| Commit message (Collapse) | Author | Age |
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The input to the Enum macro is supposed to resemble the definition of an
enum in Rust code. When manually defining an enum (or a struct for that
matter), we typically terminate all branches with a comma, and don't
just omit that on the last line.
To mirror this behavior, this change adjusts the Enum macro to accept
(and in fact, require) a comma-terminated last line as well, as opposed
to not accepting it as had been the case so far.
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This change updates the cc crate to version 1.0.37.
Import subrepo cc/:cc at cbf6d2f1312b6be22a7a363cf5c2a02acabc531f
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This change updates the libc crate to version 0.2.55.
Import subrepo libc/:libc at caf17a0641d29dc624621177f5756804dd180c13
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Macros typically should reference types by their full path and not
assume that they are in scope wherever the macro is expanded. We did
missed one spot where AsRef was not fully qualified in the Enum macro.
While that is not much of an issue here (and there may be more
occurrences, e.g., in the auto derives) lets fix that up for the sake of
consistency.
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With Rust 1.35 we get compile errors due to doc comments that are added
to macro invocations but not actually included in the expanded output.
The rustc wrongly assumes that we want to document the resulting code
and not just provide details about the invocation itself.
This change explicitly allows for those cases. Alternatively we could
have "downgraded" the doc comments to normal comments or removed them
altogether. There is little difference between those alternatives.
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This change adds a test case for the -V/--version option to the suite of
tests.
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Due to a bug in argparse [0], custom stdout and stderr settings are
ignored when using argparse::Print, as we currently do for the --version
option. This patch adds a workaround for this problem: Instead of using
argparse::Print, we use argparse::StoreTrue for the --version option.
The argument parsing will fail as the command is missing, but the
version variable will still be set to true if the version option was
set. So we ignore the parsing result and discard the argparse output if
the version variable is set.
[0] https://github.com/tailhook/rust-argparse/pull/50
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The split between the parse_arguments and the handle_arguments functions
is not really useful for reasoning about the code. In fact, it just adds
additional overhead in the form of complex function signatures into the
picture.
As it provides no real other value, this change merges the functionality
of both functions into a single one: handle_arguments.
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To be able to decide whether to print the argparse output depending on
the result of the argument parsing, this patch wraps stdout and stderr
in a BufWriter before invoking argparse. Our BufWriter implementation
only writes to the inner Write if the flush method is called. This
allows us to decide whether the buffered data should be written or
silently dropped.
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We have introduced the parse function to unify the common parsing
related tasks. In that vein, this change goes one step further and
adjusts the function to actually consume the ArgumentParser object used
by it.
All clients using this function actually do not access the parser
afterwards, and, in fact, some of them have to explicitly drop it
because of borrow conflicts with "referred" arguments.
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This patch changes the error handling in the args' module parse function
to use the Result's map_err instead of a more verbose if let expression.
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This change updates the libc crate to version 0.2.48.
Import subrepo libc/:libc at 42cd3ba27254c423e03f6f4324de57075047f6a0
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This change updates the regex-syntax crate to version 0.6.5.
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This change updates the memchr crate to version 2.1.3.
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This change updates the proc-macro2 crate to version 0.4.26.
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This change updates the quote crate to version 0.6.11.
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This change updates the syn crate to version 0.15.26.
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The factory reset only clears the slot status. The slot content is
overwritten with random data. Therefore accessing a PWS slot after a
factory reset returns garbage data. We fixed this by always querying
the status before accessing the PWS. This patch adds a corresponding
test case.
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The Nitrokey devices do not check whether a PWS slot is programmed
before accessing it (upstream issues [0] [1]). Until this is fixed in
the firmware, we have to manually check the slot status in pws get. This
could have been done in libnitrokey or the nitrokey crate, yet this
would lead to unnecessary commands if we check multiple fields of a slot
at the same time.
[0] https://github.com/Nitrokey/nitrokey-pro-firmware/issues/56
[1] https://github.com/Nitrokey/nitrokey-storage-firmware/issues/81
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After performing the factory reset, we also build the AES key so that
the device is fully usable. Due to timing issue, we have to add a delay
between the factory reset and building the AES key.
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The -V/--version option prints the nitrocli version to stdout and exits.
In the future, it should also print the used libnitrokey version, but as
the required function is only available with nitrokey 0.3.2 and as the
current interface does not reflect the latest change in version naming,
I skipped that in this patch.
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This change bumps the version of the crate to 0.2.3. The following
notable changes have been made since 0.2.2:
- Added the storage hidden subcommand for working with hidden volumes
- Store cached PINs on a per-device basis to better support multi-device
scenarios
- Further decreased binary size by using system allocator
- Bumped nitrokey dependency to 0.3.4
- Bumped rand dependency to 0.6.4
- Removed rustc_version, semver, and semver-parser dependencies
- Bumped nitrokey-sys dependency to 3.4.3
- Bumped libc dependency to 0.2.47
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The duplicate_associated_type_bindings lint seems to have been removed
with the Rust 1.32 release.
This change removes the lint from the program to prevent the newly
introduced warning from being emitted.
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If nitrokey-app is running, the device it connected to cannot be
detected by other applications. This patch adds this issue to the list
of known problems in the README.
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The CI scripts and the rustfmt configuration are only needed when
developing. There is no point in distributing them in the package
published on crates.io, so we exclude them from packaging using the
exclude setting in Cargo.toml.
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This change updates the libc crate to version 0.2.47.
Import subrepo libc/:libc at ce1dfcbf81bd74662b5cd02a9214818a0bfbbffa
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This change updates the nitrokey crate to version 0.3.4.
