Man page - npm-audit(1)
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Manual
NPM-AUDIT
NAMESynopsis
Description
Audit Signatures
Audit Endpoints
Bulk Advisory Endpoint
Quick Audit Endpoint
Scrubbing
Calculating Meta-Vulnerabilities and Remediations
Exit Code
Examples
Configuration
See Also
NAME
npm-audit
Synopsis
<!-- AUTOGENERATED USAGE DESCRIPTIONS -->
Description
The audit
command submits a description of the dependencies configured
in
your project to your default registry and asks for a report
of known
vulnerabilities. If any vulnerabilities are found, then the
impact and
appropriate remediation will be calculated. If the
fix
argument is
provided, then remediations will be applied to the package
tree.
The command will exit with a 0 exit code if no vulnerabilities were found.
Note that some
vulnerabilities cannot be fixed automatically and will
require manual intervention or review. Also note that since
npm audit fix
runs a full-fledged
npm install
under the hood, all configs that
apply to the installer will also apply to
npm install
-- so things like
npm audit fix --package-lock-only
will work as
expected.
By default, the
audit command will exit with a non-zero code if any
vulnerability is found. It may be useful in CI environments
to include the
--audit-level
parameter to specify the minimum
vulnerability level that
will cause the command to fail. This option does not filter
the report
output, it simply changes the command’s failure
threshold.
Audit Signatures
To ensure the integrity of packages you download from the public npm registry, or any registry that supports signatures, you can verify the registry signatures of downloaded packages using the npm CLI.
Registry signatures can be verified using the following audit command:
$ npm audit signatures
The npm CLI supports registry signatures and signing keys provided by any registry if the following conventions are followed:
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• |
Signatures are provided in the package’s packument in each published version within the dist object: |
"dist":{
"..omitted..": "..omitted..",
"signatures": [{
"keyid": "SHA256:{{SHA256_PUBLIC_KEY}}",
"sig":
"a312b9c3cb4a1b693e8ebac5ee1ca9cc01f2661c14391917dcb111517f72370809..."
}]
}
See this example of a signed package from the public npm registry.
The sig is generated using the following template: ${package.name}@${package.version}:${package.dist.integrity} and the keyid has to match one of the public signing keys below.
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• |
Public signing keys are provided at registry-host.tld/-/npm/v1/keys in the following format: |
{
"keys": [{
"expires": null,
"keyid": "SHA256:{{SHA256_PUBLIC_KEY}}",
"keytype": "ecdsa-sha2-nistp256",
"scheme": "ecdsa-sha2-nistp256",
"key": "{{B64_PUBLIC_KEY}}"
}]
}
Keys response:
|
• |
expires : null or a simplified extended <a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ISO_8601" target="_blank">ISO 8601 format</a>: YYYY-MM-DDTHH:mm:ss.sssZ |
||
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keydid : sha256 fingerprint of the public key |
||
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keytype : only ecdsa-sha2-nistp256 is currently supported by the npm CLI |
||
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scheme : only ecdsa-sha2-nistp256 is currently supported by the npm CLI |
||
|
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key : base64 encoded public key |
See this <a href="https://registry.npmjs.org/-/npm/v1/keys" target="_blank">example key’s response from the public npm registry</a>.
Audit Endpoints
There are two
audit endpoints that npm may use to fetch vulnerability
information: the
Bulk Advisory
endpoint and the
Quick Audit
endpoint.
Bulk Advisory Endpoint
As of version 7,
npm uses the much faster
Bulk Advisory
endpoint to
optimize the speed of calculating audit results.
npm will
generate a JSON payload with the name and list of versions
of each
package in the tree, and POST it to the default configured
registry at
the path
/-/npm/v1/security/advisories/bulk
.
Any packages in
the tree that do not have a
version
field in their
package.json file will be ignored. If any
--omit
options are specified
(either via the
--omit
config, or one of the
shorthands such as
--production
,
--only=dev
,
and so on), then packages will
be omitted from the submitted payload as appropriate.
