0.13.0 (older version)
From mozilla/supply-chain copy of hg. By bendk.
These reviews are from cargo-vet. To add your review, set up cargo-vet and submit your URL to its registry.
The current version of askama_parser is 0.14.0.
0.13.0 (older version)
From mozilla/supply-chain copy of hg. By bendk.
0.13.0 (older version)
From google/supply-chain copy of google/rust-crate-audits. By Luca Versari.
Reviewed in
cargo-vet does not verify reviewers' identity. You have to fully trust the source the audits are from.
This crate will not introduce a serious security vulnerability to production software exposed to untrusted input. More…
This crate can be compiled, run, and tested on a local workstation or in controlled automation without surprising consequences. More…
Negligible unsoundness or average soundness.
Full description of the audit criteria can be found at https://github.com/google/rust-crate-audits/blob/main/auditing_standards.md#ub-risk-2
Mild unsoundness or suboptimal soundness.
Full description of the audit criteria can be found at https://github.com/google/rust-crate-audits/blob/main/auditing_standards.md#ub-risk-3
Extreme unsoundness.
Full description of the audit criteria can be found at https://github.com/google/rust-crate-audits/blob/main/auditing_standards.md#ub-risk-4
Lib.rs has been able to verify that all files in the crate's tarball, except Cargo.lock,
are in the crate's repository with a git tag matching the version. Please note that this check is still in beta, and absence of this confirmation does not mean that the files don't match.
Crates in the crates.io registry are tarball snapshots uploaded by crates' publishers. The registry is not using crates' git repositories, so there is a possibility that published crates have a misleading repository URL, or contain different code from the code in the repository.
To review the actual code of the crate, it's best to use cargo crev open askama_parser. Alternatively, you can download the tarball of askama_parser v0.14.0 or view the source online.
Template crate. This is only used to generate the Rust/JS code for UniFFI.
We used to use askama, then we switched to rinja which was a fork. Now rinja and askama have merged again.
I did a quick scan of the current code and couldn't find any issues.