. Skim through the code on NPM (they will probably never stop labelling it as “beta”), commit history and changelog.

— Vet its dependency tree. Dependencies is a vector for attack on you and your users, and any new developer in the tree is another person you’re trusting to not be malicious and to take all of the above measures, too.

  • inbx0 23 days ago

    > Run Yarn in zero-installs mode (or equivalent for your package manager). Every new or changed dependency gets checked in.

    Idk, lockfiles provide almost as good protection without putting the binaries in git. At least with `--frozen-lockfile` option.

    • strogonoff 23 days ago

      Zero-installs mode does not replace the lockfile. Your lockfile is still the source of truth regarding integrity hashes.

      However, it’s an extra line of defence against

      1) your registry being down (preventing you from pushing a security hotfix when you find out another package compromised your product),

      2) package unpublishing attacks (your install step fails or asks you to pick a replacement version, what do you do at 5pm on a Friday?), and

      3) possibly (but haven’t looked in depth) lockfile poisoning attacks, by making them more complicated.

      Also, it makes the size of your dependency graph (or changes therein) much more tangible and obvious, compared to some lines in a lockfile.

      • inbx0 23 days ago

        Number 1 would only be a win for zero-installs if it happened that registry was up when you made the security hotfix, since you'd need to install the depdencency the first time to get it in VC, but then suddenly down when doing a deploy. Seems like a highly unlikely scenario to me. Also, cases where npm CVEs must be patched with such urgency or bad things will happen are luckily very rare, in my experience.

        Most npm CVEs are stuff like DDoS vulnerabilities, and you should have mitigations for those in place for at the infra-level anyway (e.g. request timeouts, rate limits, etc), or you are pretty much guaranteed to be cooked sooner or later anyway. The really dangerous stuff like arbitrary command execution from a library that takes end user input is much much more rare. The most recent big one I remember is React2shell.

        Number 2 hasn't been much of an issue for a long time. npm doesn't allow unpublishing package after 72 hours (apart from under certain rare conditions).

        Don't know about number 3. Would feel to me that if you have something running that can modify lockfile, they can probably also modify the chekced-in tars.

        I can see how zero-installs are useful under some specific constraints where you want to minimize dependencies to external services, e.g. when your CI runs under strict firewalls. But for most, nah, not worth it.

        • strogonoff 23 days ago

          > you'd need to install the depdencency the first time to get it in VC, but then suddenly down when doing a deploy.

          Which dependency? It sounds like you are assuming some specific scenario, whereas the fix can take many forms. In immediate term, the quickest step could be to simply disable some feature. A later step may be vendoring in a safe implementation.

          The registry doesn’t need to be actually down for you, either; the necessary condition is that your CI infrastructure can’t reach it.

          > cases where npm CVEs must be patched with such urgency or bad things will happen are luckily very rare, in my experience.

          Not sure what you mean by “npm CVEs”. The registry? The CLI tool?

          As I wrote, if you are running compromised software in production, you want to fix it ASAP. In first moments you may not even know whether bad things will happen or not, just that you are shipping malicious code to your users. Even if you are lucky enough to determine with 100% confidence (putting your job on the line) that the compromise is inconsequential, you don’t want to keep shipping that code for another hour because your install step fails due to a random CI infra hiccup making registry inaccessible (as happened in my experience at least half dozen times in years prior, though luckily not in a circumstance where someone attempted to push an urgent security fix). Now imagine it’s not a random hiccup but part of a coordinated targeted attack, and somehow it becomes something anticipated.

          > Number 2 hasn't been much of an issue for a long time. npm doesn't allow unpublishing package after 72 hours (apart from under certain rare conditions).

          Those rare conditions exist. Also, you are making it sound as if the registry is infallible, and no humans and/or LLMs there accept untrusted input from their environment.

          The key aspect of modern package managers, when used correctly, is that even when the registry is compromised you are fine as long as integrity check crypto holds up and you hold on to your pre-compromise dependency tree. The latter is not a technical problem but a human problem, because conditions can be engineered in which something may slip past your eyes. If this slip-up can be avoided at little to no cost—in fact, with benefits, since zero-installs shortens CI times, and therefore time-to-fix, due to dramatically shorter or fully eliminated install step—it should be a complete no-brainer.

          > Don't know about number 3. Would feel to me that if you have something running that can modify lockfile, they can probably also modify the chekced-in tars.

          As I wrote, I suspect it’d complicate such attacks or make them easier to spot, not make them impossible.

          • habinero 23 days ago

            This is why Artifactory and similar exist and they do this better. You ~never want to vendor libraries.

            • strogonoff 22 days ago

              Are you saying it replaces my package manager, or that I should add another tool to my stack, vet yet another vulnerable dependency for critical use, to do something my package manager already does just as well?

              > You ~never want to vendor libraries.

              I just explained why you should, and you are yet to provide a counter-argument.

      • KajMagnus 22 days ago

        Good points. But what do you mean with 3: "lockfile poisoning attacks, by making them more complicated" — making the lockfiles more complicated?

        Also, 4) Simpler to `git diff` the changes, when you have the source locally already :- )

        • strogonoff 22 days ago

          > making the lockfiles more complicated?

          Poor phrasing; I meant the attacks. Now you don’t just have a lockfile you need to sneakily modify, and the diff grows.

          As to your second point, yes. It’s really a different feeling when you add one more package and suddenly have 215 new files to check in!

          • KajMagnus 21 days ago

            > suddenly have 215 new files to check in!

            How big is your repo, if I may ask?

            Personally I store vendored dependencies in a submodule, where I can squash history, if it grows too large.

            • strogonoff 18 days ago

              > How big is your repo

              It’s a subjective question, but in one of the zero-installs projects I definitely remember that when I added a couple of particular GUI libraries there suddenly a very, very long list of new files to track, since those maintainers to keep things decoupled. I wouldn’t stop using that library at that point (there were deadlines), but I would definitely try to find something lighter or more batteries-included next time.

              There can be a tiny project with just one dependency that happens to have an overgrown, massive graph of further transitive dependencies (a very unpleasant scenario which I would recommend to avoid).

              With zero installs turned on, such a codebase could indeed qualify as “big repo”, which I think would reflect well its true nature.

              Without zero installs it could be tiny but with a long long lockfile that nobody really checks when committing changes.

              > Personally I store vendored dependencies in a submodule

              I don’t like the added mental overhead of submodules, and so prefer to avoid them when possible, which I guess is a subjective preference.

              Since this is, coneptually speaking, the matter of package management more so than it is the matter of version control in genetal, I prefer to rely on package manager layer to handle this. I can see how your approach could make sense, but honestly I would be more anxious about forgetting something when keeping vendored dependencies up-to-date in that scenario.

              Your approach could be better in a sense that you can spot-check not just the list of changed packages, but also the actual code (since you presumably vendor them as is, while Yarn checks in compressed .tgz files). Not sure whether that justifies the added friction.

    • littlecranky67 23 days ago

      Exactly. Yarn uses a yarn.lock file with the sha256 hashes of each npm package it downloads from the repo (they are .tgz files). If the hash won't match, install fails. No need to commit the dependencies into your git.

nananana9 23 days ago

Package managers are a failed experiment.

We have libraries like SQLite, which is a single .c file that you drag into your project and it immediately does a ton of incredibly useful, non-trivial work for you, while barely increasing your executable's size.

The issue is not dependencies themselves, it's transitive ones. Nobody installs left-pad or is-even-number directly, and "libraries" like these are the vast majority of the attack surface. If you get rid of transitive dependencies, you get rid of the need of a package manager, as installing a package becomes unzipping a few files into a vendor/ folder.

There's so many C libraries like this. Off the top of my head, SQLite, FreeType, OpenSSL, libcurl, libpng/jpeg, stb everything, zlib, lua, SDL, GLFW... I do game development so I'm most familiar with the ones commonly used in game engines, but I'm sure other fields have similarly high quality C libraries.

They also bindings for every language under the sun. Rust libraries are very rarely used outside of Rust, and C#/Java/JS/Python libraries are never used outside their respective language (aside form Java ones in other JVM langs).

  • pjc50 23 days ago

    Package managers are now basically a requirement for language adoption. Doing it manually is not a solution, in an automated world.

    What is a problem is library quality. Which is downstream of nobody getting paid for it, combined with an optimistic but unrealistic "all packages are equal" philosophy.

    > High quality C libraries

    > OpenSSL

    OpenSSL is one of the ones where there's a ground up rewrite happening because the code quality is so terrible while being security critical.

    On the other end, javascript is uniquely bad because of the deployment model and difficulty of adding things to the standard library, so everything is littered with polyfills.

    • hresvelgr 23 days ago

      > Package managers are now basically a requirement for language adoption. Doing it manually is not a solution, in an automated world.

      Absolute nonsense. What does automated world even mean? Even if one could infer reasonably, it's no justification. Appealing to "the real world" in lieu of any further consideration is exactly the kind of mindlessness that has led to the present state of affairs.

      Automation of dependency versions was never something we needed it was always a convenience, and even that's a stretch given that dependency hell is abundant in all of these systems, and now we have supply chain attacks. While everyone is welcome to do as they please, I'm going to stick to vendoring my dependencies, statically compiling, and not blindly trusting code I haven't seen before.

      • nailer 23 days ago

        > Automation of dependency versions was never something we needed

        How do you handle updating dependencies then?

      • PedroBatista 23 days ago

        Relax, while mentioning the real world without any criticism for the soundness of the solution is absolute nonsense, some would say idiotic, thinking only in the absolute best solution given your narrow world view is not any better.

        • hresvelgr 23 days ago

          While I agree that my view is narrow, the "best solution" in question is what we used to do, and it was fine. There are still many places that manually manage dependencies. Fundamentally automatic software versioning is an under-developed area in need of attention, and technologies like semantic versioning which are ubiquitous are closer to suggestions, and not true indicators of breaking changes. My personal view is that fully automatic dependency version management is an ongoing experiment and should be treated as such.

      • pjc50 23 days ago

        > What does automated world even mean?

        People are trying to automate the act of programming itself, with AI, let alone all the bits and pieces of build processes and maintenance.

  • staticassertion 23 days ago

    They're not a failed experiment. No one has ever "experimented" by making a safe package manager for their new language. And it is not that insane to do so. Very basic things will get you very far:

    1. Packages should carry a manifest that declares what they do at build time, just like Chrome extensions do. This manifest would then be used to configure its build environment.

    2. Publishers to official registries should be forced to use 2FA. I proposed this a decade ago for crates.io and people lost their minds, like I was suggesting we drag developers to a shed to be shot.

    3. Every package registry should produce a detailed audit log that contains a "who, what, when". Every build/ command should be producing audit logs that can be collected by endpoint agents too.

    4. Every package registry should support TUF.

    5. Typosquatting defenses should be standard.

    etc etc etc. Some of this is hard, some of this is not hard. All of this is possible. No one has done it, so it's way too early to say "package managers can't be made safe" when no one has tried.

    • mladen5 23 days ago

      I don't understand commercial aspect of large OSS like package managers but i was wondering for years why this was missing from npm. I think typosquatting was handled by npm last year but only after some popular miss typed packages started stealing developer creds.

      • staticassertion 23 days ago

        The people building package managers are unaware of these problems going into it and it becomes extremely disruptive to start adding these things later on since your entire ecosystem is built on the assumption that they can do these things.

        It's also shockingly controversial to suggest typosquatting suggestions. I made this suggestion ages ago for cargo, demonstrated that basic distance checks would have impacted <1% of crates over all time, and people still didn't want it.

    • philipwhiuk 23 days ago

      > Publishers to official registries should be forced to use 2FA. I proposed this a decade ago for crates.io and people lost their minds, like I was suggesting we drag developers to a shed to be shot.

      How is this enforced when it's pushed via a pipeline?

      • staticassertion 23 days ago

        Your account is separate from your publishing. That is, in order to go to my account to change configuration values, 2FA must be required.

        Publishing should be handled via something like Trusted Publishing, which would leverage short lived tokens and can integrate with cryptographic logs for publish information (ie: "Published from the main branch of this repo at this time").

    • otterley 23 days ago

      For those who didn't know what TUF means (like me), I think they're referring to The Update Framework (https://theupdateframework.io).

      • staticassertion 23 days ago

        Sorry, I should have clarified that - you're correct. `cosign` is an example of a tool that makes this quite straightforward and proves that this sort of system can work today.

    • bbkane 23 days ago

      Love these ideas!

  • hvb2 23 days ago

    If you're developing for the web your attack surface is quite a bit bigger. Your proposed solution of copying a few files might work but how do you keep track of updates? You might be vulnerable to a published exploit fixed a few months ago. A package manager might tell you a new version is available. I don't know how that would work in your scenario.

  • doginasuit 23 days ago

    > We have libraries like SQLite, which is a single .c file that you drag into your project and it immediately does a ton of incredibly useful, non-trivial work for you, while barely increasing your executable's size.

    I'm not sure why you believe this is more secure than a package manager. At least with a package manager there is an opportunity for vetting. It's also trivial that it did not increase your executable's size. If your executable depends on it, it increases its effective size.

  • layer8 23 days ago

    For some reason, NPM is the only ecosystem with substantial issues with supply-chain attacks.

    • rvz 23 days ago

      It is because it has the lowest barrier to entry with no quality control. Ever.

      This is what happens when there is no barrier to entry and it includes everyone who has no idea what they are doing in charge of the NPM community.

      When you see a single package having +25 dependencies, that is a bad practice and increases the risk of supply chain attacks.

      Most of them don't even pin their dependencies and I called this out just yesterday on OneCLI. [0]

      It just happens that NPM is the worst out of all of the rest of the ecosystems due to the above.

      [0] https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=47577183

    • SoKamil 23 days ago

      Popularity

    • techterrier 23 days ago

      apart from that python one the other day

    • indy 23 days ago

      The culture within the npm/js community has mainly been one of using the package manager rather than "re-inventing the wheel", as such the blast radius of a compromised package is much greater

      • progmetaldev 23 days ago

        It's more to do with the standard library being so barren of common application needs, and looking for a solution that the community has gotten behind. Axios has been a common dependency in many codebases, because it is a solid solution that many have already used. Every developer could try building all the libraries that they would reach for themselves, but then each company has now taken on the task of ensuring their own (much larger) codebase is free from security issues, on top of taking care of their own issues and bugs.

      • christophilus 23 days ago

        It’s not just NPM, though. Every Rails project and every Rust project I’ve seen ended up with massive numbers of dependencies vs what an equivalent project in Go or C# would have needed.

        • anthk 23 days ago

          CPAN too, just try Hailo under Perl to test an old-fashioned chatbot based on Markov chains where very small LLM's and Hailo converge if used with the advanced training options for it. Yes, it will pull tons of dependencies, (less with cpanminus if run with 'cpanm -n Hailo'), but contrary to NPM, Pip and the like CPAN's repos are highly curated and before PHP and ubiquitoous Python Perl was used everywhere, from a sysadmin language (better than Bash/Sh for sure) to CGI, IRC bots and whatnot. How many issues did we have? Zero or near zero.

  • allreduce 23 days ago

    I don't think this community of professionals is going to come around to a solution which requires marginally more effort.

    If no one checks their dependencies, the solution is to centralize this responsibility at the package repository. Something like left-pad should simply not be admitted to npm. Enforce a set of stricter rules which only allow non-trivial packages maintained by someone who is clearly accountable.

    Another change one could make is develop bigger standard libraries with all the utilities which are useful. For example in Rust there are a few de facto standard packages one needs very often, which then also force you to pull in a bunch of transitive dependencies. Those could also be part of the standard library.

    This all amounts to increasing the minimal scope of useful functionality a package has to have to be admitted and increasing accountability of the people maintaining them. This obviously comes with more effort on the maintainers part, but hey maybe we could even pay them for their labor.

  • squeaky-clean 23 days ago

    SQLite had 6 CVE's last year. FreeType had an RCE bug published last year. libcurl's last CVE reported was 2 weeks ago. Libpng had 4 vulnerabilities published this year....

  • anthk 23 days ago

    Package managers are older than some users here. From CPAN/CTAN to ports under BSD's.

    Some pm's are badly maintained (Pip/NPM), while others are curated enough.

    Again, if you have GNU/Linux installed, install Guix, read the Info manual on 'guix import' and just create a shell/container with 'guix shell --container' (and a manifest package created from guix import) and use any crap you need for NPM in a reproducible and isolated way. You $HOME will be safe, for sure.

  • vincnetas 23 days ago

    no no, please we don't want to get back to dragging files to your project to make them work.

  • TacticalCoder 23 days ago

    Then you've got ecosystems like Clojure where many projects are just considered done and used by many. You can pin these (and be warned if a new version still comes out, say for an actual security fix). There are Clojure projects so stable, without any know exploit (we're certainly not talking about daily npm exploits here), that haven't been updated in years because they are... Done. Simply done. Perfection.

    Something to reflect upon too.

  • voidfunc 23 days ago

    I'd really like to see package managers organized around rings where a very small core of incredibly important stuff is kept in ring 0, ring 1 gets a slightly wider amount of stuff and can only depend on ring 0 dependencies and then ring 2+ is the crapware libraries that infect most ecosystems.

    But maybe that's not the right fit either. The world where package managers are just open to whatever needs to die. It's no longer a safe model.

    • regularfry 23 days ago

      The OS distro model is actually the right one here. Upstream authors hate it, but having a layer that's responsible for picking versions out of the ecosystem and compiling an internally consistent grouping of known mutually-compatible versions that you can subscribe to means that a lot of the random churn just falls away. Once you've got that layer, you only need to be aware of security problems in the specific versions you care about, you can specifically patch only them, and you've got a distribution channel for the fixes where it's far more feasible to say "just auto-apply anything that comes via this route".

      That model effectively becomes your ring 1. Ring 0 is the stdlib and the package manager itself, and - because you would always need to be able to step outside the distribution for either freshness or "that's not been picked up by the distro yet" reasons - the ecosystem package repositories are the wild west ring 2.

      In the language ecosystems I'm only aware of Quicklisp/Ultralisp and Haskell's Stackage that work like this. Everything else is effectively a rolling distro that hasn't realised that's what it is yet.

    • swiftcoder 23 days ago

      In practice, "ring 0" is whatever gets merged into your language's standard library. Node and python both have pretty expansive standard libraries at this point, stepping outside of those is a choice

    • anakaine 23 days ago

      Malicious actor KPI: affect a Ring 0 package.

  • jonkoops 23 days ago

    > We have libraries like SQLite, which is a single .c file that you drag into your project

    You are just swapping a package manager with security by obscurity by copy pasting code into your project. It is arguably a much worse way of handling supply chain security, as now there is no way to audit your dependencies.

    > If you get rid of transitive dependencies, you get rid of the need of a package manager

    This argument makes no sense. Obviously reducing the amount of transitive dependencies is almost always a good thing, but it doesn't change the fundamental benefits of a package manager.

    > There's so many C libraries like this

    The language with the most fundamental and dangerous ways of handling memory, the language that is constantly in the news for numerous security problems even in massively popular libraries such as OpenSSL? Yes, definitely copy-paste that code in, surely nothing can go wrong.

    > They also bindings for every language under the sun. Rust libraries are very rarely used outside of Rust

    This is a WILD assumption, doing C-style bindings is actually quite common. YOu will of course then also be exposing a memory unsafe interface, as that is what you get with C.

    What exactly is your argument here? It feels like what you are trying to say is that we should just stop doing JS and instead all make C programs that copy paste massive libraries because that is somhow 'high quality'.

    This seems like a massively uninformed, one-sided and frankly ridiculous take.

    • nananana9 23 days ago

      > You are just swapping a package manager with security by obscurity by copy pasting code into your project

      You should try writing code, and not relying on libraries for everything, it may change how you look at programming and actually ground your opinions in reality. I'm staring at company's vendor/ folder. It has ~15 libraries, all but one of which operate on trusted input (game assets).

      > fundamental benefits of a package manager.

      I literally told you why they don't matter if you write code in a sane way.

