| Commit message (Collapse) | Author | Age |
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An arguably unrepresentative survey of services (GitHub, Google
Authenticator, and Bitbucket) seems to suggests that the base32 format
is the de-facto standard format for OTP secrets. Given that it's not
necessarily obvious what format a secret is in and that most services
refrain from mentioning it explicitly, having the correct default format
is fairly important.
With this change we switch the default format from hexadecimal to
base32 to accommodate for this finding.
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A while back we removed the nitrocli/ directory in the repository root.
Unfortunately, we missed that the binary-sizes.py script relied on the
previous directory structure. This change adjusts the script to work
with the new structure.
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Our custom macros for conveniently creating types with additional meta
information for working with structopt do not actually use the doc
comments we have in place -- these comments are solely for in-source
documentation. We are an application and as such crates.io will not
automatically generate documentation.
All of that does not deter rustc from complaining that doc comments are
unused. In the past we tried to fudge that by adding a special
allowance, #[allow(unused_doc_comments)], but that seems to have seized
to work.
With this change we finally give in and move the doc comment into the
macro itself, where it will be used to annotate the generated type. This
step should hopefully silence rustc once and for all -- at the expense
of a slight decrease in readability.
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This change bumps the version of the crate to 0.3.3. The following
notable changes have been made since 0.3.2:
- Added bash completion support via shell-complete utility program
- Updated minimum required Rust version to 1.40.0
- Converted Cargo.lock to new lock file format
- Bumped libc dependency to 0.2.69
- Bumped structopt dependency to 0.3.13
- Bumped various transitive dependencies to most recent versions
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Since version 1.38.0 of Rust, Cargo has built in support for a new lock
file format that aims at reducing merge conflicts of unrelated changes.
Given that we require an even more recent version of Rust, it seems safe
to switch over to this new format (which by now is the default for new
projects anyway).
This patch changes the format of Cargo.lock accordingly.
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This change updates transitive dependencies of the nitrokey crate to
their most recent versions.
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This change updates the regex crate to version 1.3.7. Transitive
dependencies are updated as well.
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This change updates the structopt crate to version 0.3.13. Transitive
dependencies are updated as well.
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This change updates the libc crate to version 0.2.69.
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We have never been fully satisfied with the name arg_defs. Now that we
have gotten rid of the formerly used args module, this change renames
arg_defs to args.
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This change removes the args module by moving all remaining
functionality in it into main.rs. The result is arguably a nice
consolidation of all context related definitions in a single module.
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As a next step moving us closer towards removing the args module, this
change merges the config_set function into the existing function of the
same name in the commands module.
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Now that we have isolated and separated out structopt specific
definitions into a new module, arg_defs, args.rs is actually so small
that we do not want to keep it around any longer.
This change marks a first step moving us closer towards removing it.
Specifically, it merges the otp_set function from args.rs into the
function of the same name in commands.rs.
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This change updates the minimum required version of Rust to 1.40.0.
Among other changes, this version stabilized std::mem::take, which is
something we will use with subsequent changes.
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This change adds a test for the previously introduced bash completion
functionality. To test the generated completion script, we spin up a
bash instance, source the script, and then perform a completion as the
shell would do it. It seems impossible to convince compgen to do the
heavy lifting for us and so we invoke the completion function with the
expected environment variables present.
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This change adds support for generating a bash completion script. If
sourced, the shell will provide tab completions for the program's
arguments.
There are two possible approaches provided by clap for going about
generating shell completion functionality: either at build time, by
separately generating the clap parsers out-of-band, or at run time, as
an option to the main program itself. We are generally not too much in
favor of a run time approach, as it means less inspectability at
installation time and more overhead in the form of code crammed into the
main binary.
Hence, with this change we take the "build time" approach. Clap
recommends hooking the generation up in build.rs, but this seems like an
inflexible choice. For one, that is because it would mean
unconditionally generating this file or using some user-unfriendly
environment variable based approach for making the process conditional.
But there is also the fact that specifying the command for which to
generate the script should likely be configurable. That is a limitation
of the completion script that clap generates (see
https://github.com/clap-rs/clap/issues/1764).
In our version we provide a utility program that emits the completion
script to standard output, accepting regular command line options
itself. In doing so we allow for installation time generation of the
completion script or installation of the utility itself, the output of
which could be sourced on demand -- depending on the user's preference.
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We are aiming to rid the arg_defs module of dependencies to the rest of
the crate in an attempt to make the file fully free standing. The last
remaining references into the crate are used to hook up the functionality
backing the respective commands. Luckily for us, this "gluing" of
functionality to types is really only required in the macro-generated
code (which we do not care about as part of this exercise) and so with
this change we remove the use declarations from the top of the file and
reference the respective functionality in an absolute manner instead.
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This change removes the need to import crate::Error from the arg_defs
module. By dropping this dependency we make the file more independent of
the rest of the crate, which subsequently will allow us to merely
include! it in another file in order to get the argument related type
definitions without compilation errors due to missing symbols from the
rest of the crate.
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The PinType struct, despite being intended for the pinentry module, is
ultimately part of the argument handling definitions. Because our goal
is to consolidate all of those in a single file, this change moves the
definition of this type from the pinentry module into the newly
introduced arg_defs.
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This change marks the first step in a restructuring of the argument
handling code, the ultimate goal of which is a separation of the type
definitions as used by structopt from the logic associated with it. This
change in particular introduces a new module, arg_defs, that contains
all those type definitions that previously resided in the args module.