Import subrepo nitrokey/:nitrokey at 41cdc1f7091a3c442241dbb2379c50dbcc7e9c5f
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This change adds tests for the lock command. For the Nitrokey Pro we
cannot test too much because the only side-effect is that the password
safe is closed and it will be opened automatically again by virtue of
our non-interactive testing methodology.
For Storage devices we verify that the encrypted volume is closed, which
is a documented side-effect.
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This change updates the README and the man page with documentation about
hidden volumes in general and the storage hidden subcommand in
particular.
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This change adds a test for the creation, opening, and closing of a
hidden subvolume. In order to support that in a non-interactive fashion,
we introduce and honor the NITROCLI_PASSWORD environment variable, that
prevents an interactive password query.
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With this change we implement the storage hidden subcommand. We support
creation, opening, and closing of hidden volumes.
Note that the opening of a hidden volume automatically closes any opened
encrypted volumes and vice versa. To that end, we force file system
level caches to disk even from the storage open and storage hidden open
commands.
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This change introduces a new subcommand to the storage command called
'hidden'. This subcommand can be used to interact with hidden volumes.
Right now we support three operations pertaining hidden volumes: create,
open, and close.
This patch merely provides the infrastructure for parsing the commands
and all their arguments, it does not yet implement them fully.
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With the required interface for secrets well defined, this change
introduces a second secret type in addition to PINs: passwords. Similar
to a PIN, a password can contain pretty arbitrary characters but
passwords can be retried repeatedly, whereas PINs cause a lockout after
a certain number of failed attempts.
Our first use case for passwords will be for hidden volumes. For those,
we do not want to gpg-agent to cache entries and so a password entry
indicates that it is not to be cached through the previously introduced
mechanism for optional caching.
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Another commonality between a password and a PIN is that they typically
both have a minimum length.
To accommodate for this requirement, this change introduces another
method to the SecretEntry trait that represents the secret's minimum
character length.
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Currently, when we enter a secret (i.e., a PIN) through the pinentry
module, this PIN will automatically be cached and not asked from the
user again on subsequent inquiries. However, caching may not always be
desired. For the upcoming support of passwords used in conjunction with
hidden volumes, we do not want any caching because different passwords
can be entered for different volumes and the user's intention is not
clear until a password has actually been entered.
To accommodate this use case, this change modifies the signature of the
SecretEntry trait's cache_id method to return an optional cache ID. If
none is returned, caching of the entered secret is disabled.
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We do not know what kind of data future implementers of the SecretEntry
trait may want to return. For all we know these could just be static
strings, in which case the forced conversion into a String by virtue of
the return type is wasteful.
To be more flexible in the future while gaining some consistency, this
change makes all those trait's methods return a Cow object instead.
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Now that we have introduced the notion of a secret abstracting over
whether something is a PIN or a password in terms of terminology, we
need to define what makes a secret in code. From the pinentry module's
perspective, the commonality between the two is that they both can be
entered through a dialog containing a prompt and a description, and they
can be cached.
This change introduces a trait, SecretEntry, that defines methods
representing those properties. Right now only the existing PinEntry
struct implements this trait.
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In the past we have worked solely with PINs. PINs in our (or rather, the
Nitrokey's) sense are not necessarily numbers but they can be reasonably
short in length, because they can only be retried a limited number of
times.
In the future, however, we will introduce the notion of a password,
which does not carry such a restriction.
The commonality between the two is that they are secrets and so with
this change we refer to secrets -- rather than PINs -- in places where
both passwords and PINs can conceptually be used.
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Various functions in the pinentry module contain an arguably redundant
'_pin' suffix in their name. Examples include inquire_pin and clear_pin.
This change removes this part from their names.
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The functionality we have in place for choosing a PIN can arguably be
moved into the pinentry module: it can be considered logic directly
related to working with PINs or secrets and that has no dependencies to
unrelated modules of the program.
This patch moves the choose_pin and check_pin functions into the
pinentry module.
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This change adds two tests for the storage command. The first one
verifies that a proper error message is emitted if a storage command is
attempted on a Pro device. The second one checks the output of the
status subcommand and expected changes to it when opening or closing the
encrypted volume.
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This change adds a set of tests for the pws command. Covered are all
subcommands with the most commonly used parameter combinations.
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The previous change to properly format the help text for optional
arguments left one thing out: parameters that are based on an Option as
opposed to an enum. The problem with those is that we cannot simply ask
the value (i.e., the Option) for all the variants of the inner type.
Instead, we have to reference the actual type of the inner enum in order
to retrieve all its possible variants.
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This change continues the effort of auto-generating more of the help
text content by extending the logic to optional arguments. We make use
of the fmt_enum macro to format the description of the argument with the
available variants (as well as the default, if any) interpolated.
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With the ability to fully generate the command enums we use for working
with the argparse crate, we can now take things one step further and
populate the contents of the help string we print for the user that
lists the available commands.
Doing so we also fix a bug where we forgot to mention the "storage
status" command in the help text.
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Not too long ago we added a macro to auto generate the command enums and
the required trait implementations from a concise declarative
representation. This change extends this mechanism to the execute method
implementation that some of those enums provide.
When a tuple is specified as the "destination", e.g., here:
> Enum! {ConfigCommand, [
> Get => ("get", config_get),
> Set => ("set", config_set)
> ]}
the second component of this tuple will be interpreted as the function
to invoke when this variant used in the newly generated execute method.
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We have been loosely tracking the resulting size of the stripped release
binary as that is arguably the most relevant metric to optimize for. To
have a better idea of the influence of various changes and their effect
on the binary size, this change adds a script that automates the process
of gathering this metric. E.g.,
$ var/binary-size.py HEAD~3 HEAD --unit kib
> 994
> 970
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