      > doing C-style bindings is actually quite common

      I know bindings for Rust libraries exist. Read the literal words you quoted. "Rust libraries are very rarely used outside of Rust". Got some counterexamples?

  • pie_flavor 23 days ago

    Rust libraries are infrequently used outside of Rust because if you have the option, you'd just use Rust, not the ancient featureless language intrinsically responsible for 70% of all security issues. C libraries are infrequently used in Rust outside of system libc, for the same reason; I go and toggle the reqwest switch to use rustls every time, because OpenSSL is horrendous. This is also why you say 'rarely' instead of 'never', when a few years ago it was 'never'; a few years from now you'll say 'uncommonly', and so on. The reason C libraries are used is because you don't feel like reimplementing it yourself, and they are there; but that doesn't apply more to C libraries than Rust libraries, and the vast majority of crates.io wouldn't be usefully represented in C anyway, or would take longer to bind to than to rewrite. (No, nobody uses libcurl.) Finally, this only happens in NPM, and the Rust libraries you pull in are all high-quality. So this sounds like a bunch of handwaving about nonsense.

    • physicsguy 23 days ago

      Rust is terrible for pulling in hundreds of dependencies though. Add tokio as a dependency and you'll get well over 100 packages added to your project.

      • estebank 23 days ago

        Even side stepping that tokio no longer pulls multiple packages, it used to be split into multiple packages, in the same way that KDE in Rust would be hundreds of packages.

        Rust projects tend to take their project and split it into many smaller packages, for ease of development, faster compiles through parallelization, ensuring proper splitting of concerns, and allowing code reuse by others. But the packages are equivalent to a single big package. The people that write it are the same. They get developed in tandem and published at the same time. You can take a look at the del tree for ripgrep, and the split of different parts of that app allows me to reuse the regex engine without dealing with APIs that only make sense in the context of a CLI app or pulling in code I won't ever use (which might be hiding an exploit too).

        Counting 100 100 line long crates all by the same authors as inherently more dangerous than 1 10000 line long crate makes no sense to me.

        • SAI_Peregrinus 22 days ago

          It's worth noting that Rust packages (crates) are all single compilation units, and every compilation unit is a package. It's the equivalent of complaining that OpenSSL pulls in hundreds of `.c` files.

      • pie_flavor 23 days ago

        pin-project-lite is the only base dependency, which itself has no dependencies. If you enable the "full" feature, ie all optional doodads turned on (which you likely don't need), it's 17: bytes, cfg-if, errno, libc, mio, parking_lot+parking_lot_core+lock_api, pin-project-lite, proc_macro2+quote+syn+unicode-ident, scopeguard, signal-hook-registry, smallvec, and socket2. You let me know which ones you think are bloat that it should reimplement or bind to a C library about, and without the blatant fabrication this time.

  • Andrex 22 days ago

    Thought experiment: a language that enforces dependencies to be 2 levels deep or less.

    I wonder if dependencies would flatten out with this limitation in mind.

  • victorbjorklund 23 days ago

    I think you can do copy paste in most languages. But it will be a pain to update when there are improvements / security fixes.

    You got a project with 1-2 depencies? Sure. But if you need to bring in 100 different libs (because you bring in 10 libs which in turn brings in 10 libs) good luck.

    • skydhash 23 days ago

      > But if you need to bring in 100 different libs (because you bring in 10 libs which in turn brings in 10 libs

      So don’t?

      With manual deps management, everyone soon gravitates to a core set of deps. And libraries developer tends to reduce their deps needs, That’s why you see most C libraries deals with file formats, protocols, and broad concerns. Smaller algorithms can be shared with gists and blog articles.

      • habinero 23 days ago

        > Smaller algorithms can be shared with gists and blog articles

        You just invented a worse Stack Overflow.

        Using libraries is good, actually.

        • skydhash 22 days ago

          Like is-even or leftpad?

          • habinero 22 days ago

            Like requests and pytest and ruff and so on, yes.

            Rewriting the world to protect against a specific kind of threat is insane.

            • skydhash 22 days ago

              It's not there isn't good libraries everywhere. It just the practice around NPM that people are appalled with. It's all about lowering the barrier for developers, even in spite of security and quality.

crimsonnoodle58 23 days ago

Setting min-release age to 7 days is great, but the only true way to protect from supply chain attacks is restricting network access.

This needs to be done (as we've seen from these recent attacks) in your devenv, ci/cd and prod environments. Not one, or two, but all of these environments.

The easiest way is via using something like kubernetes network policies + a squid proxy to allow limited trusted domains through, and those domains must not be publicly controllable by attackers. ie. github.com is not safe to allow, but raw.githubusercontent.com would be as it doesn't allow data to be submitted to it.

Network firewalls that perform SSL interception and restrict DNS queries are an option also, though more complicated or expensive than the above.

This stops both DNS exfil and HTTP exfil. For your devenv, software like Little Snitch may protect your from these (I'm not 100% on DNS exfil here though). Otherwise run your devenv (ie vscode) as a web server, or containerised + vnc, a VM, etc, with the same restrictions.

  • nicce 23 days ago

    > Setting min-release age to 7 days is great, but the only true way to protect from supply chain attacks is restricting network access.

    Getting zero day patches 7 days later if no proper monitoring about important patches or if this specific patch is not in the important list. Always a tradeoff.

    • crimsonnoodle58 23 days ago

      Thats true. Setting to 7 days saves you from a supply chain attack, but opens you to zero days. Another example why network filtering is a better solution.

  • TacticalCoder 23 days ago

    > but raw.githubusercontent.com would be as it doesn't allow data to be submitted to it

    But raw.githubusercontent.com still contains code and now the attacker can publish the code he wants no!?

    Don't get me wrong: I love the idea to secure as much as possible. I'm running VMs and containerizing and I eat firewalling rules for breakfast, my own unbound DNS with hundreds of thousands (if not millions) of domains blocked, etc. I'm not the "YOLO" kind of guy.

    But I don't understand what's that different between raw.githubusercontent.com and github.com? Is it for exploits that are not directly in the source code? Can you explain a bit more?

    • crimsonnoodle58 22 days ago

      In the case of compromised code, the attacker has already loaded what he wants, so loading extra code from raw.githubusercontent.com is not the issue, or our threat model. We are already compromised!

      The issue is that code then extracting secrets and data from your organisation, ie. data exfil.

      raw.githubusercontent.com can not be used to submit data to, it's read only, but github.com obviously can.

      Note, if you really needed github.com access in your application or environment, then you need to use SSL interception (using squid or a firewall) and allow certain URLs and methods ie. GET requests only from your organisations path, to make it safe.

xinayder 23 days ago

Very detailed and props to the security researchers, but the blog post has several indicators that it was written by AI, to which point I suspect their malware analysis was also done by a LLM.

I just wish it had more human interaction rather than have a GenAI spit out the blog post. It's very repetitive and includes several EM dashes.

  • nicce 23 days ago

    It is harder and harder to trust any blog post anymore, the more AI there is. I used to read blog posts because of the personality and the precision level. Now both have been taken away.

    • rc_mob 23 days ago

      Yeah, 98% of blog posts only exist for SEO purposes and so most of that is of course written by LLM

  • efilife 22 days ago

    It was in part written by a LLM, but I believe some of the analysis was done by humans. You can just check where there's proper punctuation and em-dashes in the commented code

croemer 23 days ago

Has anyone else noticed there was a recent sudden flurry of 3000 deleted issues on axios/axios? The jump happened on March 23. Was this a first sign of compromise? Or just coincidence of an AI agent going rogue.

There are pretty much exactly 3000 deleted issues, with the range starting at https://github.com/axios/axios/issues/7547 (7547) and ending at https://github.com/axios/axios/issues/10546 (10546 which is 7547+2999)

Maybe just a coincidence but they have cubic-dev-ai edit every single PR with a summary. And that bot edits PR descriptions even for outside contributors.

  • croemer 22 days ago

    Maintainer replied here https://github.com/axios/axios/discussions/10612

    > nope this was just someone bombing the repo throught the API it seemd

    > i then just closed and deleted them with a script.. seems it is happening with a couple repos, blocked the users who were doing this

    I think it could well have been the attacker trying to hiding any notifications of suspicious activity (email address changed, suspicious login) in the flurry of issue related emails.

jmward01 23 days ago

This may not be popular, but is there a place for required human actions or just timed actions to slow down things like this? For instance, maybe a GH action to deploy requires a final human click and to change that to cli has a 3 day cooling period with mandatory security emails sent out. Similarly, you switch to read only for 6 hrs after an email change. There are holes in these ideas but the basic concept is to treat security more like physical security, your goal isn't always to 100% block but instead to slow an attacker for xxx minutes to give the rest of the team time to figure out what is going on.

  • ArcHound 23 days ago

    Hi, security here. We've tried, but the amount of people you need for this vs the amount of people you have trying to review and click the big button always means that this step will be a bottleneck. Thus this step will be eliminated.

    A much better approach would be to pin the versions used and do intentional updates some time after release, say a sprint after.

    • themafia 23 days ago

      Why not just release escrow? If I try to push a new release version another developer or developers have to agree to that release. In larger projects you would expect the release to be coordinated or scheduled anyways. Effectively we're just moving "version pinning" or "version delay" one layer up the release chain.

    • zbentley 23 days ago

      Pinning, escrowing, and trailing all help, but I'm not sure "this step will be eliminated" is inevitable.

      Package manager ecosystems are highly centralized. npm.org could require MFA (or rate limit, or email verification, or whatever) and most packagers would gripe but go along with this. A minority would look for npm competitors that didn't have this requirement, and another minority would hack/automate MFA and remove the added security, but the majority of folks would benefit from a centralized requirement of this sort.

      • ArcHound 22 days ago

        Let me rephrase - manual security verification is a velocity blocker. People won't do manual security verification of changes.

        I agree that npm.org requiring MFA is a good idea in general and in this case.

        • habinero 22 days ago

          Yup. As someone who's been on both the eng and security side, you cannot improve security by blocking the product bus. You're just going to get run over. Your job is to find ways of managing risk that work with the realities of software development.

