| Commit message (Collapse) | Author | Age |
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To enable applications like nitrokey-test to go back to a manager
instance from a Device instance, we add the into_manager function to the
Device trait. To do that, we have to keep track of the Manager’s
lifetime by adding a lifetime to Device (and then to some other traits
that use Device).
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In the last patches, we ensured that devices can only be obtained using
the Manager struct. But we did not ensure that there is only one device
at a time. This patch adds a mutable reference to the Manager instance
to the Device implementations. The borrow checker makes sure that there
is only one mutable reference at a time.
In this patch, we have to remove the old connect, Pro::connect and
Storage::connect functions as they do no longer compile. (They discard
the MutexGuard which invalidates the reference to the Manager.)
Therefore the tests do no longer compile.
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As part of the connection refactoring, this patch moves the connect
methods of the Pro and Storage structs into the Manager struct. To
maintain compatibility with nitrokey-test, the old methods are not
removed but marked as deprecated.
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As part of the connection refactoring, this patch moves the
connect_model function to the Manager struct. As the connect_model
function is not used by nitrokey-test, it is removed.
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As part of the connection refactoring, we replace the connect function
with the Manager::connect method. To maintain compatibility with
nitrokey-test, the connect function is not removed but marked as
deprecated.
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As part of the connection refactoring, we introduce the Manager struct
that deals with connection management. To make sure there can be only
once instance of the manager, we add a global static Mutex that holds
the single Manager instance. We use the struct to ensure that the user
can only connect to one device at a time.
This also changes the Error::PoisonError variant to store the
sync::PoisonError. This allows the user to call into_inner on the
PoisonError to retrieve the MutexGuard and to ignore the error (for
example useful during testing).
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This patch prepares the refactoring of the connection methods by
introducing the Error variants ConcurrentAccessError and PoisonError.
ConcurrentAccessError indicates that the user tried to connect to
obtain a token that is currently locked, and PoisonError indicates that
a lock has been poisoned, i. e. a thread panicked while accessing using
a token.
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As the return type of the NK_get_{major,minor}_firmware_version methods
changed with libnitrokey 3.5, we also have to adapt our
get_firmware_version function in device.rs.
This patch also updates the changelog and the todo list with the changes
caused by the new libnitrokey version.
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This reverts commit 13006c00dcbd570cf8347d89557834e320427377.
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This reverts commit 0972bbe82623c3d9649b6023d8f50d304aa0cde6.
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The current implementation of PasswordSafe stored a normal reference to
the Device. This patch changes the PasswordSafe struct to use a mutable
reference instead. This allows the borrow checker to make sure that
there is only one PasswordSafe instance at a time. While this is
currently not needed, it will become important once we can lock the PWS
on the Nitrokey when dropping the PasswordSafe instance.
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In the initial nitrokey-rs implementation, the Admin and the User struct
take the Device by value to make sure that the user cannot initiate a
second authentication while this first is still active (which would
invalidate the temporary password). Now we realized that this is not
necessary – taking a mutable reference has the same effect, but leads to
a much cleaner API.
This patch refactors the Admin and User structs – and all dependent code
– to use a mutable reference instead of a Device value.
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Previously, all methods that access a Nitrokey device took a reference
to the device as input. This method changes methods that change the
device state to require a mutable reference instead. In most case,
this is straightforward as the method writes data to the device (for
example write_config or change_user_pin). But there are two edge cases:
- Authenticating with a PIN changes the device state as it may decrease
the PIN retry counter if the authentication fails.
- Generating an HOTP code changes the device state as it increases the
HOTP counter.
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To prepare the mutability refactoring, we add a device_mut method to
DeviceWrapper that can be used to obtain a mutable reference to the
wrapped device.
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As we want to change some methods to take a mutable reference to a
Device, we implement DerefMut for User<T> and Admin<T> so that users can
obtain a mutable reference to the wrapped device.
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Previously, we considered this command as unsupported as it only was
available with firmware version 0.49. But as discussed in nitrocli
issue 80 [0], it will probably be re-enabled in future firmware
versions. Therefore this patch adds the set_encrypted_volume_mode to
Storage.
[0] https://github.com/d-e-s-o/nitrocli/issues/80
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This patch combines the get_{major,minor}_firmware_version methods into
the new get_firmware_version method that returns a FirmwareVersion
struct. Currently, this requires casting from i32 to u8. But this will
be fixed with the next libnitrokey version as we change the return types
for the firmware getters.
