joomla / cve
Joomla CVE Package
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Installs: 2
Dependents: 0
Suggesters: 0
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Watchers: 10
Forks: 3
Open Issues: 5
Type:joomla-package
Requires
- php: ^8.1.0
- ext-json: *
- joomla/registry: ^3.0
- joomla/uri: ^3.0
- psr/http-client: ^1.0.1
Requires (Dev)
- joomla/http: ^3.0
- phan/phan: ^5.4.2
- phpstan/phpstan: ^1.10.7
- phpunit/phpunit: ^9.5.28
- roave/security-advisories: dev-master
- squizlabs/php_codesniffer: ^3.7.2
- yoast/phpunit-polyfills: ^1.0.4
This package is auto-updated.
Last update: 2024-12-08 21:32:50 UTC
README
Requires PHP 7 >= 7.3 or PHP 8 < 8.2
Using the CVE Package
tbd
Instantiating CVE
Instantiating CVE Service is easy:
use Joomla\Cve\CveService; $cve = new CveService;
This creates a basic Github object that can be used to access publicly available resources on mitre.org.
In most cases it is necessary to specify additional options. This can be done by injecting in a Registry object with your preferred options. Support is available for optionally providing a custom CVE account username and password, as well as a custom URL for the CVE API server (as would be the case for testing purposes).
use Joomla\Cve\CveService; use Joomla\Registry\Registry; $options = new Registry; $options->set('api.org', 'cve_org'); $options->set('api.username', 'cve_username'); $options->set('api.key', 'cve_key'); $options->set('api.url', 'http://localhost:3000'); $cve = new CveService($options);
Available Options
Installation via Composer
Add "joomla/cve": "~2.0@dev"
to the require block in your composer.json and then run composer install
.
{ "require": { "joomla/cve": "~2.0@dev" } }
Alternatively, you can simply run the following from the command line:
composer require joomla/cve "~2.0@dev"
If you want to include the test sources, use
composer require --prefer-source joomla/cve "~2.0"