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If you are using the Yarn feature zero-installs that was introduced in Yarn V2, note that this PR does not update the .yarn/cache/ directory meaning this code cannot be pulled and immediately developed on as one would expect for a zero-install project - you will need to run yarn to update the contents of the ./yarn/cache directory.
If you are not using zero-install you can ignore this as your flow should likely be unchanged.
⚠️Warning
Failed to update the yarn.lock, please update manually before merging.
Vulnerabilities that will be fixed with an upgrade:
Merging this PR will not cause a version bump for any packages. If these changes should not result in a new version, you're good to go. If these changes should result in a version bump, you need to add a changeset.
Next steps: Take a moment to review the security alert above. Review
the linked package source code to understand the potential risk. Ensure the
package is not malicious before proceeding. If you're unsure how to proceed,
reach out to your security team or ask the Socket team for help at
support@socket.dev.
Suggestion: Packages should remove all network access that is functionally unnecessary. Consumers should audit network access to ensure legitimate use.
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in this pull request, reply with the comment
@SocketSecurity ignore npm/node-sass@9.0.0. You can
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Next steps: Take a moment to review the security alert above. Review
the linked package source code to understand the potential risk. Ensure the
package is not malicious before proceeding. If you're unsure how to proceed,
reach out to your security team or ask the Socket team for help at
support@socket.dev.
Suggestion: Review all remote URLs to ensure they are intentional, pointing to trusted sources, and not being used for data exfiltration or loading untrusted code at runtime.
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@SocketSecurity ignore npm/babel-loader@10.0.0. You can
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Next steps: Take a moment to review the security alert above. Review
the linked package source code to understand the potential risk. Ensure the
package is not malicious before proceeding. If you're unsure how to proceed,
reach out to your security team or ask the Socket team for help at
support@socket.dev.
Suggestion: Review all remote URLs to ensure they are intentional, pointing to trusted sources, and not being used for data exfiltration or loading untrusted code at runtime.
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in this pull request, reply with the comment
@SocketSecurity ignore npm/css-loader@6.0.0. You can
also ignore all packages with @SocketSecurity ignore-all.
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Next steps: Take a moment to review the security alert above. Review
the linked package source code to understand the potential risk. Ensure the
package is not malicious before proceeding. If you're unsure how to proceed,
reach out to your security team or ask the Socket team for help at
support@socket.dev.
Suggestion: Packages should avoid dynamic imports when possible. Audit the use of dynamic require to ensure it is not executing malicious or vulnerable code.
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in this pull request, reply with the comment
@SocketSecurity ignore npm/css-loader@6.0.0. You can
also ignore all packages with @SocketSecurity ignore-all.
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Next steps: Take a moment to review the security alert above. Review
the linked package source code to understand the potential risk. Ensure the
package is not malicious before proceeding. If you're unsure how to proceed,
reach out to your security team or ask the Socket team for help at
support@socket.dev.
Suggestion: Review all remote URLs to ensure they are intentional, pointing to trusted sources, and not being used for data exfiltration or loading untrusted code at runtime.
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in this pull request, reply with the comment
@SocketSecurity ignore npm/eslint@10.0.0. You can
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Next steps: Take a moment to review the security alert above. Review
the linked package source code to understand the potential risk. Ensure the
package is not malicious before proceeding. If you're unsure how to proceed,
reach out to your security team or ask the Socket team for help at
support@socket.dev.
Suggestion: Packages should avoid dynamic imports when possible. Audit the use of dynamic require to ensure it is not executing malicious or vulnerable code.
Mark the package as acceptable risk. To ignore this alert only
in this pull request, reply with the comment
@SocketSecurity ignore npm/mini-css-extract-plugin@2.4.5. You can
also ignore all packages with @SocketSecurity ignore-all.
To ignore an alert for all future pull requests, use Socket's Dashboard to
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Next steps: Take a moment to review the security alert above. Review
the linked package source code to understand the potential risk. Ensure the
package is not malicious before proceeding. If you're unsure how to proceed,
reach out to your security team or ask the Socket team for help at
support@socket.dev.
Suggestion: Review all remote URLs to ensure they are intentional, pointing to trusted sources, and not being used for data exfiltration or loading untrusted code at runtime.