If the registry
responds with an error, or with an invalid response, then
npm will attempt to load advisory data from the
Quick
Audit
endpoint.
The expected
result will contain a set of advisory objects for each
dependency that matches the advisory range. Each advisory
object contains
a
name
,
url
,
id
,
severity
,
vulnerable_versions
, and
title
.
npm then uses
these advisory objects to calculate vulnerabilities and
meta-vulnerabilities of the dependencies within the
tree.
Quick Audit Endpoint
If the
Bulk
Advisory
endpoint returns an error, or invalid data, npm
will
attempt to load advisory data from the
Quick Audit
endpoint, which is
considerably slower in most cases.
The full package
tree as found in
package-lock.json
is submitted,
along
with the following pieces of additional metadata:
|
• |
npm_version |
|||
|
• |
node_version |
|||
|
• |
platform |
|||
|
• |
arch |
|||
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• |
node_env |
All packages in
the tree are submitted to the Quick Audit endpoint.
Omitted dependency types are skipped when generating the
report.
Scrubbing
Out of an
abundance of caution, npm versions 5 and 6 would
"scrub" any
packages from the submitted report if their name contained a
/
character,
so as to avoid leaking the names of potentially private
packages or git
URLs.
However, in
practice, this resulted in audits often failing to properly
detect meta-vulnerabilities, because the tree would appear
to be invalid
due to missing dependencies, and prevented the detection of
vulnerabilities
in package trees that used git dependencies or private
modules.
This scrubbing has been removed from npm as of version 7.
Calculating Meta-Vulnerabilities and Remediations
npm uses the
@npmcli/metavuln-calculator
module to turn a set of security advisories into a set of
"vulnerability"
objects. A "meta-vulnerability" is a dependency
that is vulnerable by
virtue of dependence on vulnerable versions of a vulnerable
package.
For example, if
the package
foo
is vulnerable in the range
>=1.0.2 <2.0.0
, and the package
bar
depends on
foo@ˆ1.1.0
, then that version
of
bar
can only be installed by installing a
vulnerable version of
foo
.
In this case,
bar
is a
"metavulnerability".
Once
metavulnerabilities for a given package are calculated, they
are
cached in the
˜/.npm
folder and only
re-evaluated if the advisory range
changes, or a new version of the package is published (in
which case, the
new version is checked for metavulnerable status as
well).
If the chain of
metavulnerabilities extends all the way to the root
project, and it cannot be updated without changing its
dependency ranges,
then
npm audit fix
will require the
--force
option to apply the
remediation. If remediations do not require changes to the
dependency
ranges, then all vulnerable packages will be updated to a
version that does
not have an advisory or metavulnerability posted against
it.
Exit Code
The
npm
audit
command will exit with a 0 exit code if no
vulnerabilities
were found. The
npm audit fix
command will exit with
0 exit code if no
vulnerabilities are found
or
if the remediation is
able to successfully
fix all vulnerabilities.
If
vulnerabilities were found the exit code will depend on the
audit-level
config.
Examples
Scan your
project for vulnerabilities and automatically install any
compatible
updates to vulnerable dependencies:
$ npm audit fix
Run
audit
fix
without modifying
node_modules
, but still
updating the
pkglock:
$ npm audit fix --package-lock-only
Skip updating devDependencies :
$ npm audit fix --only=prod
Have
audit
fix
install SemVer-major updates to toplevel
dependencies, not
just SemVer-compatible ones:
$ npm audit fix --force
Do a dry run to
get an idea of what
audit fix
will do, and
also
output
install information in JSON format:
$ npm audit fix --dry-run --json
Scan your
project for vulnerabilities and just show the details,
without
fixing anything:
$ npm audit
Get the detailed audit report in JSON format:
$ npm audit --json
Fail an audit only if the results include a vulnerability with a level of moderate or higher:
$ npm audit --audit-level=moderate
Configuration
<!-- AUTOGENERATED CONFIG DESCRIPTIONS -->
See Also
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npm install |
|||
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config |