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This change bumps the version of the crate to 0.3.2. The following
notable changes have been made since 0.3.1:
- Added the list command that lists all attached Nitrokey devices
- Reworked argument handling:
- Added structopt dependency in version 0.3.7
- Replaced argparse with structopt
- Removed argparse dependency
- Made the --verbose and --model options global
- Removed vendored dependencies and moved source code into repository
root
- Bumped nitrokey dependency to 0.6.0
- Bumped quote dependency to 1.0.3
- Bumped syn dependency to 1.0.14
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The Nitrokey team changed the URL where details about the Nitrokey
Storage device are to be found, rendering our link broken. This change
updates the link to reference the new location.
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This change updates the quote crate to version 1.0.3.
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The plugin_as_library lint has been deprecated as of Rust 1.40.0. Hence,
with this change we remove it from the list of lints we want to get
warnings from.
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This change updates the syn crate to version 1.0.14.
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nitrokey 0.6.0 introduced the SerialNumber struct (instead of
representing serial numbers as strings). We no longer have to manually
format the serial number as SerialNumber implements Display.
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As it is no longer required to set the global options before the command
and as we will probably introduce more global options with the next
releases, this patch removes the global options from the synopsis line
in the man page. See issue #102 for more details.
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This patch adds the attribute 'global = true' for the top-level
--verbose and --model options, which ensures that they can also be set
for subcommands. For example:
$ nitrocli status --model pro
Instead of only:
$ nitrocli --model pro status
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The -o/--otp-pin and -O/--no-otp-pin options to the config set command
are supposed to be mutually exclusive, with wrong usage detected by
structopt.
That is not the case currently, however, because the argument to
structopt's conflicts_with attribute is supposed to be the resulting
option and not the name of the variable capturing the result.
This change fixes the problem by changing the string accordingly.
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This patch implements the list command that lists all attached Nitrokey
devices. Currently the Nitrokey Storage does not report its serial
number during HID enumeration, see [0]. So if we detect a Nitrokey
Storage device, we connect to it and use the get_serial_number function
to query its serial number. This can be disabled using the --no-connect
option.
Note that even the get_serial_number function reports a wrong serial
number for the Nitrokey Storage, see [1].
[0] https://github.com/Nitrokey/nitrokey-storage-firmware/issues/88
[1] https://github.com/Nitrokey/nitrokey-storage-firmware/issues/76
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This patch adds the basic scaffolding for the list command which will
list all attached Nitrokey devices.
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This change updates the version of the nitrokey crate that we use to
0.5.1. As part of that, it replaces occurrences of Storage::get_status
with Storage::get_storage_status as the method has been renamed.
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With the switch to using structopt for argument parsing some of the
default values have become mere strings, whereas one of our earlier
objectives was to have symbolic values where that is possible. As
structopt works with symbolic values equally well, this change makes it
use those.
As a bonus, also list the possible formats for the --format option to
the otp set subcommand.
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With the recent patch set moving us to using structopt over argparse we
introduced all new structs and enums representing subcommands and the
like as public. That is unnecessary, as they are not accessed from the
outside.
This change adjusts the visibility accordingly.
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Since we updated the Command! macro to also allow enum variants without
fields, we no longer need the empty *Args structs for commands or
subcommands without arguments or options.
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Since we changed the Command! macro to also support doc comments, we can
now document the commands directly in the enum. This makes the
documentation more consistent when we remove the empty structs for
commands without arguments.
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This patch introduces two changes to the Command! macro:
- We allow variants without fields so that we no longer have to define
empty *Args structs just for the Command! macro.
- We allow doc comments so that we can document commands without a
separate *Args struct.
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Currently, the ordering in the args.rs file is inconsistent and
arbitrary. This patch orders the members by command hierarchy:
- common data structures
- for each command C:
- CArgs
- CCommand
- for each subcommand S:
- SArgs
- custom data structures
- custom functions
- main argument handling function
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This patch adds the possible_values method to the structopt attributes
for all enum options and arguments using the all_str function added in
the previous patch. Therefore, the help messages now also list the
possible values for these options.
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To make it easier to list all possible values for a command-line option
mapped to an enum, we add the all_str function to the Enum! macro that
returns an array of the string representations of all variants.
We also use this new function to simplify the generation of the error
message in the FromStr implementation in Enum!.
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To simplify the code, this patch replaces the one-line argument handling
functions with closures.
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As we no longer have to implement the Display and AsRef traits for the
enums generated with the Command! macro, we don’t have to set a string
representation either. So we can drop this argument from the Command!
macro.
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In the previous patches, we replaced argparse with structopt and removed
the argparse dependency. This patch removes the code that was only
needed for argparse.
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As we have replaced argparse with structopt, we no longer need it as a
dependency. This patch removes the dependency from Cargo.toml and
deletes the included copy.
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This patch changes the argument handling code to use structopt instead
of argparse using the data structures we introduced in the last patch.
As part of that transition we replace the old Error::ArgparseError
variant with ClapError that stores a structopt::clap::Error.
Because of that replacement, the format of the help messages changed,
breaking some of the tests. Hence, this change adapts them accordingly.
Also clap currently prints the version output to stdout, so we ignore
the version_option test case for now.
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This patch introduces new structs that can be used with structopt to
store the options and arguments parsed from the command line. These
structs use the existing enums and command structs.
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As a preparation for the structopt transition, we derive StructOpt for
the enums generated by Command! so that they can be used as a
subcommand.
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For the transition to structopt, we have to be able to easily construct
enum variants once we have added fields to them. Therefore we implement
the Default trait in the generated macros by choosing the first variant
as the default.
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