Mark the package as acceptable risk. To ignore this alert only
in this pull request, reply with the comment
@SocketSecurity ignore npm/node-sass@9.0.0. You can
also ignore all packages with @SocketSecurity ignore-all.
To ignore an alert for all future pull requests, use Socket's Dashboard to
change the triage state of this alert.
Next steps: Take a moment to review the security alert above. Review
the linked package source code to understand the potential risk. Ensure the
package is not malicious before proceeding. If you're unsure how to proceed,
reach out to your security team or ask the Socket team for help at
support@socket.dev.
Suggestion: Review all remote URLs to ensure they are intentional, pointing to trusted sources, and not being used for data exfiltration or loading untrusted code at runtime.
Mark the package as acceptable risk. To ignore this alert only
in this pull request, reply with the comment
@SocketSecurity ignore npm/webpack-dev-server@4.6.0. You can
also ignore all packages with @SocketSecurity ignore-all.
To ignore an alert for all future pull requests, use Socket's Dashboard to
change the triage state of this alert.
Next steps: Take a moment to review the security alert above. Review
the linked package source code to understand the potential risk. Ensure the
package is not malicious before proceeding. If you're unsure how to proceed,
reach out to your security team or ask the Socket team for help at
support@socket.dev.
Suggestion: Review all remote URLs to ensure they are intentional, pointing to trusted sources, and not being used for data exfiltration or loading untrusted code at runtime.
Mark the package as acceptable risk. To ignore this alert only
in this pull request, reply with the comment
@SocketSecurity ignore npm/webpack@5.98.0. You can
also ignore all packages with @SocketSecurity ignore-all.
To ignore an alert for all future pull requests, use Socket's Dashboard to
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Block
Potential code anomaly (AI signal): npm webpack is 100.0% likely to have a medium risk anomaly
Notes: The module appears functionally legitimate as an extensible serializer/deserializer. The primary security concern is that deserialization can load and execute modules whose names are taken directly from the serialized payload (via loaders or falling back to require(request)). Deserializing untrusted data therefore allows arbitrary code execution in the host process. Use of this module is safe only when deserializing trusted data or when callers enforce a strict whitelist of allowed 'request' modules (via controlled loaders) and avoid falling back to require on unvalidated request strings.
Next steps: Take a moment to review the security alert above. Review
the linked package source code to understand the potential risk. Ensure the
package is not malicious before proceeding. If you're unsure how to proceed,
reach out to your security team or ask the Socket team for help at
support@socket.dev.
Suggestion: An AI system found a low-risk anomaly in this package. It may still be fine to use, but you should check that it is safe before proceeding.
Mark the package as acceptable risk. To ignore this alert only
in this pull request, reply with the comment
@SocketSecurity ignore npm/webpack@5.98.0. You can
also ignore all packages with @SocketSecurity ignore-all.
To ignore an alert for all future pull requests, use Socket's Dashboard to
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Block
Minified code present: npm webpack with 99.0% likelihood
Next steps: Take a moment to review the security alert above. Review
the linked package source code to understand the potential risk. Ensure the
package is not malicious before proceeding. If you're unsure how to proceed,
reach out to your security team or ask the Socket team for help at
support@socket.dev.
Suggestion: In many cases minified code is harmless, however minified code can be used to hide a supply chain attack. Consider not shipping minified code on npm.
Mark the package as acceptable risk. To ignore this alert only
in this pull request, reply with the comment
@SocketSecurity ignore npm/webpack@5.98.0. You can
also ignore all packages with @SocketSecurity ignore-all.
To ignore an alert for all future pull requests, use Socket's Dashboard to
change the triage state of this alert.
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Snyk has created this PR to fix 1 vulnerabilities in the yarn dependencies of this project.
Snyk changed the following file(s):
package.jsonNote for zero-installs users
If you are using the Yarn feature zero-installs that was introduced in Yarn V2, note that this PR does not update the
.yarn/cache/directory meaning this code cannot be pulled and immediately developed on as one would expect for a zero-install project - you will need to runyarnto update the contents of the./yarn/cachedirectory.If you are not using zero-install you can ignore this as your flow should likely be unchanged.
Vulnerabilities that will be fixed with an upgrade:
SNYK-JS-AJV-15274295
Important
Note: You are seeing this because you or someone else with access to this repository has authorized Snyk to open fix PRs.
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