| Commit message (Collapse) | Author | Age |
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The Result enum is more idiomatic and easier to use than our custom
CommandStatus enum with the same structure. This is especially true for
the try operator ?.
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When enabled, the password safe can be used without authentication. The
lock device can be used to lock the password safe. Currently,
PasswordSafe::drop calls this command to make sure that other
applications cannot access the password safe without authentication.
On the Nitrokey Storage, locking the device may also disable the
encrypted or hidden volume. As using the password safe should not have
side effects on the storage volumes, this patch removes the call to the
lock device command from the Drop implementation. Instead, the user
should call this method after making sure that it does not have side
effects.
A feature request for a command that only locks the password safe
without side effects is submitted to the Nitrokey Storage firmware
repository:
https://github.com/Nitrokey/nitrokey-storage-firmware/issues/65
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By calling NK_lock_device when dropping a PasswordSafe instance, we can
make sure that the password safe cannot be reused without
authentication.
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Instead of wrapping an owned Device instance, PasswordSafe now only
requires a reference to a Device. The lifetime parameter makes sure
that the device lives at least as long as the password safe. Using a
reference instead of an owned device allows us to implement Drop on
PasswordSafe to make sure that the password safe is disabled once it is
destructed.
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A password safe (PWS) stores names, logins and passwords in slots. PWS
are supported both by the Nitrokey Pro and the Nitrokey Storage. They
are implemented as a struct wrapping a device as the device may not be
disconnected while the password safe is alive. The creation of a
password safe is handled by the GetPasswordSafe trait, implemented by
DeviceWrapper, Pro and Storage.
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