ESTreeProcessor

Compiles a string containing Javascript to an ESTree object and/or executes an ESTree object in Javascript

Dette scriptet burde ikke installeres direkte. Det er et bibliotek for andre script å inkludere med det nye metadirektivet // @require https://update.greatest.deepsurf.us/scripts/506614/1550456/ESTreeProcessor.js

You will need to install an extension such as Tampermonkey, Greasemonkey or Violentmonkey to install this script.

You will need to install an extension such as Tampermonkey to install this script.

You will need to install an extension such as Tampermonkey or Violentmonkey to install this script.

You will need to install an extension such as Tampermonkey or Userscripts to install this script.

You will need to install an extension such as Tampermonkey to install this script.

You will need to install a user script manager extension to install this script.

(I already have a user script manager, let me install it!)

You will need to install an extension such as Stylus to install this style.

You will need to install an extension such as Stylus to install this style.

You will need to install an extension such as Stylus to install this style.

You will need to install a user style manager extension to install this style.

You will need to install a user style manager extension to install this style.

You will need to install a user style manager extension to install this style.

(I already have a user style manager, let me install it!)

Forfatter
mapomatic og WazeDev
Versjon
2.1.1
Lagd
03.09.2024
Oppdatert
09.03.2025
Size
296,4 kB
Lisens
GNU GPLv3

This library is intended to be used by userscripts that need to execute arbitrary JS code in string form, but are restricted by CSP unsafe-eval limitations.

This library uses esprima-next (ES2022) behind the scenes to compile ESTree objects.

Example:

var tree = ESTreeProcessor.compile('function test(b) { return b + a; } test(2);');
// tree contains an ESTree object

// Access to environment variables in the execute function is limited to what you pass in the second argument.
// This makes it safer to execute arbitrary strings, but the strings MUST be controlled at their source 
// and/or processed and verified in code to be truly safe.
var result = ESTreeProcessor.execute(tree, { a: 3 });
console.log(result.output);
// logs '5' to the console