          And before anyone gets upset about that, every engineering discipline has these kind of risk tradeoffs. You can't build a bridge that'll last 5,000 years and costs half of our GDP, even though that's "safer". You build a bridge that balances usage, the environment, and good stewardship of taxpayer money.

    • jmward01 23 days ago

      Yeah, I am looking at that on the use end. It sounds like on the python side this type of thing will be more standard (uv now and soon pip supported with version date requirements). I think time is a big missing element in many security in depth decisions. It can be time until you adopt like use no package newer than xx days or time it takes to deploy etc etc. Unfortunately the ecosystem is getting really diverse and that means ever more sophisticated attacks so we may need to do things that are annoying just to survive.

      • ArcHound 22 days ago

        Yes, that's why I recommend intentional updates. Planning at least a sprint later gives you a week or two, hoping the community catches such issues.

  • TZubiri 23 days ago

    lgtm (didn't read)

woeirua 23 days ago

Supply chain attacks are so scary that I think most companies are going to use agents to hard fork their own versions of a lot of these core libraries instead. It wasn’t practical before. It’s definitely much more doable today.

  • pglevy 23 days ago

    I was thinking about this as a bull case for human developers. Seems if you're worried enough to do this you're not going to have LLMs write the new code.

  • seanmarshall 16 days ago

    Once you fork it, you are then on the hook for forking every future update and security patch. You can automate a lot of the testing, but its still adding an extra failure point that you are now responsible for.

    And if you pin it, then when you inevitably get a CVE for an old version, the upgrade path is harder and more time consuming. And that's when the security teams come knocking to pass their audit.

  • samuelknight 23 days ago

    Large companies already maintain a clone of their packages. Very large ones actually bundle their own build system (Google Bazil, AWS Brazil). If you want to update a package, you have to fetch the sources and update the internal repository. It slows down the opportunities for a supply chain attack down to a crawl.

  • cryptonym 23 days ago

    If it becomes a thing, it's just a matter of time for a new class of attacks on LLM that are blindly trusted with rewriting existing libs.

  • silverwind 23 days ago

    Even better would be to not use so many libs. Most use cases will do fine with native `fetch`.

  • Levitating 23 days ago

    Or just lock to a specific version?

    • silverwind 23 days ago

      Eventually you will want to update it, every update is a risk.

      • SkyPuncher 23 days ago

        But, pinning has prevented most of the recent supply chain attacks.

        As long as you don't update your pins during an active supply chain attack, the risk surface is rather low.

        • habinero 22 days ago

          The flip side of that is now you're running old software and CVEs get published all the time. Threat actors actively scan the internet looking for software that's vulnerable to new CVEs.

red_admiral 23 days ago

There's a package manager discussion, but the bit that stands out to me is that this started with a credential compromise. At some point when a project gets big enough like axios, maybe the community could chip in to buy the authors a couple of YubiHSM or similar. I wish that _important keys live in hardware_ becomes more standard given the stakes.

Dealing with dependencies is another question; if it's stupid stuff like leftpad then it should be either vendored in or promoted to be a language feature anyway (as it has been).

  • embedding-shape 23 days ago

    > At some point when a project gets big enough like axios, maybe the community could chip in to buy the authors a couple of YubiHSM or similar

    I kind of feel like the authors here should want that for themselves, before the community would even realize it's needed. I can't say I've worked on packages that are as popular as axios, but once some packages we were publishing hit 10K downloads or so, we all agreed that we needed to up our security posture, and we all got hardware keys for 2FA and spent 1-2 weeks on making sure it was as bullet-proof we could make it.

    To be fair, most FOSS is developed by volunteers so I understand not wanting to spend any money on something you provide for free, but on the other hand, I personally wouldn't feel comfortable being responsible for something that popular without hardening my own setup as much as I could, even if it means stopping everything for a week.

    • Rastonbury 23 days ago

      I thought npm started requiring hardware keys for publish, or may have been new accounts only

  • filleokus 23 days ago

    Totally agree.

    Also, considering how prevalent TPM/Secure Enclaves are on modern devices, I would guess most package maintainers already have hardware capable of generating/using signing keys that never leave hardware.

    I think it is mostly a devex/workflow question.

    Considering the recent ci/cd-pipeline compromises, I think it would make sense to make a two phase commit process required for popular packages. Build and upload to the registry from a pipeline, but require a signature from a hardware resident key before making the package available.

  • rjmunro 23 days ago

    Most of axios' functionality has effectively been promoted to a language feature as `fetch`, but the problem is people don't bother to migrate. I've migrated our direct usage of it but it's still pulled in transitively in several parts of our codebase.

    Even left-pad is still getting 1.6 million weekly downloads.

    • embedding-shape 23 days ago

      Annoyingly, the times I reach for axios and similar is when I need to keep track of upload progress, which I could only do with XMLHttpRequest, not fetch, unless I've missed some recent browser changes, and the API of XMLHttpRequest remains as poor as the first times I had to use it. Download progress been supported by fetch since you can track chunks yourself, but somehow they didn't think to do that for requests for some reason, only responses.

  • TZubiri 23 days ago

    >maybe the community could chip in to buy the authors a couple of YubiHSM

    There's no community, the users of axios are devs that looked at stackoverflow for "how to download a file in javascript", they barely know or care what axios is.

    Now the users of axios are devs that ask Claude Code or Codex to scrape a website or make a dashboard, they don't even know about the word axios.

    I personally had to delete axios a couple of time from my codebase when working with junior devs.

  • pamcake 23 days ago

    Or those people can (fund) separate repackaging and redistribution with more stringent and formalized review process.

    Maybe not all users should pull all packages straight from what devs are pushing.

    There's no reason we can't have "node package distributions" like we have Linux distributions. Maybe we should stop expecting devs and maintainers and Microsoft to take responsibility for our supply-chain.

mr_bob_sacamano 22 days ago

# If you have a projects folder containing multiple projects on macOS, you can run this script to recursively scan all subfolders for vulnerable axios versions and the presence of plain-crypto-js, helping you quickly identify potentially affected projects:

find . -name "package.json" -exec sh -c ' dir=$(dirname "{}") echo "==== $dir ====" cd "$dir" npm list axios 2>/dev/null | grep -E "1\.14\.1|0\.30\.4" grep -A1 "\"axios\"" package-lock.json 2>/dev/null | grep -E "1\.14\.1|0\.30\.4" [ -d node_modules/plain-crypto-js ] && echo "POTENTIALLY AFFECTED" ' \;

acheong08 23 days ago

There are so many scanners these days these things get caught pretty quick. I think we need either npm or someone else to have a registry that only lets through packages that pass these scanners. Can even do the virustotal thing of aggregating reports by multiple scanners. NPM publishes attestation for trusted build environments. Google has oss-rebuild.

All it takes is an `npm config set` to switch registries anyways. The hard part is having a central party that is able to convince all the various security companies to collaborate rather than having dozens of different registries each from each company.

Rather than just a hard-coded delay, I think having policies on what checks must pass first makes sense with overrides for when CVEs show up.

(WIP)

  • drum55 23 days ago

    The ones you hear about are caught quickly, I’m more worried about the non obvious ones. So far none of these have been as simple as changing a true to a false and bypassing all auth for all products or something, and would that be caught by an automated scanner?

    • acheong08 23 days ago

      There are definitely levels to this. Yes I think it can be caught by automated scanners in theory. Either commit by commit scanning and reproducible builds or fuzzing and getting the behavioral differences between versions

  • pamcake 23 days ago

    Sounds great until trivy images get compromised, like last week.

    • acheong08 23 days ago

      Hence why you source data from multiple vendors I'd say. Rather than putting all eggs in one basket

mcintyre1994 23 days ago

The frustrating thing here is that axios versions display on npmjs with verified provenance. But they don’t use trusted publishing: https://github.com/axios/axios/issues/7055 - meaning the publish token can be stolen.

I wrongly thought that the verified provenance UI showed a package has a trusted publishing pipeline, but seems it’s orthogonal.

NPM really needs to move away from these secrets that can be stolen.

majorbugger 23 days ago

Good morning, or as they say in the NPM world, which package got compromised today?

riteshkew1001 23 days ago

Ran npm ci --ignore-scripts in our CI for months but never thought about local dev. Turns out that's the gap, your CI is safe but your laptop runs postinstall on every npm install.

The anti-forensics here are much more complicated that I had imagined. Sahring after getting my hands burned.

After the RAT deploys, setup.js deletes itself and swaps package.json with a clean stub. Your node_modules looks fine. Only way to know is checking for artifacts: /Library/Caches/com.apple.act.mond on mac, %PROGRAMDATA%\wt.exe on windows, /tmp/ld.py on linux. Or grep network logs for sfrclak.com.

Somehow noboady is worried about how agentic coding tools run npm install autonomously. No human in the loop to notice a weird new transitive dep. That attack surface is just getting worsened day by day.

TheTaytay 23 days ago

I know there is a cooldown period for npm packages, but I’m beginning to want a cooldown for domains too. According to socket, the C2 server is sfrclak[.]com, which was registered in the last 24 hours.

yoyohello13 23 days ago

This is just going to get worse and worse as agentic coding gets better. I think having a big dependency tree may be a thing of the past in the coming years. Seems like eventually new malware will be coming out so fast it will basically be impossible to stop.

Bridged7756 23 days ago

At this point picking Node for a backend is a foot gun. Large companies have the funds for private, security vetted npm repositories, but what about small companies, startups, personal projects? Pnpm makes things more secure without install scripts, mininum package time, but it's still the same activity, does an extra parachute make skydiving any less inherently dangerous?

I'm not dogmatic about the whole "JS for the backend is sin" from backend folks, but it seems like it was the right call. You should stick to large org backed packages, or languages with good enough standard libraries, like Go, Java, Python, C#.

raphinou 23 days ago

I'm working on a multi signature solution that helps to detect unauthorized releases in the case of an account hijack. It is open source, self hostable, accountless and I am looking for feedback!

Website: https://asfaload.com/

GitHub:https://github.com/asfaload/asfaload

Spec: https://github.com/asfaload/spec

Hackbraten 23 days ago

I am now migrating all my unencrypted secrets on my machines to encrypted ones. If a tool supports scripted credential providers (e.g. aws-cli or Ansible), I use that feature. Otherwise, I wrap the executable with a script that runs gpg --decrypt and injects an environment variable.

That way, I can at least limit the blast radius when (not if) I catch an infostealer.

6thbit 23 days ago

I don’t buy the “wait 7 days” being thrown around as a guard.

Wouldn’t that just encourage the bad actors to delay the activation of their payloads a few days or even remotely activated on a switch?

  • roflcopter69 23 days ago

    Of course the "wait 7 days" are not a silver bullet, but it gives automated scanners plenty of time to do their work. Those automated scanners surely catch this `eval(base64.decode("..."))` stuff that some of those attacks used so in my book this dependency cooldown is a net win. I guess the skilled malicious actors will then up their game but I think it's okay to kick off an arms race between them and the security scanners in the dependency world.

    • 6thbit 23 days ago

      That's a good point. In some level I'd prefer the delay to happen on publication of the package itself. Do any of these scanners have cryptographic attestations or similar?

marjipan200 23 days ago

Incident tracking:

https://github.com/axios/axios/issues/10604

rawgabbit 22 days ago

CNN reports it was North Korean hackers. https://lite.cnn.com/2026/03/31/politics/north-korea-hacking...

  • 40four 20 days ago

    That’s probably the most interesting part of this whole story and it’s nowhere to be found here

dryarzeg 23 days ago

(A bit off-topic; half-joking, half-serious)

What a great time to be alive! Now, that's exactly why I enjoy writing software with minimal dependencies for myself (and sometimes for my family and friends) in my spare time - first, it's fun, and second, turns out it's more secure.

  • SoftTalker 23 days ago

    This only limits the possibility of compromise, it doesn't remove it. Python itself could be compromised, or the package that your linux distro provides could be.

    With AI agents the volume and frequency of supply chain attacks is going to explode. I think our entire notion of how to develop and distribute software safely needs to change. I don't have answers; "reflections on trusting trust" explains the difficulties we now face.

pjmlp 23 days ago

The amount of people still using this instead of fetch. Nonetheless when wasn't axios, it would be something else.

This is why corporations doing it right don't allow installing the Internet into dev machines.

Yet everyone gets to throw their joke about PC virus, while having learnt nothing from it.

  • tgv 23 days ago

    Axios has a long history, and is included in a lot of code, also in indirect dependencies. Just check its npm page: it has 174025 dependents as of this moment, including a lot of new packages (I see openclaw and mcp related packages in the list).

    And with LLMs generating more and more code, the risk of copying old setups increases.

  • shevy-java 23 days ago

    > The amount of people still using this instead of fetch.

    People are lazy. And sometimes they find old stuff via a google search and use that.

pier25 23 days ago

PSA from the Claude Code leaks it looks like it's using Axios (although an older version)

aa-jv 23 days ago

I have a few projects which rely on npm (and react) and every few months I have to revisit them to do an update and make sure they still build, and I am basically done with npm and the entire ecosystem at this point.

Sure, its convenient to have so much code to use for basic functionality - but the technical debt of having to maintain these projects is just too damn high.

At this point I think that, if I am forced to use javascript or node for a project, I reconsider involvement in that project. Its ecosystem is just so bonkers I can't justify the effort much longer.

There has to be some kind of "code-review-as-a-service" that can be turned on here to catch these things. Its just so unproductive, every single time.

fluxist 23 days ago

A command to recursively check for the compromised axios package version:

   find / -path '*/node_modules/axios/package.json' -type f 2>/dev/null | while read -l f; set -l v (grep -oP '"version"\s*:\s\*"\K(1\.14\.1|0\.30\.4)' $f 2>/dev/null); if test -n "$v"; printf '\a\n\033[1;31m FOUND v%s\033[0m  \033[1;33m%s\033[0m\n' $v (string replace '/package.json' '' -- $f); else; printf '\r\033[2m scanning: %s\033[K\033[0m' (string sub -l 70 -- $f); end; end; printf '\r\033[K\n\033[1;32m scan complete\033[0m\n'
  • hk__2 23 days ago

    Or more simply:

        find / -type f -path '*/node_modules/axios/package.json' \
            -exec grep -Pl '"version"\s*:\s*"(1\.14\.1|0\.30\.4)"' {} + 2>/dev/null
    
    Let’s not encourage people to respond to security incidents by… copy/pasting random commands they don’t understand.
  • skydhash 23 days ago

    What’s with all those escapes codes?

    • sph 23 days ago

      script kiddies love their ANSI color codes and fancy ASCII art

koolba 23 days ago

> Both versions were published using the compromised npm credentials of a lead axios maintainer, bypassing the project's normal GitHub Actions CI/CD pipeline.

Doesn’t npm mandate 2FA as of some time last year? How was that bypassed?

Surac 23 days ago

All these supply chain attacks make me nervous about the apps I use. It would be valuable info if an app used such dependencies, but on the other hand, programmers would cut their sales if they gave you this info.

zar1048576 23 days ago

In case it helps, we open-sourced a tool to audit dependencies for this kind of supply-chain issue. The motivation was that there is a real gap between classic “known vulnerability” scanning and packages whose behavior has simply turned suspicious or malicious. We also use AI to analyze code and dependency changes for more novel or generic malicious behavior that traditional scanners often miss.

Project: https://point-wild.github.io/who-touched-my-packages/

bluepeter 23 days ago

Min release age sucks, but we’ve been here before. Email attachments used to just run wild too, then everyone added quarantine delays and file blocking and other frictions... and it eventually kinda/sorta worked. This does feel worse, though, with fewer chokepoints and execution as a natural part of the expectation.

Edit: bottom line is installs are gonna get SOOO much more complicated. You can already see the solution surface... Cooling periods, maintainer profiling, sandbox detonation, lockfile diffing, weird publish path checks. All adds up to one giant PITA for fast easy dev.

  • mayama 23 days ago

    Min release age might just postpone vulnerability to be applied few days later in non trivial cases like this. More I think about it, Odin lang approach of no package manager makes senses. But, for that approach won't work for Javascript as it needs npm package even for trivial things. Even vendoring approach like golang won't work with Javascript with the amount of churn and dependencies.

    • tisc 23 days ago

      It does not _need_ it, that’s the thing. It has become a custom to import a dependency for a lot of things. Especially for JavaScript.

tonymet 23 days ago

1/5 of your CLI and 1/3 of your gui apps are npm based. Each one has 400+ dependencies , none notable enough to go viral when they are breached. And who knows what other packages are currently compromised. We all have 30+ node_modules on our disks, and 2/3 of them were shipped by outside vendors , packaged in an archive.

“I’m smart I use fetch instead of axios”. “I pin my versions” – sure but certainly one of your npx or Electron apps uses axios or another less notably compromised package.

Let’s

wolvesechoes 23 days ago

I am glad I don't need to touch JS or web dev at all.

Now, I tend to use Python, Rust and Julia. With Python I am constantly using few same packages like numpy and matplotlib. With Rust and Julia, I try as much as possible to not use any packages at all, because it always scares me when something that should be pretty simple downloads half of the Internet to my PC.

Julia is even worse than Rust in that regard - for even rudimentary stuff like static arrays or properly namespaced enums people download 3rd party packages.

  • someguyornotidk 23 days ago

    Isn't Rust just as susceptible to this issue? For example, how do you deal with Rust's lack of support for HTTP in the standard library? Importing hyper pulls in a couple dozen transitive libraries which exposes you to the exact same kind of threats that compromised axios.

    Given how HTTP is now what TCP was during the 90s and almost all modern networked applications needing to communicate in it one way or another, most rust projects come with an inherent security risk.

    These days, I score the usability of programming languages by how complete their standard library is. By that measure, Rust and Javascript get an automatic F.

    • wolvesechoes 23 days ago

      It is, therefore I have stated I avoid any dependencies while writing Rust, unless they are self-contained. And I said I am glad I don't do web, so I don't have need for HTTP implementations.

  • hu3 23 days ago

    It's mind boggling when a simple Rust app pulls in Serde and with it half a black hole worth of packages to serialize some mundane JSON.

twodave 23 days ago

How is it we've made it this far and we still don't have any kind of independent auditing of basic publish security on NPM? You'd think this would be collectively a trivial and high priority task (to ensure that all publishes for packages over a certain download volume are going through a session that authenticated via MFA, for instance).

  • philipwhiuk 23 days ago

    > You'd think this would be collectively a trivial and high priority task (to ensure that all publishes for packages over a certain download volume are going through a session that authenticated via MFA, for instance).

    Because all mainstream packages are published via CI/CD pipeline not by an MFA'd individual uploading a GZIP to npm.com

    • zbentley 23 days ago

      Requiring a human-in-the-loop for final, non-prerelease publication doesn't seem like that onerous of a burden. Even if you're publishing multiple releases a day on the regular (in which case ... I have questions, but anyway) there are all sorts of automations that stay secure while reducing the burden of having to manually download an artifact from CI, enter MFA, and upload it by hand.

    • twodave 22 days ago

      You can still have a step that requires a certain user/group to sign off, and you can still enforce that those users have MFA set up. Almost any serious shop that expects to pass audits already does this in some form or fashion before pushing code to prod.

cleansy 23 days ago

To have an initial smoke test, why not run a diff between version upgrades, and potentially let an llm summarise the changes? It’s a baffling practice that a lot of developers are just blindly trusting code repos to keep the security standards. Last time I installed some npm package (in a container) it loaded 521 dependencies and my heart rate jumped a bit

  • dj_mc_merlin 23 days ago

    Is this the first time you have ever thought about the idea of supply chain attacks? This is the first thought 90% of people have and it doesn't work. Too much work to manually verify diffs and LLMs aren't good enough at this yet.

    • cleansy 22 days ago

      No, I think about it all the time. It’s just baffling that this kind of attack is still a thing, after a decade+ of this happening over and over again.

      • habinero 22 days ago

        Why is it baffling? It's like saying "why do we still have outages". Well, yes.

lepuski 23 days ago

I believe compartmentalized operating systems like Qubes are the future for defending against these kinds of attacks.

Storing your sensitive data on a single bare-metal OS that constantly downloads and runs packages from unknown maintainers is like handing your house key out to a million people and hoping none of them misuse it.

  • lukewarm707 23 days ago

    i am rolling back a huge number of 'features' in my personal pc and going back to extremely miminal setups

    the security solution i have is where it needs to become more simple, getting rid of attack surface that is coming out of these bloated releases

carlbarrdahl 23 days ago

Many of the suggestions in this thread (min-release, ignore script) are defenses for the consumers.

I've been working on Proof of Resilience, a set of 4 metrics for OSS, and using that as a scoring oracle for what to fund.

Popularity metrics like downloads, stars, etc are easy to fake today with ai agents. An interesting property is that gaming these metrics produces better code, not worse.

These are the 4 metrics:

1. Build determinism - does the published artifact match a reproducible build from source?

2. Fuzzing survival - does the package survive fuzz testing?

3. Downstream stability - does it break any repos dependent on this project when pushing a release?

4. Patch velocity - how fast are fixes merged?

Here's a link to the post, still early but would appreciate any feedback.

https://hackmd.io/@carlb/proof-of-resilience

  • Imustaskforhelp 23 days ago

    Carl, with all due respect, have you used AI for making this hackmd post?

    "it's not just a waste of money — it's a security problem"

    I am really passionate about these things, but I am not going to read something which you haven't written. Even sharing a prompt/rough-sketches/raw-writing might be beneficial but I recommend writing it by-hand man, we are all burnt out reading AI slop, I can't read more AI

    • carlbarrdahl 23 days ago

      You're right, I used an LLM to help write it from sketches. Gonna rewrite it properly because I think the ideas are worth exploring. Thanks for taking the time to read and reply.

      • Imustaskforhelp 22 days ago

        In my opinion, its okay to use LLM to help find some sources and then validating them (but I also recommend using hand researching too as you might find some good things that you maybe weren't even looking for!)

        but, please don't use LLM to help write it from sketches. Even show the sketch :)

        Much of my writing is very sketch-y. Some people don't like it, but its mine and I am proud of it and I hope that even if you write sketches/refine them, you can be comfortable sharing your ideas in your words in the way you wish to write them carl!

        My thinking is that, I improve my writing by well... practice itself. So I write publically and there are some thoughts which occur in my head during the writing process itself (PG has a good article about it recently)

        In a world of AI, to me, Human writing is a breath of fresh air. Please don't fall into the rabbit-hole that you might need LLM to help write you.

        These are just my 2 cents though, but I feel like I am definitely not alone in thinking so.

        Have a nice day and I am looking forward for you to write the article yourself. Feel free to share me when you do with my mail as I would love to read it, as I am also passionate about the funding of open source :)

tonymet 23 days ago

Has anyone tested general purpose malware detection on supply chains ? Like clamscan . I tried to test the LiteLLM hack but the affected packages had been pulled. Windows Defender AV has an inference based detector that may work when signatures have not yet been published

  • Imustaskforhelp 23 days ago

    > tried to test the LiteLLM hack but the affected packages had been pulled

    Hey, I have been part of the archival effect/Litellm issue thread. I think I have stored them in archive.org for preservation purposes

    https://web.archive.org/web/20260325073027/https://files.pyt...

    (I have also made an archive of the github issue with all the comments manually till a certain point at https://web.archive.org/web/20260325054202/https://serjaimel...)

    • tonymet 21 days ago

      the primitive clamscan experiment worked! it detected Txt.Trojan.TeamPCP-10059839-1 from the .tar.gz archive. I'll continue testing to see if it's viable

         # apk add clamav-scanner freshclam
         # freshclam
         # curl -LO https://web.archive.org/web/20260325073027/https://files.pythonhosted.org/packages/f6/2c/731b614e6cee0bca1e010a36fd381fba69ee836fe3cb6753ba23ef2b9601/litellm-1.82.8.tar.gz
      
          # clamscan litellm-1.82.8.tar.gz
         Loading:     6s, ETA:   0s [========================>]    3.63M/3.63M sigs
         Compiling:   2s, ETA:   0s [========================>]       41/41 tasks
      
         /root/supply-chain-scanner/pkg/litellm-1.82.8.tar.gz: Txt.Trojan.TeamPCP-10059839-1 FOUND
      
         ----------- SCAN SUMMARY -----------
         Known viruses: 3627757
         Engine version: 1.4.4
         Scanned directories: 0
         Scanned files: 1
         Infected files: 1
         Data scanned: 94.98 MB
         Data read: 16.59 MB (ratio 5.72:1)
         Time: 50.057 sec (0 m 50 s)
         Start Date: 2026:04:01 19:57:23
         End Date:   2026:04:01 19:58:13
    • tonymet 21 days ago

      thanks for highlighting that i will take a look and see if there's similar archive for the other vulnerabilities as well .

      If i can make it work with clamscan & MS Defender i'll run a scan and try to report back

      • Imustaskforhelp 21 days ago

        Glad to see that Clamscan experiment worked. Keep me updated on the continued testing and I am glad that my archival efforts are appreciated :)

        • tonymet 21 days ago

          absolutely massive help. i love HN community and thanks. If you do see an archive of axios or other compromised artifacts, please send those my way for continued testing. i'm going to test automation and see if this actually has utility.

  • jesse_dot_id 23 days ago

    I second this question. I usually scan our containers with snyk and guarddog, and have wondered about guarddog in particular because it adds so much build time.

  • esseph 23 days ago

    > Has anyone tested general purpose malware detection on supply chains ? Like clamscan

    You could use Trivy! /s

bodash 23 days ago

Some great tips in this thread and I've been collecting them all at https://github.com/bodadotsh/npm-security-best-practices

mtudOP 23 days ago

Supply chain woes continue

anthk 23 days ago

Guix saves you from this. You can import NPM packages in a container (not even touching $HOME) and giving you a shell on the spot with just the dependencies and nothing more.

Learn about 'guix import'.

Oh, and you can install Guix on any GNU/Linux distro.

OlivOnTech 23 days ago

The attacker went through the hassle to compromise a very widely used package, but use a non standard port (8000) on their C2... If you plan to do something like that, use 443 at least, many corporate network do not filter this one ;)

george_max 23 days ago

With all the recent supply chain attacks, I'm starting to think it's only a matter of time before all of us are victims. I think this is a sign to manually check all package diffs or postinstall scripts.

jruohonen 23 days ago

So the root cause was again a developer's opsec. For improving things, I haven't seen many new initiatives on that side (beyond 2FA, but even that seems unenforced in these repositories, I reckon).

aizk 23 days ago

In light of these nonstop supply chain attacks: Tonight I created /supply-chain-audit -- A simple claude code skill that fetches info on the latest major package vulnerability, then scans your entire ~/ and gives you a report on all your projects.

https://github.com/IsaacGemal/claude-skills

It's a bit janky right now but I'd be interested to hear what people think about it.

hyperadvanced 23 days ago

Just sanity checking - if I only ever install axios in a container that has no secrets mounted in to its env, is there any real way I can get pwned by this kind of thing?

chrisldgk 22 days ago

My main question here is mostly why so many people still rely on axios for their fetch implementation. Native fetch has been a thing in the JavaScript world for so long, and the DX gains to using axios over it are miniscule. The only thing I can think of is axios instances, but you can easily write a tiny wrapper for fetch that would do the same.

This is a genuine question - if you still use axios, why exactly?

Imustaskforhelp 23 days ago

If someone from github is reading this, https://github.com/axios/axios/issues/10604#issuecomment-416...

I think that jason might like if someone from github team can contact them as soon as possible.

(8 minutes ago at the time of writing)

SEJeff 22 days ago

https://docs.npmjs.com/trusted-publishers/#recommended-restr... This helps mitigate spear phished privileges employees pushing hacked npm packages entirely.

malikolivier 23 days ago

This is exactly to avoid this kind of issue that I decided to work on StableBuild. StableBuild pins and hosts a copy of your dependencies at a specific freeze date, so that your supply chain is never contaminated. This way, a compromised version published after your freeze date (even with the same version number!) would never reach your build.

robshippr 22 days ago

Three hours between the malicious publish and npm pulling the versions. If your CI ran an install during that window, this went straight to prod. Most teams I've worked with still have loose version ranges somewhere in their dependency tree even if they think they've locked everything down.

dhruv3006 23 days ago

174025 dependents.

Ciantic 23 days ago

NPM should learn from Linux distribution package managers.

Have a branch called testing, and packages stay in testing for few weeks, after which they go to stable. That is how many Linux distributions handle packages. It would have prevented many of these.

Advising every user of npm/pnpm to change their settings and set their own cooldown periods is not a real choice.

  • Levitating 23 days ago

    Not all distributions work with a staging repository, and it's not really intended for this purpose either.

    Besides there's always a way to immediately push a new version to stable repositories. You have to in order to deal with regressions and security fixes.

    • Ciantic 23 days ago

      I know not all, but Debian/Ubuntu/Fedora does, and while the intended purpose of multi-stage releases is not necessarily security but stability, it still does help up with security too. Because third parties can look and scan the dependencies while they are still not in stable.

      Most of the supply chain vulnerabilities that ended up in the NPM would have been mitigated with having mandatory testing / stable branches, of course there needs to be some sort of way to skip the testing but that would be rather rare and cumbersome and audited, like it is in Linux distributions too.

  • ivanjermakov 23 days ago

    NPM is one big AUR, where anyone can submit arbitrary unverified code. The difference is that AUR is intentionally harder to use to prevent catastrophic one-line installs.

    • Levitating 23 days ago

      Is a "AUR" now just how we name unaudited software repositories?

      Just to note, if we're talking about Linux Distributions. There's also COPR in Fedora, OBS for OpenSUSE (and a bunch of other stuff, OBS is awesome), Ubuntu has PPAs. And I am sure there's many more similar solutions.

shahmeern 23 days ago

Script to check if you've been pwnd if anyone needs it (or just ask an llm to make one for you): https://gist.github.com/shamwow/93101381686f23d21a85da4bac5b...

aeneas_ory 20 days ago

I wrote a tool that helps you check if your machine was compromised: https://github.com/aeneasr/was-i-axios-pwned

shevy-java 23 days ago

NPM gets worse than russian roulette. Perhaps we have to rename russian roulette to node roulette: noulette.

