| Commit message (Collapse) | Author | Age |
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The get_production_info method maps to the NK_get_production_info
function of libnitrokey. The Storage firmware supports two query modes:
with or without a write test. libnitrokey only performs the query
without write test, so the fields that are only set for the write test
are ignored in our implementation. This affects:
- user and admin retry counts
- smart card ID
- SD card size
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The export_firmware method writes the firmware of the Nitrokey Storage
to the unencrypted storage. We only test that the command succeeds as
mounting the unencrypted storage and accessing the file is out of scope
for the tests.
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The new set_unencrypted_volume_mode method sets the access mode of the
unencrypted volume on the Nitrokey Storage. Depending on the requested
access mode, it calls either NK_set_unencrypted_read_only_admin or
NK_set_unencrypted_read_write_admin.
Note that this function requires firmware version 0.51 or later.
(Earlier firmware versions used the user PIN.)
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The update PIN is only used in the Storage tests, so it is moved from
the common tests/util module to the tests/device module. This fixes
compiler warnings when compiling the other test modules.
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The connect_* device tests fail when run in a setup with a Pro and
Storage stick present. The problem is that these tests assume only one
stick to be present, and that the corresponding connect function for the
other stick reports an error.
However, in a two stick setup there is no such guarantee. This patch
removes tests for those assumptions.
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This patch adds the global connect_model function that can be used to
connect to a Nitrokey device of a given model. Contrary to Pro::connect
and Storage::connect, the model does not have to be set at compile time.
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This patch introduces the methods enable_hidden_volume,
disable_hidden_volume and create_hidden_volume for the Storage struct to
support the hidden volumes on the Nitrokey Storage. The enable and
create methods require that the encrypted storage has been enabled.
Contrary to authentication and password safe access, we do not enforce
this requirement in the API as file system operations could have
unwanted side effects and should not performed implicitly.
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We experienced various problems running the tests and while they may or
may not be caused by local setup issues, it is helpful to have more
information than just an indication that an assertion (true/false) was
violated.
To that end, this change adjusts some of the assert!(<func>().is_ok())
to compare against Ok(()) instead. This way, if the result is not the Ok
variant, the error code will get printed.
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This change is the first in a series to migrate the existing tests to
using the nitrokey-test crate. The crate provides a couple of benefits
over the existing way testing works:
- test execution is automatically serialized (i.e., no more need for
--test-threads)
- available devices are detected at runtime (i.e., no more need for
--features test-pro)
- tests capable of running only on a specific device are automatically
skipped if this device is not present
In addition to that, the crate also offers selection of particular
groups of tests by virtue of the NITROKEY_TEST_GROUP environment
variable. If set (valid values are "nodev", "pro", and "storage") only
tests of the particular group are run (those tests will fail if a
required precondition is not met, i.e., if a device is present but
"nodev" is set, or if the "pro" group is run but no device or a storage
device is present).
Unfortunately, it has some limitations as well. Most importantly Rust
does not allow us to indicate whether a test has been skipped or not.
While it has #[ignore] support, that strictly is a compile-time feature
and, hence, not usable.
This patch in particular pulls in the nitrokey-test crate and adjusts
the existing device tests to make use of it.
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Contrary to my previous beliefs, build_aes_key has to be called even
after a factory reset using the Nitrokey API. This patch updates the
documentation and the unit tests based on this insight.
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This patch adds the build_aes_key method to the Device trait that uses
the NK_build_aes_key function to build new AES keys on the device. This
effectively resets the password safe and the encrypted storage. It is
unclear whether other data (e. g. the one-time passwords) are affected
too.
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This patch adds the factory_reset_method to the Device trait that uses
the NK_factory_reset function to perform a factory reset. The tests
verify that the user and admin PIN are reset and that the OTP storage
and the password safe are deleted.
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This patch adds the change_update_pin method to the Storage struct that
uses the NK_change_update_password function to set the password required
for firmware updates.
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This patch adds a test case that changes the PIN when calling
unlock_user_pin. The previous test case only unlocked the current user
PIN.
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It seems that with newer firmeware, the model string in the lsblk output
is Nitrokey_Storage instead of Nitrokey Storage. Therefore this patch
replaces underscores with spaces to account for both versions.
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This patch adds the function Device::get_model that returns the model of
the connected Nitrokey stick.
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Currently, the test-no-device feature is used for tests that expect no
Nitrokey to be connected. Yet test-no-device is equivalent to not
test-pro and not test-storage. Therefore, this patch removes the
test-no-device feature.
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Newer Rust versions support integration tests in a top-level tests
directory. This patch refactors the existing unit tests into
integration tests.
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