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Detect potentially catastrophic exponential-time regular expressions by limiting the star height to 1.
WARNING: This module has both false positives and false negatives. Use vuln-regex-detector for improved accuracy.
Suppose you have a script named safe.js:
var safe = require('safe-regex');
var regex = process.argv.slice(2).join(' ');
console.log(safe(regex));
This is its behavior:
$ node safe.js '(x+x+)+y'
false
$ node safe.js '(beep|boop)*'
true
$ node safe.js '(a+){10}'
false
$ node safe.js '\blocation\s*:[^:\n]+\b(Oakland|San Francisco)\b'
true
const safe = require('safe-regex')
Return a boolean ok whether or not the regex re is safe and not possibly
catastrophic.
re can be a RegExp object or just a string.
If the re is a string and is an invalid regex, returns false.
opts.limit - maximum number of allowed repetitions in the entire regex.
Default: 25.With npm do:
npm install safe-regex
The following documents may be edifying:
This project follows Semantic Versioning 2.0 (semver).
Here are the project-specific meanings of MAJOR, MINOR, and PATCH updates: