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renovate/lock-file-maintenance

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@renovate

@renovate renovate Bot commented Nov 1, 2025

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This PR contains the following updates:

Update Change
lockFileMaintenance All locks refreshed

🔧 This Pull Request updates lock files to use the latest dependency versions.


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@renovate renovate Bot requested review from a team as code owners November 1, 2025 02:27
@coderabbitai

coderabbitai Bot commented Nov 1, 2025

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Important

Review skipped

Review was skipped due to path filters

⛔ Files ignored due to path filters (4)
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  • packages/core/solidity/src/environments/hardhat/polkadot/package-lock.json is excluded by !**/package-lock.json
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@socket-security

socket-security Bot commented Nov 1, 2025

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Caution

Review the following alerts detected in dependencies.

According to your organization's Security Policy, you must resolve all "Block" alerts before proceeding. It is recommended to resolve "Warn" alerts too. Learn more about Socket for GitHub.

Action Severity Alert  (click "▶" to expand/collapse)
Block Medium
Potential security risk (AI signal): npm @aws-sdk/xml-builder

Notes: undefined

Confidence: undefined

Severity: undefined

From: packages/core/solidity/src/environments/hardhat/upgradeable/package-lock.jsonnpm/@openzeppelin/hardhat-upgrades@4.0.2npm/@aws-sdk/xml-builder@3.972.30

ℹ Read more on: This package | This alert | What are AI-detected potential security risks?

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 identified potential security problems in this package. It is advised to review the package thoroughly and assess the potential risks before installation. You may also consider reporting the issue to the package maintainer or seeking alternative solutions with a stronger security posture.

Mark the package as acceptable risk. To ignore this alert only in this pull request, reply with the comment @SocketSecurity ignore npm/@aws-sdk/xml-builder@3.972.30. 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.

Block Low
Potential code anomaly (AI signal): npm @babel/core is 68.0% likely to have a medium risk anomaly

Notes: The code defines a stack-trace manipulation utility that can selectively hide or reveal frames and inject synthetic frames into error traces. While not inherently malicious, its global alteration of Error.prepareStackTrace and stackTraceLimit enables obfuscation of error reporting and can hinder debugging or auditing. Use is advised with thorough documentation and restricted scope in security-sensitive environments.

Confidence: 0.68

Severity: 0.60

From: packages/core/solidity/src/environments/hardhat/polkadot/package-lock.jsonnpm/@parity/hardhat-polkadot@0.2.7npm/@babel/core@7.29.7

ℹ Read more on: This package | This alert | What is an AI-detected potential code anomaly?

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/@babel/core@7.29.7. 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.

Block Low
Potential code anomaly (AI signal): npm @babel/core is 75.0% likely to have a medium risk anomaly

Notes: The examined code is a standard, benign helper for constructing and wrapping configuration items from descriptors within Babel’s tooling. There is no evidence of data leakage, exfiltration, backdoors, or other malicious activity in this fragment. The combination of immutability, brand-based identity, and non-enumerable descriptor storage indicates a well-scoped internal utility rather than anything suspicious.

Confidence: 0.75

Severity: 0.50

From: packages/core/solidity/src/environments/hardhat/polkadot/package-lock.jsonnpm/@parity/hardhat-polkadot@0.2.7npm/@babel/core@7.29.7

ℹ Read more on: This package | This alert | What is an AI-detected potential code anomaly?

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/@babel/core@7.29.7. 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.

Block Low
Potential code anomaly (AI signal): npm @babel/helper-module-imports is 78.0% likely to have a medium risk anomaly

Notes: The analyzed code is a Babel AST helper (ImportBuilder) used to construct import statements and interop-wrapped imports. It contains no indicators of malicious behavior, data exfiltration, backdoors, or runtime abuses. It operates within a compiler/transpiler context to produce code, not to execute arbitrary user data. Therefore, the code itself does not present security risks or malware indicators under normal usage. This is benign library behavior intended for code transformation.

Confidence: 0.78

Severity: 0.55

From: packages/core/solidity/src/environments/hardhat/polkadot/package-lock.jsonnpm/@parity/hardhat-polkadot@0.2.7npm/@babel/helper-module-imports@7.29.7

ℹ Read more on: This package | This alert | What is an AI-detected potential code anomaly?

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/@babel/helper-module-imports@7.29.7. 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.

Block Low
Potential code anomaly (AI signal): npm @babel/helper-module-transforms is 80.0% likely to have a medium risk anomaly

Notes: The code is a legitimate, static-code transformation utility used in Babel to ensure proper behavior of ES module bindings after transforms. There is no evidence of malicious behavior, data leakage, or external communications within this fragment. It operates purely on AST-level transformations consistent with module import/export handling.

Confidence: 0.80

Severity: 0.50

From: packages/core/solidity/src/environments/hardhat/polkadot/package-lock.jsonnpm/@parity/hardhat-polkadot@0.2.7npm/@babel/helper-module-transforms@7.29.7

ℹ Read more on: This package | This alert | What is an AI-detected potential code anomaly?

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/@babel/helper-module-transforms@7.29.7. 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.

Block Low
Potential code anomaly (AI signal): npm @babel/helper-string-parser is 78.0% likely to have a medium risk anomaly

Notes: The analyzed code is a standard, well-structured parsing utility for JavaScript string literals and escapes (consistent with Babel’s helper-string-parser). It includes thorough validation, proper Unicode handling, and defensive error reporting. There is no evidence of malicious behavior, data leakage, or network activity within this fragment. The security risk is low when used as part of a trusted toolchain; the code otherwise poses no evident supply-chain threat based on the provided snippet.

Confidence: 0.78

Severity: 0.55

From: packages/core/solidity/src/environments/hardhat/polkadot/package-lock.jsonnpm/@parity/hardhat-polkadot@0.2.7npm/@babel/helper-string-parser@7.29.7

ℹ Read more on: This package | This alert | What is an AI-detected potential code anomaly?

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/@babel/helper-string-parser@7.29.7. 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.

Block Low
Potential code anomaly (AI signal): npm @babel/helpers is 75.0% likely to have a medium risk anomaly

Notes: The analyzed fragment is a conventional Babel/TypeScript-style decorators runtime (applyDecs) responsible for applying decorators to class members and managing metadata and initializers. There is no evidence of malware, backdoors, or external data leakage within this module. While complex, the code behaves as a metadata-driven decorator processor and should be considered low risk when used as intended. Downstream risks depend on the decorators provided by consumers, not this utility itself.

Confidence: 0.75

Severity: 0.60

From: packages/core/solidity/src/environments/hardhat/polkadot/package-lock.jsonnpm/@parity/hardhat-polkadot@0.2.7npm/@babel/helpers@7.29.7

ℹ Read more on: This package | This alert | What is an AI-detected potential code anomaly?

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/@babel/helpers@7.29.7. 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.

Block Low
Potential code anomaly (AI signal): npm @babel/helpers is 61.0% likely to have a medium risk anomaly

Notes: The code fragment is a standard Babel decorator runtime helper (applyDecs2203). Its security posture hinges on the trustworthiness of the supplied decorators. If decorators are from untrusted sources, they can execute arbitrary code during decoration or initialization. The library itself does not exhibit malicious behavior, but this pattern introduces a high-risk surface via external inputs. Recommended mitigations include validating decorator outputs, enforcing sandboxing or runner boundaries for decorators, and auditing decorator sources in the application.

Confidence: 0.61

Severity: 0.58

From: packages/core/solidity/src/environments/hardhat/polkadot/package-lock.jsonnpm/@parity/hardhat-polkadot@0.2.7npm/@babel/helpers@7.29.7

ℹ Read more on: This package | This alert | What is an AI-detected potential code anomaly?

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/@babel/helpers@7.29.7. 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.

Block Low
Potential code anomaly (AI signal): npm @grpc/grpc-js is 65.0% likely to have a medium risk anomaly

Notes: The analyzed fragment is a conventional gRPC subchannel implementation featuring state management, connection orchestration, call creation with optional stats, and credential access delegation. No malicious behavior, backdoors, or data exfiltration patterns are evident in this snippet. Observability through health watchers is limited, which could reduce runtime visibility in some deployments, but does not imply security risk by itself.

Confidence: 0.65

Severity: 0.58

From: packages/core/solidity/src/environments/hardhat/polkadot/package-lock.jsonnpm/@parity/hardhat-polkadot@0.2.7npm/@grpc/grpc-js@1.14.4

ℹ Read more on: This package | This alert | What is an AI-detected potential code anomaly?

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/@grpc/grpc-js@1.14.4. 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.

Block Low
Potential code anomaly (AI signal): npm @smithy/core is 65.0% likely to have a medium risk anomaly

Notes: The code implements a conventional, well-structured event-stream unmarshalling pipeline with explicit handling for error, exception, and event message types. The primary security considerations are: potential exposure of header/body content through thrown errors, reliance on the deserializer contract (notably the $unknown flag), and ensuring that downstream consumers appropriately trust the deserialized payloads. In a supply-chain context, ensure that eventStreamCodec, deserializer implementations, and error handling are trusted and audited to avoid leaking sensitive metadata, and consider sanitizing error messages in production.

Confidence: 0.65

Severity: 0.60

From: packages/core/solidity/src/environments/hardhat/upgradeable/package-lock.jsonnpm/@openzeppelin/hardhat-upgrades@4.0.2npm/@smithy/core@3.25.1

ℹ Read more on: This package | This alert | What is an AI-detected potential code anomaly?

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/@smithy/core@3.25.1. 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.

Block Low
Potential code anomaly (AI signal): npm ajv is 75.0% likely to have a medium risk anomaly

Notes: The code represents a conventional, non-obfuscated part of AJV’s custom keyword support. No direct malicious actions are evident within this module. Security concerns mainly arise from the broader supply chain: the external rule implementation (dotjs/custom), the definition schema, and any user-supplied keyword definitions. The dynamic compilation path (compile(metaSchema, true)) should be exercised with trusted inputs. Recommended follow-up: review the contents of the external modules and monitor the inputs supplied to addKeyword/definitionSchema to ensure no unsafe behavior is introduced during validation or data handling.

Confidence: 0.75

Severity: 0.55

From: ?npm/eslint@9.39.4npm/ajv@6.15.0

ℹ Read more on: This package | This alert | What is an AI-detected potential code anomaly?

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/ajv@6.15.0. 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.

Block Low
Potential code anomaly (AI signal): npm ajv is 65.0% likely to have a medium risk anomaly

Notes: The code is a straightforward build script to bundle and minify a specified package using Browserify and UglifyJS. The primary security concern is potential path manipulation: json.main is used to form a require path without validating that it stays within the target package directory. If a malicious or misconfigured package.json includes an absolute path or traversal outside the package, the script could bundle unintended files. Otherwise, the script does not perform network access, data exfiltration, or backdoor actions, and there is no hard-coded secrets or dynamic code execution beyond standard bundling/minification.

Confidence: 0.65

Severity: 0.58

From: ?npm/eslint@9.39.4npm/ajv@6.15.0

ℹ Read more on: This package | This alert | What is an AI-detected potential code anomaly?

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/ajv@6.15.0. 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.

Block Low
Potential code anomaly (AI signal): npm ajv is 61.0% likely to have a medium risk anomaly

Notes: The code augments a meta-schema to permit remote dereferencing of keyword schemas via a hardcoded data.json resource. This introduces network dependency and potential changes to validation semantics at runtime. While not inherently malicious, the remote reference constitutes a notable security and reliability risk that should be mitigated with local fallbacks, input validation, and explicit remote-resource governance.

Confidence: 0.61

Severity: 0.60

From: ?npm/eslint@9.39.4npm/ajv@6.15.0

ℹ Read more on: This package | This alert | What is an AI-detected potential code anomaly?

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/ajv@6.15.0. 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.

Block Low
Potential code anomaly (AI signal): npm ajv is 70.0% likely to have a medium risk anomaly

Notes: The code implements a standard AJV-like dynamic parser generator for JTD schemas. There are no explicit malware indicators in this fragment. The primary security concern is the dynamic code generation and execution from external schemas, which introduces a medium risk if schemas are untrusted. With trusted schemas and proper schema management, the risk is typically acceptable within this pattern.

Confidence: 0.70

Severity: 0.60

From: packages/core/solidity/src/environments/hardhat/polkadot/package-lock.jsonnpm/@nomicfoundation/hardhat-toolbox@6.1.2npm/@modelcontextprotocol/sdk@1.29.0npm/ajv@8.20.0

ℹ Read more on: This package | This alert | What is an AI-detected potential code anomaly?

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/ajv@8.20.0. 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.

Block Low
Potential code anomaly (AI signal): npm ajv is 68.0% likely to have a medium risk anomaly

Notes: The code implements standard timestamp validation with clear logic for normal and leap years and leap seconds. There is no network, file, or execution of external code within this isolated fragment. The only anomalous aspect is assigning a string to validTimestamp.code, which could enable external tooling to inject behavior in certain environments, but this does not constitute active malicious behavior in this isolated snippet. Overall, low to moderate security risk in typical usage; no malware detected within the shown code.

Confidence: 0.68

Severity: 0.50

From: packages/core/solidity/src/environments/hardhat/polkadot/package-lock.jsonnpm/@nomicfoundation/hardhat-toolbox@6.1.2npm/@modelcontextprotocol/sdk@1.29.0npm/ajv@8.20.0

ℹ Read more on: This package | This alert | What is an AI-detected potential code anomaly?

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/ajv@8.20.0. 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.

Block Low
Potential code anomaly (AI signal): npm ajv is 70.0% likely to have a medium risk anomaly

Notes: This module generates JavaScript code at runtime via standaloneCode(...) and then immediately executes it with require-from-string. Because the generated code can incorporate user-supplied schemas or custom keywords without sanitization or sandboxing, an attacker who controls those inputs could inject arbitrary code and achieve remote code execution in the Node process. Users should audit and lock down the standaloneCode output or replace dynamic evaluation with a safer, static bundling approach.

Confidence: 0.70

Severity: 0.62

From: packages/core/solidity/src/environments/hardhat/polkadot/package-lock.jsonnpm/@nomicfoundation/hardhat-toolbox@6.1.2npm/@modelcontextprotocol/sdk@1.29.0npm/ajv@8.20.0

ℹ Read more on: This package | This alert | What is an AI-detected potential code anomaly?

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/ajv@8.20.0. 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.

Block Low
Potential code anomaly (AI signal): npm css-tree is 78.0% likely to have a medium risk anomaly

Notes: The code is a standard, well-scoped parser fragment for a DSL-like FeatureFunction construct. It uses dynamic feature dispatch with proper balance checks and safe fallbacks, and emits a consistent AST node. No malicious behavior detected; the main risks relate to misconfiguration of the features map rather than code-level exploits.

Confidence: 0.78

Severity: 0.58

From: ?npm/rollup-plugin-styles@4.0.0npm/css-tree@3.2.1

ℹ Read more on: This package | This alert | What is an AI-detected potential code anomaly?

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/css-tree@3.2.1. 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.

Block Low
Potential code anomaly (AI signal): npm docker-modem is 68.0% likely to have a medium risk anomaly

Notes: The code implements an SSH-based HTTP transport by executing a remote Docker command and using its stream as the HTTP connection. This creates a potentially covert proxy that can be exploited for data tunneling or exfiltration if misused or exposed in open environments. It lacks explicit permission checks, auditing, and tight confinement of what traffic can traverse the tunnel. Recommend restricting usage, implementing explicit authorization and logging, and validating environment support before deployment.

Confidence: 0.68

Severity: 0.62

From: packages/core/solidity/src/environments/hardhat/polkadot/package-lock.jsonnpm/@parity/hardhat-polkadot@0.2.7npm/docker-modem@5.0.7

ℹ Read more on: This package | This alert | What is an AI-detected potential code anomaly?

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/docker-modem@5.0.7. 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.

Block Low
Potential code anomaly (AI signal): npm esbuild is 68.0% likely to have a medium risk anomaly

Notes: The code represents a thorough and sophisticated installer for esbuild with multiple fallback mechanisms to acquire platform-appropriate binaries. While largely legitimate, its use of direct tarball downloads, manual extraction without explicit integrity validation, and the override/wrapper mechanism create nontrivial supply-chain and abuse risks. Recommend enabling strict binary integrity checks (checksums/signatures), minimizing or auditing the override/wrapper feature, and implementing tighter error visibility and logging to reduce operational risk and potential misuse.

Confidence: 0.68

Severity: 0.60

From: packages/core/solidity/src/environments/hardhat/polkadot/package-lock.jsonnpm/@parity/hardhat-polkadot@0.2.7npm/esbuild@0.27.7

ℹ Read more on: This package | This alert | What is an AI-detected potential code anomaly?

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/esbuild@0.27.7. 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.

Block Low
Potential code anomaly (AI signal): npm esbuild is 90.0% likely to have a medium risk anomaly

Notes: The package runs a postinstall helper (install.js) which is common for packages that need to fetch or extract platform binaries. That helper should be inspected (install.js) to confirm it only downloads known release artifacts and verifies them against the provided binary hashes. With hashes present and no non-registry dependencies, the package looks legitimate, but any postinstall executable is a potential attack surface and should be audited before installing in high-risk environments.

Confidence: 0.90

Severity: 0.60

From: packages/core/solidity/src/environments/hardhat/upgradeable/package-lock.jsonnpm/tsx@4.22.4npm/esbuild@0.28.1

ℹ Read more on: This package | This alert | What is an AI-detected potential code anomaly?

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/esbuild@0.28.1. 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.

Block Low
Potential code anomaly (AI signal): npm hardhat is 75.0% likely to have a medium risk anomaly

Notes: The code implements a subprocess-based transport to offload event sending. While this can reduce main-process dependencies, it creates a cross-process data path that exposes the serialized event via environment variables to an external subprocess. The subprocess script (not present here) becomes a critical trust boundary. Without inspecting the subprocess implementation and package contents, there is a non-trivial risk of data leakage or tampering via the external process. No explicit malware detected in this fragment, but the design warrants careful review of the subprocess code and supply chain integrity.

Confidence: 0.75

Severity: 0.60

From: packages/core/confidential/package.jsonnpm/hardhat@2.28.6

ℹ Read more on: This package | This alert | What is an AI-detected potential code anomaly?

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/hardhat@2.28.6. 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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@renovate renovate Bot force-pushed the renovate/lock-file-maintenance branch 7 times, most recently from db00401 to a0ee822 Compare November 6, 2025 20:57
@renovate renovate Bot force-pushed the renovate/lock-file-maintenance branch 8 times, most recently from b215735 to 389055a Compare November 13, 2025 17:02
@renovate renovate Bot force-pushed the renovate/lock-file-maintenance branch from 389055a to 3234900 Compare November 18, 2025 11:07
@renovate renovate Bot force-pushed the renovate/lock-file-maintenance branch 7 times, most recently from 516279b to 8bd085a Compare December 1, 2025 18:56
@renovate renovate Bot force-pushed the renovate/lock-file-maintenance branch 3 times, most recently from 892690a to 845e59c Compare December 9, 2025 02:46
@renovate renovate Bot force-pushed the renovate/lock-file-maintenance branch 5 times, most recently from c2d81d7 to 00f519b Compare February 2, 2026 21:38
@renovate renovate Bot force-pushed the renovate/lock-file-maintenance branch 5 times, most recently from a1c9c42 to b43f7c8 Compare February 17, 2026 15:46
@renovate

renovate Bot commented Feb 17, 2026

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⚠️ Artifact update problem

Renovate failed to update an artifact related to this branch. You probably do not want to merge this PR as-is.

♻ Renovate will retry this branch, including artifacts, only when one of the following happens:

  • any of the package files in this branch needs updating, or
  • the branch becomes conflicted, or
  • you click the rebase/retry checkbox if found above, or
  • you rename this PR's title to start with "rebase!" to trigger it manually

The artifact failure details are included below:

File name: packages/core/confidential/src/environments/hardhat/package-lock.json
npm warn Unknown env config "store". This will stop working in the next major version of npm. See `npm help npmrc` for supported config options.
npm error code ERESOLVE
npm error ERESOLVE unable to resolve dependency tree
npm error
npm error While resolving: hardhat-sample@0.0.1
npm error Found: @zama-fhe/relayer-sdk@0.3.0-5
npm error node_modules/@zama-fhe/relayer-sdk
npm error   dev @zama-fhe/relayer-sdk@"0.3.0-5" from the root project
npm error
npm error Could not resolve dependency:
npm error peer @zama-fhe/relayer-sdk@"^0.3.0-8" from @fhevm/mock-utils@0.3.0-4
npm error node_modules/@fhevm/mock-utils
npm error   peer @fhevm/mock-utils@"0.3.0-4" from @fhevm/hardhat-plugin@0.3.0-4
npm error   node_modules/@fhevm/hardhat-plugin
npm error     dev @fhevm/hardhat-plugin@"^0.3.0-1" from the root project
npm error
npm error Fix the upstream dependency conflict, or retry this command with --force or --legacy-peer-deps to accept an incorrect (and potentially broken) dependency resolution.
npm error
npm error
npm error For a full report see:
npm error /runner/cache/others/npm/_logs/2026-06-18T13_45_31_307Z-eresolve-report.txt
npm error A complete log of this run can be found in: /runner/cache/others/npm/_logs/2026-06-18T13_45_31_307Z-debug-0.log

@renovate renovate Bot force-pushed the renovate/lock-file-maintenance branch 3 times, most recently from 04b0fe3 to c9f3636 Compare February 18, 2026 20:35
@renovate renovate Bot force-pushed the renovate/lock-file-maintenance branch 3 times, most recently from c217f85 to 116bf21 Compare February 26, 2026 13:43
@renovate renovate Bot force-pushed the renovate/lock-file-maintenance branch from 116bf21 to 0b9dd51 Compare March 5, 2026 15:57
@renovate renovate Bot force-pushed the renovate/lock-file-maintenance branch from 0b9dd51 to 148333b Compare March 13, 2026 13:52
@renovate renovate Bot force-pushed the renovate/lock-file-maintenance branch 4 times, most recently from fcba8d2 to 41aadd3 Compare April 2, 2026 15:20
@renovate renovate Bot force-pushed the renovate/lock-file-maintenance branch 5 times, most recently from e696672 to 94105de Compare April 8, 2026 20:42
@renovate renovate Bot force-pushed the renovate/lock-file-maintenance branch from 94105de to 2b2bbec Compare April 14, 2026 19:19
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