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Previously, we sometimes returned a value without wrapping it in a
result if the API method did not indicate errors in the return value.
But we can detect errors using the NK_get_last_command_status function.
This patch changes the return types of these methods to Result<_, Error>
and adds error checks.
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To avoid unnecessary function calls, we replace the or with an or_else
in get_cstring.
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The DEFAULT_{ADMIN,USER}_PIN constants implicitly have static lifetime.
Therefore we can remove the static lifetime modifiers.
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For consistency with the other Error variants, we rename Unknown to
UnknownError.
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Many of our functions do not return a Result<_, Error>, but for example
a Result<_, (Device, Error)>. We only use the typedef in one function,
but it makes the other functions more complicated as we have to use
result::Result (if crate::Result is imported). Therefore, this patch
removes the typedef. Applications or libraries can still redefine it if
they want to.
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rand_core does not have a stable release yet, and it is unlikely that
there will be one soon. To be able to stabilize nitrokey without
waiting for a stable rand_core version, we remove the rand_core::Error
type from the public API and replace it with a Box<dyn error::Error>.
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This patch adds license and copyright information to all files to make
nitrokey-rs compliant with the REUSE practices [0].
[0] https://reuse.software/practices/2.0/
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Not all users of the authenticate methods want to use the device after
an error, so implementing From<(T: Device, Error)> for Error makes it
easier for them to discard the device.
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Previously, we used lossy UTF-8 conversion. Yet the user should be
notified if we have a problem instead of silently changing the data.
Therefore, we now return an error if we enocunter an invalid UTF-8
string. This leads to a change in `get_library_version`’s signature.
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Previously, we just ignored UTF-8 errors. This patch prepares the
Utf8Error variant so that we are able to return UTF-8 errors.
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This includes:
- using idiomatic Rust
- limiting the scope of unsafe blocks
- simplifying code
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To reduce the number of casts, we introduce the temp_password_ptr method
that casts the pointer received from the Vec<u8> to a c_char pointer
that can be handled by libnitrokey.
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Numeric casting might truncate an integer, while into() is only
implemented for numeric types if the cast is possible without
truncation.
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The Pro and Storage structs may only be created using the connect
functions. This patch adds a private PhantomData field to the structs
to ensure that the compiler does not allow direct instantiation.
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If possible, check specific error codes instead of `is_err()`. This
makes the code more readable and catches bugs resulting in the wrong
error code. Also, using the assert_*_err and assert_ok macros yields
error messages containing the expected and the actual value.
To be able to use these macros with the `get_password_safe` method, we
also have to implement `Debug` for `PasswordSafe` and `Device`.
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The CommandError::Undefined variant has been refactored into
Error::UnexpectedError and CommunicationError::NotConnected and is
therefore no longer needed.
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Previously, we returned a CommandError::Undefined if a connect function
failed. A CommunicationError::NotConnected is a more specific and
better fitting choice.
Once the Try trait has been stabilized, we should return an Option<_>
instead of a Result<_, Error> from the connect functions.
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The UnexpectedError variant is used when a libnitrokey function returns
a value that violates the function’s contract, for example if a function
returns a null pointer although it guarantees to never return null.
Previously, we returned a CommandError::Unspecified in these cases.
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For example, the WrongSlot error may also be returned for a PWS slot.
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AsStr is automatically implementeded if Display is implemented, so
having a manual as_str() method is not necessary.
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Communication errors returned by libnitrokey were previously not mapped
to an error type in the nitrokey crate. We introduce the
CommunicationError enum to represent these errors.
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Previously, library errors were part of the CommandError enum. As
command errors and library errors are two different error types, they
should be split into two enums.
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An error code can not only indiciate a command error, but also a library
or device communication error. Therefore, the variant for an unknown
error code should be placed in the top-level Error enum instead of the
CommandError enum.
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We reserve CommandError for errors returned by the Nitrokey device.
Errors during random number generation should have their own type.
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This patch changes all public functions to return the Error enum instead
of the CommandError enum. This breaks the tests which will be fixed
with the next patch.
This patch also adds a placeholder variant Error::CommandError and a
placeholder enum CommandError to make the transition to a new
nitrokey-test version easier.
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The Error enum is a wrapper for the possible error types (currently only
CommandError). Result<T> is defined as Result<T, Error>.
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This prepares the refactoring of util::CommandError into multiple enums.
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