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path: root/nitrocli/src/tests/otp.rs
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* Move nitrocli source code into repository rootDaniel Mueller2020-04-04
| | | | | | Now that all vendored dependencies have been removed, this change moves the program's source code from the nitrocli/ directory into the root of the repository.
* Update nitrokey crate to 0.4.0-alpha.3Daniel Mueller2019-08-12
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | This change updates the version of the nitrokey crate that we use to 0.4.0-alpha.3. This version is the supposedly last pre-release before 0.4.0, with no further major anticipated changes. In order to integrate with this new version we have to adjust the way we connect to a Nitrokey device by funneling those connection requests through a global manager object. The rationale behind that step being that the underlying libnitrokey actually cannot handle access of multiple devices at the same time, and so the manager object is used to prevent accidental wrong concurrent usage. Because a device object now effectively keeps a reference to the manager, we need to provide an additional lifetime to that and derived objects. Lastly, the use of a manager is also the reason why the tests had to be adjusted to no longer accept device objects in their signatures, but only the respective model for which to invoke the test. That is required because, as elaborated earlier on, having a device object implies having taken a reference to a manager (in that case owned by nitrokey-test), and that reference clashes with the nitrocli code itself attempting to take the manager. We side step this problem by merely accepting a Model object, which can be passed around independently of the manager itself, meaning that nitrokey-test does not need to hold such a reference while the test is run. Import subrepo nitrokey/:nitrokey at f150d59410eefdec2ae69b2422906a3d1d88aa07 Import subrepo nitrokey-sys/:nitrokey-sys at 8695e2c762807e033a86c8d03974b686d20cdd72 Import subrepo lazy-static/:lazy-static at b4b2b16aaa79dd7548e288455a0dbe4065bf4e1a
* Update nitrokey crate to 0.4.0-alpha.0Daniel Mueller2019-07-17
| | | | | | | | | | | This is patch marks the first step in the process of updating the nitrokey dependency to version 0.4. In particular, it integrates with the first alpha version. The main change on the nitrocli side accompanying the version bump is that the nitrokey::CommandError got replaced by a more general nitrokey::Error which includes the former variant. Import subrepo nitrokey/:nitrokey at d433189caefe6bd6c88da7fbb1d6e9304353eb83
* Properly pad user supplied hexadecimal strings to otp set subcommandDaniel Mueller2019-10-13
| | | | | | | | | | The library ultimately taking care of communicating with the Nitrokey device, libnitrokey, unconditionally expects hexadecimal strings supplied as part of the configuration of an OTP slot to have an even number of bytes. Users should not be aware of this detail and so with this change we take care of padding the supplied string with a leading zero to make such a configuration go through without an error.
* Clear cached PIN entry as part of pin set commandDaniel Mueller2019-06-01
| | | | | | | | | | When a PIN is changed using the pin set command, the last action is to confirm the operation with the previously used PIN. This step will cause this PIN, which is now stale and no longer valid, to be cached, which in turn can cause follow up command using the same PIN type to use this wrong cached entry for authentication. To fix this problem, this change explicitly clear the PIN entry from the cache after the PIN has been changed.
* Add tests for otp commandDaniel Mueller2019-01-14
| | | | | | | This change adds a set of tests for the otp command. We cover some variants of the status, set, get, and clear. Testing all the possible combinations is out of scope and so only a more or less arbitrary subset of arguments was chosen.
* Report command errors properlyDaniel Mueller2019-01-09
So far we have taken all nitrokey::CommandError objects and put them in formatted form into the Error::Error variant. What we really should do, though, is to preserve the original error, with the additional context provided by the caller, and report that up the stack directly. Doing so has at least the benefit that we are able to check for expected errors without hard coding the textual representation as maintained by the nitrokey create. This change refactors the code accordingly and adds two tests for such expected error codes.