0xbadcafebee 23 days ago

We're going to see this more and more and more. And it's not going to stop. Because nobody in the industry will use the simplest, industry-standard security practices. Because they don't feel like it. A software building code is the only thing that'll fix it.

summitwebaudit 22 days ago

The postinstall script vector is getting all the attention, but IMO the scarier part is how the attacker chain works: compromise one package's credentials, use that access to pivot to the next target. Trivy -> LiteLLM -> now potentially axios. Each compromised package becomes a credential harvester for the next round.\n\nThe min-release-age configs (now in npm, pnpm, bun, uv) are a good start, but they only work as herd immunity — you need enough early adopters installing fresh releases to trigger detection before the 7-day window expires for everyone else. It's basically a bet that security researchers will catch it faster than your cooldown period.\n\nFor Node specifically: if you're still using axios for new projects, it's worth asking why. Native fetch has been stable in Node since v21. One less dependency in your tree is one less attack surface.

neya 23 days ago

I wonder if this has any connection with the recent string of attacks including the FBI director getting hacked. The attack surface is large, executed extremely cleanly - almost as if done by a high profile state sponsored actor, just like in Hollywood movies.

_pdp_ 23 days ago

I am not saying this is the reason for this compromise but the sudden explosion of coding assistant like claude code, and tools like openclaw is teaching entire crop of developers (and users) that it is ok to have sensitive credentials .env files.

darepublic 23 days ago

I used axios in the distant past but haven't used it whenever I had my say in the past five years. You don't need it, and for special things like retries I could roll my own just fine. Now ai will roll it for you

1970-01-01 23 days ago

Is this Jia Tan 5.0? I've lost count. You really should stop trusting packages (implicitly). Or don't. It's your funeral, not mine. See you at Jia Tan 6.0 April?

  • __jonas 23 days ago

    Not at all, it was a regular maintainer account that was hijacked (probably through phishing) and used to push a malicious payload, not a threat actor posing as a contributor and adding a backdoor like in the Jia Tan case.

    • 1970-01-01 23 days ago

      I use Jia Tan as a figurehead for malicious maintainers. This clearly was a targeted hack. Does it really matter how long it took to get the job done?

      • __jonas 23 days ago

        I'd argue this has not much in common with Jia Tan apart from both being supply chain attacks, there is no malicious maintainer here, a trusted maintainer had their account taken over.

        I guess the end result is the same, a malicious package pushed by an account that was thought to be trusted, but I think the Jia Tan case is worth being looked at differently than just simple account takeover.

        • 1970-01-01 22 days ago

          It's just a longer backstory. All the same in the end. Hackers targeted a popular package. The lead maintainer was compromised. The pattern fits. There will be more of these.

6thbit 23 days ago

> published manually via a stolen npm access token with no OIDC binding and no gitHead

So this and litellm one would’ve been preventable by proper config of OIDC Trusted Publishers.

asen_not_taken 21 days ago

Axios has been one of my favorite libraries for over a decade. However, I must say I have never used it since starting vibe coding.

Blackthorn 23 days ago

Do we have a way yet to tell if something on our system is compromised? There's plenty of end user software built on node, like Gemini CLI and LM Studio.

flerchin 23 days ago

Ok it's bad, but our npm projects are pinned in the package-lock.json, which I imagine most would be? So who would pull this besides security scanners?

  • croemer 23 days ago

    `npm install` might be enough to pull it, unless you pin down to the patch?

    • flerchin 23 days ago

      I don't think that's right if it's in your package-lock it wouldn't pull it unless you npm update axios, or delete the package-lock.json and then npm install.

OsrsNeedsf2P 23 days ago

Updating my packages feels like playing Russian Roulette

stevenmh 23 days ago

This is why Node.js is completely unsuitable as backend. Until recently, there wasn’t even a standard Promise-based HTTP client. Why should we need to download a library just to make a simple HTTP request? It’s because Node.js’s standard library is too limited, leading to an explosive growth in third-party libraries. As a result, it’s vulnerable to security attacks, and maintaining it in an enterprise environment becomes a major challenge. Let’s use .NET or Go. Why use JavaScript outside of the browser when there are excellent backend environments out there?

K0IN 22 days ago

So here is the pitch: for npm / a new registry

1. Only the registry itself can build packages (only source provided) 2. Builds must be reproducable (no network or external files during build / publish) 3. New versions are hidden by default 4. Releases can only be published by an account, using a hardware 2fa token + password (no persistent login, no long lasting token) 5. All commits must be signed (maybe block web commits or add a cooldown of a few days?) 6. builtin scanners (using ai, virustotal, existing services) 7. if a security violation is found the version is instantly removed 8. Atleast 1 - 3 Days delay for releases 9. Hard no on binaries / post install scripts and binary data 10. blockchain like public record to see who published, updated, owns what

neya 23 days ago

The NPM ecosystem is a joke. I don't even want anything to do with it, because my stack is fully Elixir. But, just because of this one dependency that is used in some interfaces within my codebase, I need to go back to all my apps and fix it. Sigh.

JavaScript, its entire ecosystem is just a pack of cards, I swear. What a fucking joke.

TZubiri 23 days ago

I've been saying for ages, use xmlhttprequest, or hell, even fetch().

Stop downloading code from the internet unless it's a major strategic decision.

croemer 23 days ago

I'm impressed how this was caught as a network anomaly in a GitHub actions monitoring tool.

This might have taken a lot longer to discover, otherwise.

twodave 23 days ago

Can we get a non-AI-generated article for this? I think the aikido one might be fine, but if there’s a more official source let’s use that in lieu of this AI nonsense.

pagecalm 22 days ago

This is the part that's tough — we push everyone to keep dependencies updated and automate it with Renovate or Dependabot, but that's exactly the pipeline that would have pulled this in before anyone noticed. Lockfiles and pinning help slow it down, but most teams pair those with automated update PRs which kind of negates the point. You can reduce your dependency surface area to lower the odds but one compromised maintainer on a top-10 package and none of that matters.

samuelknight 23 days ago

Absolute wave of supply chain attacks recently. Hopefully this causes everyone to tighten up their dependencies and update policies.

rtpg 23 days ago

Please can we just have a 2FA step on publishing? Do we really need a release to be entirely and fully automated?

It won't stop all attacks but definitely would stop some of these

Kinrany 23 days ago

Running almost anything via npx will trigger this

mkdelta221 22 days ago

This is the second major npm supply chain attack this year and the playbook is identical every time: hijack a maintainer account, publish via CLI to bypass CI/CD, inject a dependency nobody's heard of.

The fix isn't better scanning (though Socket catching it in 6 minutes is impressive). The fix is npm making Trusted Publishers mandatory for packages above a download threshold. If axios can only be published through GitHub Actions OIDC, a stolen password is useless.

We run a fleet of AI agents that depend on npm packages. First thing we did tonight was audit every lockfile. Clean — but only because we aggressively minimise dependencies. The real victims here are the thousands of teams who npm install with ^ ranges and never check what changed.

Willish42 23 days ago

> This was not opportunistic. It was precision. The malicious dependency was staged 18 hours in advance.

Another obvious ChatGPT-ism. The fact that people are using AI to write these security posts doesn't surprise me, but the fact they use it to write a verbose article with spicy little snippets that LLMs seem to prefer does make it really hard to appreciate anything other than the simple facts in the article.

Yet another case in point for "do your own writing" (https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=47573519)

webprofusion 23 days ago

My first thought was does VS Code Insiders use it (or anything it relies on, or do any extensions etc). Made me think.

dinakernel 23 days ago

Default setting latest should be caught in every static code scanner. How many times has this issue been raised.

kjok 23 days ago

Curious to know why are coding agents not detecting such risks before importing dependencies?

  • mayhemducks 22 days ago

    I'm assuming you are talking about agents like claude-code and open-code which rely on GPT functions (AKA Large Language Models).

    The reason they don't detect these risks is primarily because these risks are emergent, and happen overnight (literally in the case of axios - compromised at night). Axios has a good reputation. It is by definition impossible for a pre-trained LLM to keep up with time-sensitive changes.

    • kjok 22 days ago

      I mean that agents can scan the code to find anything "suspicious". After all, security vendors that claim to "detect" malware in packages are relying on LLMs for detection.

      • mayhemducks 22 days ago

        An LLM is not a suitable substitute for purpose-built SAST software in my opinion. In my experience, they are great at looking at logs, error messages, sifting through test output, and that sort of thing. But I don't think they're going to be too reliable at detecting malware via static analysis. They just aren't built for that.

Sidmo2006 23 days ago

Ofc this happens the day we launch on product hunt. The last time we launched, AWS went down.

sgt 23 days ago

Is this an issue for those only using axios on the frontend side like in a VueJS app?

  • dfreire 23 days ago

    Absolutely. If you ever did a npm install on a project using one of the affected axios versions, your entire system may be compromised.

    > The malicious versions inject a new dependency, plain-crypto-js@4.2.1, which is never imported anywhere in the axios source code. Its sole purpose is to execute a postinstall script that acts as a cross platform remote access trojan (RAT) dropper, targeting macOS, Windows, and Linux. The dropper contacts a live command and control server and delivers platform specific second stage payloads. After execution, the malware deletes itself and replaces its own package.json with a clean version to evade forensic detection.

    I strongly recommend you read the entire article.

0x500x79 23 days ago

Pin your dependencies folks! Audit and don't upgrade to every brand new version.

  • onion2k 23 days ago

    But also have a regular review of your dependencies to update them when necessary, because as bad as compromised packages may be things do have vulnerabilities occasionally, and upgrading things that are a long way out-of-date can be quite hard.

mdavid626 22 days ago

It’s time to run development in sandboxes. Docker or sandbox-exec (for Mac).

davikr 23 days ago

Why can't we freeze the version of globally installed packages with npm?

astrostl 22 days ago

FWIW I vibe coded https://github.com/astrostl/surplies to detect evidence of the Axios and LiteLLM malware, using StepSecurity's writeups as a data source.

leventhan 23 days ago

PSA: Make sure to set a minimum release age and pin versions where possible.

ex-aws-dude 23 days ago

Why is it with Javascript the culture is to use so many dependencies?

  • zbentley 23 days ago

    All sorts of reasons, but this isn't a left-pad situation. Axios's functionality is something provided by a library in a lot of languages (C/C++ with libcurl and friends, Python with requests, Rust with reqwest, and so on).

    That's not to say it's inherently necessary for it to be a third-party package (Go, Ruby, and Java are counterexamples). But this isn't a proliferation/anemic stdlib issue.

croemer 23 days ago

I lost respect for Axios when they made a breaking change in a patch release. Digging into the root cause, I found the maintainer had approved an outside PR with an obvious AI slop PR description: https://github.com/axios/axios/issues/7059

Looks like the maintainer wasn't just careless when reviewing PRs.

  • duskdozer 23 days ago

    True, but think of how many new successfully closed PRs will be created as a result of this ~~incident~~ opportunity. Exponential KPI growth!

  • antiloper 23 days ago

    That maintainer (also the one whose creds got stolen) also has an obvious chatgpt slop profile picture on github.

JCharante 23 days ago

I don't see how a system that relies on trust can scale safely

charcircuit 23 days ago

Hopefully desktop Linux users will start to understand that malware actually does exist for Linux and that their operating system is doing nothing to protect them from getting RATed.

  • hu3 23 days ago

    What do you mean?

    Linux has the most powerful native process isolation arsenal at the user disposal.

    And some distros use even more isolation mechanisms on top of the ones provided by the kernel like snap and flatpak.

    And then you can recreate the entire thing like a spellbook with nix.

    Docker works natively in it. Do I need to say more?

    Linux is a decade ahead here with regards for security options available to the user.

    • charcircuit 23 days ago

      Yet npm isn't using them allowing this RAT to work. It is not secure by default. It requires every app to manually opt in to being secure. This opt in approach to security puts desktop Linux decades behind in regards to security. Not ahead.

      • hu3 23 days ago

        Linux is not making anything less secure than other OSs.

        In fact it even gives the user more security tools.

        So I fail to reason on you singling out Linux here.

        • charcircuit 23 days ago

          Take for example iOS and Android. All apps are sandboxed by default. You can't make a program that just steals all of your credentials like you can on desktop Linux. Having security tools means nothing if they aren't being used.

          • hu3 23 days ago

            No one is running npm in Android or iOS.

            A more apt comparison is vs Windows and macOS.

            And Linux offer more than these two with regards to security.

            • charcircuit 23 days ago

              They aren't because Node haven't developed a Node app for them. Desktop Linux does not offer more security than macOS. macOS has proper security around stuff like apps using the mic and camera.

          • PunchyHamster 23 days ago

            Android is running Linux...

            • charcircuit 23 days ago

              And they added a lot of code to make it safe for users to install and use apps in general.

8cvor6j844qw_d6 23 days ago

Should increase the delay to dependency updates.

  • tonymet 23 days ago

    Slow Russian roulette is still a losing strategy

    • btown 23 days ago

      It’s only a losing strategy if you assume everyone universally adopts the slow strategy, and no research teams spot it in the interim. For things with large splash radius, that’s unrealistic, so defenders have an information advantage.

      Makes actual security patches tougher to roll out though - you need to be vigilant to bypass the slowdown when you’re actually fixing a critical flaw. But nobody said this would be easy!

      • esseph 23 days ago

        > Makes actual security patches tougher to roll out though

        Yeah. 7 days in 2026 is a LONG TIME for security patches, especially for anything public facing.

        Stuck between a rock (dependency compromise) and a hard place (legitimate security vulnerabilities).

        Doesn't seem like a viable long-term solution.

    • neko_ranger 23 days ago

      but wouldn't it work in this case? sure if a package was compromised for months/years it wouldn't save you

      but tell dependabot to delay a week, you'd sleep easy from this nonesense

      • tonymet 23 days ago

        slowly walking through a minefield isn’t any safer than running.

        So unless you’re saying the extra time will be spent inspecting every package, whenever you do update, you will be getting an insecure package.

        You’re not safe by dodging axios. There are currently thousands of breached packages ready to install that aren’t notable.

        “I’ll run npm install after checking twitter” won’t help

        • ric2b 18 days ago

          Most packages don't become unsafe just because they were released a week ago.

classified 23 days ago

How anybody is still using NPM is beyond me.

rk06 23 days ago

> This creates a secondary deception layer. After infection, running npm list in the project directory will report plain-crypto-js@4.2.0 — because npm list reads the version field from the installed package.json, which now says 4.2.0. An incident responder checking installed packages would see a version number that does not match the malicious 4.2.1 version they were told to look for, potentially leading them to conclude the system was not compromised.

WTF!!!! gaslighting your victims into believing they are not victims. the ingenuity of this is truly mindblowing. I am shocked at such thing is even allowed. like packages should not be able to modify their contents while they are being instaleld.

silverwind 23 days ago

npm really needs to provide a options to set individual packages to only be publishable via trusted publishing.

ArtinOr 23 days ago

Reset the clock

ksk23 23 days ago

One paragraph is written two times??

diego_sandoval 23 days ago

A new day, a new npm incident.

maelito 23 days ago

Glad to be using native fetch.

jFriedensreich 23 days ago

Just a reminder that you can run most node things with deno run and have opt in permissions, audit trail and even external permission system integration now. The gotcha is that "deno task <<some package.json script>>" will NOT execute with this model which I find extremely unintuitive and had me thinking deno abandoned its sandbox for nodejs compatibility completely.

kush3434 23 days ago

first day at hacker news and this is the first post i saw

Kuyawa 23 days ago

node:fetch is all you need, simple and effective

sonexy 21 days ago

GitHub PR links

0x1ceb00da 23 days ago

Coded has zero nom dependencies. Neat!

cachius 23 days ago

Uh Axios. Even after being years out of NPM dev I remember that as the XHR thing for node. Whichs rings a big hit even to out of the loop people...

est 23 days ago

compiled JS solves a problem that no longer exists. IE6 is dead RIP.

Now we have a 20MB main.min.js problem

jijji 23 days ago

another week another npm supply chain attack

xyst 22 days ago

yet another npm supply chain attack, these are becoming as ubiquitous as gun violence in the US.

We have become numb to it.

One of my tools, bruno, was impacted but seems to be limited to cli via npm install [1]

[1] https://github.com/usebruno/bruno/security/advisories/GHSA-6...

slopinthebag 23 days ago

It's reasons like this why I refuse to download Node or use anything NPM. Thankfully other languages are better anyways.

  • waterTanuki 23 days ago
    • pianoben 23 days ago

      Log4Shell was hardly a supply-chain attack - just a latent bug in a widely-used library. That can happen anywhere.

      Maven to this day represents my ideal of package distribution. Immutable versions save so much trouble and I really don't understand why, in the age of left-pad, other people looked at that and said, "nah, I'm good with this."

      • imInGoodCompany 23 days ago

        Completely agree. NPM has the only registry where massive supply chain attacks happen several times a year. Mainly the fault lies with NPM itself, but much of it is just a terrible opsec culture in the community.

        Most package.jsons I see have semver operators on every dependency, so patches spread incredibly quickly. Package namespacing is not enforced, so there is no way of knowing who the maintainer is without looking it up on the registry first; for this reason many of the most popular packages are basically side projects maintained by a single developer*. Post-install scripts are enabled by default unless you use pnpm or bun.

        When you combine all these factors, you get the absolute disaster of an ecosystem that NPM is.

        *Not really the case for Axios as they are at least somewhat organized and financed via sponsors.

      • waterTanuki 23 days ago

        The semantics are irrelevant. The effect is what's important: Hijacking widely used software to exploit systems. The OC is somehow under the illusion that avoiding JS altogether is a silver bullet for avoiding this.

        Forest > Trees

        • pianoben 23 days ago

          The semantics are very relevant, since you presented it as a supply-chain attack. If you call a library vulnerability a supply-chain attack, then your argument has lost coherence.

          > The OC is somehow under the illusion...

          Avoiding package managers with shitty policies is the silver bullet for this attack vector. I get that it can be useful in the moment to retract published artifacts, or update them in-place, or run some code after your artifact is downloaded, but all of these are false economies in our hostile environment.

    • skydhash 23 days ago

      Other languages have package managers (perl) and there are package managers in existence that are not so vulnerable to this issue. IMO, it stems from one place: Transitive dependencies and general opaqueness of the issue.

      In package managers like pacman, apt, apk,... it's easier to catch such issue. They do have postinstall scripts, but it's part of the submission to the repo, not part of the project. Whatever comes from the project is hashed, and that hash is also visible as part of the submission. That makes it a bit difficult to sneak something. You don't push a change, they pull yours.

    • imInGoodCompany 23 days ago

      Log4Shell was not a supply chain attack.

    • slopinthebag 23 days ago

      Come on dude. The issue is the frequency and magnitude of these attacks. Log4Shell was also not a supply chain attack.

      I looked at the Rust one for example, which is literally just a malicious crate someone uploaded with a similar name as a popular one:

      > The crate had less than 500 downloads since its first release on 2022-03-25, and no crates on the crates.io registry depended on it.

      Compared to Axios, which gets 83 million downloads and was directly compromised.

      What an extremely disingenuous argument lol

      • waterTanuki 23 days ago

        What exactly do you think the argument is?

        The issues have everything to do with npm as a platform and nothing with JS as a language. You can use JS without npm. Saying you'll escape supply chain attacks by not using JS is like saying you'll be saved from an car crash with a parachute.

        • PunchyHamster 23 days ago

          Well, this particular case could be wholly avoided if it didn't take 2 decades to get competent HTTP(S) client into core language

        • ric2b 18 days ago

          JS as a language is part of the problem because the standard library is so minimal that people need to use a lot more 3rd party libraries than they would in most popular languages.

    • mememememememo 23 days ago

      C++ ftw

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