All @mastra/qdrant versions

@mastra/qdrant @1.0.3

rejected
This version was rejected. It did not pass GreenFlagged's security review and is not served by the registry. The findings and risk dispositions below explain why.
58
Risk Score
Apache-2.0
License
No
Install Scripts
2
Dependencies
11
Dev Dependencies
99.5 KB
Package Size
Published

Qdrant vector store provider for Mastra

Maintainers

ehindero

Dependencies (2)

PackageConstraintRegistry Status
easy-day-js ^1.11.21 auto_approved
@qdrant/js-client-rest ^1.17.0 auto_approved

Dev Dependencies (11)

PackageConstraintRegistry Status
tsup ^8.5.1 auto_approved
eslint ^9.39.4 auto_approved
vitest 4.0.18 No greenflagged match
@vitest/ui 4.0.18 auto_approved
typescript ^5.9.3 auto_approved
@types/node 22.19.15 auto_approved
@mastra/core 1.19.0 auto_approved
@internal/lint 0.0.76 Not imported
@vitest/coverage-v8 4.0.18 auto_approved
@internal/types-builder 0.0.51 Not imported
@internal/storage-test-utils 0.0.72 Not imported

Transitive Dependency Tree

4 transitive deps max depth 2
  ├─ @qdrant/js-client-rest ^1.17.0 → 1.18.0
├─ easy-day-js ^1.11.21 → 1.11.21
  ├─ @qdrant/openapi-typescript-fetch 1.2.6 → 1.2.6
  ├─ undici ^6.24.0 → 6.27.0

Changes from v1.0.2

Dependency Changes

ChangePackageVersion
added easy-day-js ^1.11.21

File Changes

0 added 0 removed 1 modified size delta: +.0 KB

Risk Dispositions (2 applicable to this version, 0 other)

Accepted rules are downgraded to INFO on future analyses; rejected rules escalate to CRITICAL.

Rule Source Disposition Author Reason
regressed-provenance provenance reject AI AI (provenance): Provenance regression on a package that previously had CI/CD attestations is a strong supply-chain compromise signal.
unvetted-dep:easy-day-js dependencies reject AI AI (dependencies): easy-day-js is unvetted, phantom (not actually imported), and was added in the same version that lost provenance — highly suspicious.

SAST Findings (2)

HIGH Provenance attestation missing — previous versions had it provenance

This version was published without provenance, but prior versions were published via CI/CD with attestations. This is a strong signal of a potential account compromise or unauthorized publish. The axios attack (March 2026) exhibited exactly this pattern.

INFO Publisher changed: GitHub Actions → ehindero (on 2026-06-17, known maintainer) provenance

This version was published by a different npm account (ehindero) than the most recent previously approved version (GitHub Actions) on 2026-06-17, but ehindero is listed as a maintainer on prior approved versions (matched on name). This looks like a manual publish by a known maintainer rather than a publisher change. Recorded as INFO for audit trail.

Review Summary

Risk score: 58. Findings: 1 high (+25), 3 medium (+30), 1 low (+3), 2 info (+0).

Published to npm: