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int | oath_init () |
int | oath_done () |
const char * | oath_check_version () |
const char * | oath_strerror () |
const char * | oath_strerror_name () |
int | oath_hex2bin () |
void | oath_bin2hex () |
int | oath_base32_decode () |
int | oath_base32_encode () |
#define | OATH_HOTP_LENGTH() |
int | oath_hotp_generate () |
int | oath_hotp_validate () |
int | (*oath_validate_strcmp_function) () |
int | oath_hotp_validate_callback () |
int | oath_totp_generate () |
int | oath_totp_generate2 () |
int | oath_totp_validate () |
int | oath_totp_validate_callback () |
int | oath_totp_validate2 () |
int | oath_totp_validate2_callback () |
int | oath_totp_validate3 () |
int | oath_totp_validate3_callback () |
int | oath_totp_validate4 () |
int | oath_totp_validate4_callback () |
int | oath_authenticate_usersfile () |
#define | OATHAPI |
#define | OATH_VERSION |
#define | OATH_VERSION_NUMBER |
enum | oath_rc |
#define | OATH_HOTP_DYNAMIC_TRUNCATION |
#define | oath_hotp_validate_strcmp_function |
#define | OATH_TOTP_DEFAULT_TIME_STEP_SIZE |
#define | OATH_TOTP_DEFAULT_START_TIME |
enum | oath_totp_flags |
int
oath_init (void
);
This function initializes the OATH library. Every user of this
library needs to call this function before using other functions.
You should call oath_done()
when use of the OATH library is no
longer needed.
Note that this function may also initialize Libgcrypt, if the OATH library is built with libgcrypt support and libgcrypt has not been initialized before. Thus if you want to manually initialize libgcrypt you must do it before calling this function. This is useful in cases you want to disable libgcrypt's internal lockings etc.
int
oath_done (void
);
This function deinitializes the OATH library, which were
initialized using oath_init()
. After calling this function, no
other OATH library function may be called except for to
re-initialize the library using oath_init()
.
const char *
oath_check_version (const char *req_version
);
Check OATH library version.
See OATH_VERSION
for a suitable req_version
string.
This function is one of few in the library that can be used without
a successful call to oath_init()
.
const char *
oath_strerror (int err
);
Convert return code to human readable string explanation of the reason for the particular error code.
This string can be used to output a diagnostic message to the user.
This function is one of few in the library that can be used without
a successful call to oath_init()
.
Returns a pointer to a statically allocated string
containing an explanation of the error code err
.
Since: 1.8.0
const char *
oath_strerror_name (int err
);
Convert return code to human readable string representing the error
code symbol itself. For example, oath_strerror_name(OATH_OK
)
returns the string "OATH_OK".
This string can be used to output a diagnostic message to the user.
This function is one of few in the library that can be used without
a successful call to oath_init()
.
Returns a pointer to a statically allocated string
containing a string version of the error code err
, or NULL if
the error code is not known.
Since: 1.8.0
int oath_hex2bin (const char *hexstr
,char *binstr
,size_t *binlen
);
Convert string with hex data to binary data.
Non-hexadecimal data are not ignored but instead will lead to an
OATH_INVALID_HEX
error.
If binstr
is NULL, then binlen
will be populated with the
necessary length. If the binstr
buffer is too small,
OATH_TOO_SMALL_BUFFER
is returned and binlen
will contain the
necessary length.
void oath_bin2hex (const char *binstr
,size_t binlen
,char *hexstr
);
Convert binary data to NUL-terminated string with hex data. The
output hexstr
is allocated by the caller and must have room for at
least 2*binlen
+1, to make room for the encoded data and the
terminating NUL byte.
binstr |
input binary data |
|
binlen |
length of input binary data |
|
hexstr |
output string with hex data, must have room for 2* |
Since: 1.12.0
int oath_base32_decode (const char *in
,size_t inlen
,char **out
,size_t *outlen
);
Decode a base32 encoded string into binary data.
Space characters are ignored and pad characters are added if
needed. Non-base32 data are not ignored but instead will lead to
an OATH_INVALID_BASE32
error.
The in
parameter should contain inlen
bytes of base32 encoded
data. The function allocates a new string in *out
to hold the
decoded data, and sets *outlen
to the length of the data.
If out
is NULL, then *outlen
will be set to what would have been
the length of *out
on successful encoding.
If the caller is not interested in knowing the length of the output
data out
, then outlen
may be set to NULL.
It is permitted but useless to have both out
and outlen
NULL.
in |
input string with base32 encoded data of length |
|
inlen |
length of input base32 string |
|
out |
pointer to output variable for binary data of length |
|
outlen |
pointer to output variable holding length of |
On success OATH_OK
(zero) is returned,
OATH_INVALID_BASE32
is returned if the input contains non-base32
characters, and OATH_MALLOC_ERROR
is returned on memory allocation
errors.
Since: 1.12.0
int oath_base32_encode (const char *in
,size_t inlen
,char **out
,size_t *outlen
);
Encode binary data into a string with base32 data.
The in
parameter should contain inlen
bytes of data to encode.
The function allocates a new string in *out
to hold the encoded
data, and sets *outlen
to the length of the data. The output
string *out
is zero-terminated (ASCII NUL), but the NUL is not
counted in *outlen
.
If out
is NULL, then *outlen
will be set to what would have been
the length of *out
on successful encoding.
If the caller is not interested in knowing the length of the output
data out
, then outlen
may be set to NULL.
It is permitted but useless to have both out
and outlen
NULL.
in |
input string with binary data of length |
|
inlen |
length of input data |
|
out |
pointer to newly allocated output string of length |
|
outlen |
pointer to output variable holding length of |
On success OATH_OK
(zero) is returned,
OATH_BASE32_OVERFLOW
is returned if the output would be too large
to store, and OATH_MALLOC_ERROR
is returned on memory allocation
errors.
Since: 1.12.0
# define OATH_HOTP_LENGTH(digits, checksum) (digits + (checksum ? 1 : 0))
Pre-processor macro to get length of a OTP string.
int oath_hotp_generate (const char *secret
,size_t secret_length
,uint64_t moving_factor
,unsigned digits
,bool add_checksum
,size_t truncation_offset
,char *output_otp
);
Generate a one-time-password using the HOTP algorithm as described in RFC 4226.
Use a value of OATH_HOTP_DYNAMIC_TRUNCATION
for truncation_offset
unless you really need a specific truncation offset.
To find out the size of the OTP you may use the OATH_HOTP_LENGTH()
macro. The output_otp
buffer must be have room for that length
plus one for the terminating NUL.
Currently only values 6, 7 and 8 for digits
are supported, and the
add_checksum
value is ignored. These restrictions may be lifted
in future versions, although some limitations are inherent in the
protocol.
secret |
the shared secret string |
|
secret_length |
length of |
|
moving_factor |
a counter indicating the current OTP to generate |
|
digits |
number of requested digits in the OTP, excluding checksum |
|
add_checksum |
whether to add a checksum digit or not |
|
truncation_offset |
use a specific truncation offset |
|
output_otp |
output buffer, must have room for the output OTP plus zero |
int oath_hotp_validate (const char *secret
,size_t secret_length
,uint64_t start_moving_factor
,size_t window
,const char *otp
);
Validate an OTP according to OATH HOTP algorithm per RFC 4226.
Currently only OTP lengths of 6, 7 or 8 digits are supported. This restrictions may be lifted in future versions, although some limitations are inherent in the protocol.
secret |
the shared secret string |
|
secret_length |
length of |
|
start_moving_factor |
start counter in OTP stream |
|
window |
how many OTPs after start counter to test |
|
otp |
the OTP to validate. |
Returns position in OTP window (zero is first position),
or OATH_INVALID_OTP
if no OTP was found in OTP window, or an
error code.
int (*oath_validate_strcmp_function) (void *handle
,const char *test_otp
);
Prototype of strcmp-like function that will be called by
oath_hotp_validate_callback()
or oath_totp_validate_callback()
to
validate OTPs.
The function should be similar to strcmp in that it return 0 only on matches. It differs by permitting use of negative return codes as indication of internal failures in the callback. Positive values indicate OTP mismatch.
This callback interface is useful when you cannot compare OTPs
directly using normal strcmp, but instead for example only have a
hashed OTP. You would then typically pass in the hashed OTP in the
strcmp_handle
and let your implementation of oath_strcmp
hash the
test_otp OTP using the same hash, and then compare the results.
handle |
caller handle as passed to |
|
test_otp |
OTP to match against. |
0 if and only if test_otp
is identical to the OTP to
be validated. Negative value if an internal failure occurs.
Positive value if the test_otp simply doesn't match.
Since: 1.6.0
int oath_hotp_validate_callback (const char *secret
,size_t secret_length
,uint64_t start_moving_factor
,size_t window
,unsigned digits
,oath_validate_strcmp_function strcmp_otp
,void *strcmp_handle
);
Validate an OTP according to OATH HOTP algorithm per RFC 4226.
Validation is implemented by generating a number of potential OTPs
and performing a call to the strcmp_otp
function, to compare the
potential OTP against the given otp
. It has the following
prototype:
int (*oath_validate_strcmp_function) (void *handle, const char *test_otp);
The function should be similar to strcmp in that it return 0 only on matches. It differs by permitting use of negative return codes as indication of internal failures in the callback. Positive values indicate OTP mismatch.
This callback interface is useful when you cannot compare OTPs
directly using normal strcmp, but instead for example only have a
hashed OTP. You would then typically pass in the hashed OTP in the
strcmp_handle
and let your implementation of strcmp_otp
hash the
test_otp OTP using the same hash, and then compare the results.
Currently only OTP lengths of 6, 7 or 8 digits are supported. This restrictions may be lifted in future versions, although some limitations are inherent in the protocol.
secret |
the shared secret string |
|
secret_length |
length of |
|
start_moving_factor |
start counter in OTP stream |
|
window |
how many OTPs after start counter to test |
|
digits |
number of requested digits in the OTP |
|
strcmp_otp |
function pointer to a strcmp-like function. |
|
strcmp_handle |
caller handle to be passed on to |
Returns position in OTP window (zero is first position),
or OATH_INVALID_OTP
if no OTP was found in OTP window, or an
error code.
Since: 1.4.0
int oath_totp_generate (const char *secret
,size_t secret_length
,time_t now
,unsigned time_step_size
,time_t start_offset
,unsigned digits
,char *output_otp
);
Generate a one-time-password using the time-variant TOTP algorithm described in RFC 6238. The input parameters are taken as time values.
The system parameter time_step_size
describes how long the time
window for each OTP is. The recommended value is 30 seconds, and
you can use the value 0 or the symbol
OATH_TOTP_DEFAULT_TIME_STEP_SIZE
to indicate this.
The system parameter start_offset
denote the Unix time when time
steps are started to be counted. The recommended value is 0, to
fall back on the Unix epoch) and you can use the symbol
OATH_TOTP_DEFAULT_START_TIME
to indicate this.
The output_otp
buffer must have room for at least digits
characters, plus one for the terminating NUL.
Currently only values 6, 7 and 8 for digits
are supported. This
restriction may be lifted in future versions.
secret |
the shared secret string |
|
secret_length |
length of |
|
now |
Unix time value to compute TOTP for |
|
time_step_size |
time step system parameter (typically 30) |
|
start_offset |
Unix time of when to start counting time steps (typically 0) |
|
digits |
number of requested digits in the OTP, excluding checksum |
|
output_otp |
output buffer, must have room for the output OTP plus zero |
Since: 1.4.0
int oath_totp_generate2 (const char *secret
,size_t secret_length
,time_t now
,unsigned time_step_size
,time_t start_offset
,unsigned digits
,int flags
,char *output_otp
);
Generate a one-time-password using the time-variant TOTP algorithm described in RFC 6238. The input parameters are taken as time values.
The system parameter time_step_size
describes how long the time
window for each OTP is. The recommended value is 30 seconds, and
you can use the value 0 or the symbol
OATH_TOTP_DEFAULT_TIME_STEP_SIZE
to indicate this.
The system parameter start_offset
denote the Unix time when time
steps are started to be counted. The recommended value is 0, to
fall back on the Unix epoch) and you can use the symbol
OATH_TOTP_DEFAULT_START_TIME
to indicate this.
The output_otp
buffer must have room for at least digits
characters, plus one for the terminating NUL.
Currently only values 6, 7 and 8 for digits
are supported. This
restriction may be lifted in future versions.
The flags
parameter may be used to change the MAC function, for
example OATH_TOTP_HMAC_SHA256
or OATH_TOTP_HMAC_SHA512
.
secret |
the shared secret string |
|
secret_length |
length of |
|
now |
Unix time value to compute TOTP for |
|
time_step_size |
time step system parameter (typically 30) |
|
start_offset |
Unix time of when to start counting time steps (typically 0) |
|
digits |
number of requested digits in the OTP, excluding checksum |
|
flags |
flags indicating mode, one of oath_totp_flags |
|
output_otp |
output buffer, must have room for the output OTP plus zero |
Since: 2.6.0
int oath_totp_validate (const char *secret
,size_t secret_length
,time_t now
,unsigned time_step_size
,time_t start_offset
,size_t window
,const char *otp
);
Validate an OTP according to OATH TOTP algorithm per RFC 6238.
Currently only OTP lengths of 6, 7 or 8 digits are supported. This restrictions may be lifted in future versions, although some limitations are inherent in the protocol.
secret |
the shared secret string |
|
secret_length |
length of |
|
now |
Unix time value to validate TOTP for |
|
time_step_size |
time step system parameter (typically 30) |
|
start_offset |
Unix time of when to start counting time steps (typically 0) |
|
window |
how many OTPs after/before start OTP to test |
|
otp |
the OTP to validate. |
Returns absolute value of position in OTP window (zero is
first position), or OATH_INVALID_OTP
if no OTP was found in OTP
window, or an error code.
Since: 1.6.0
int oath_totp_validate_callback (const char *secret
,size_t secret_length
,time_t now
,unsigned time_step_size
,time_t start_offset
,unsigned digits
,size_t window
,oath_validate_strcmp_function strcmp_otp
,void *strcmp_handle
);
Validate an OTP according to OATH TOTP algorithm per RFC 6238.
Validation is implemented by generating a number of potential OTPs
and performing a call to the strcmp_otp
function, to compare the
potential OTP against the given otp
. It has the following
prototype:
int (*oath_validate_strcmp_function) (void *handle, const char *test_otp);
The function should be similar to strcmp in that it return 0 only on matches. It differs by permitting use of negative return codes as indication of internal failures in the callback. Positive values indicate OTP mismatch.
This callback interface is useful when you cannot compare OTPs
directly using normal strcmp, but instead for example only have a
hashed OTP. You would then typically pass in the hashed OTP in the
strcmp_handle
and let your implementation of strcmp_otp
hash the
test_otp OTP using the same hash, and then compare the results.
Currently only OTP lengths of 6, 7 or 8 digits are supported. This restrictions may be lifted in future versions, although some limitations are inherent in the protocol.
secret |
the shared secret string |
|
secret_length |
length of |
|
now |
Unix time value to compute TOTP for |
|
time_step_size |
time step system parameter (typically 30) |
|
start_offset |
Unix time of when to start counting time steps (typically 0) |
|
window |
how many OTPs after start counter to test |
|
digits |
number of requested digits in the OTP |
|
strcmp_otp |
function pointer to a strcmp-like function. |
|
strcmp_handle |
caller handle to be passed on to |
Returns position in OTP window (zero is first position),
or OATH_INVALID_OTP
if no OTP was found in OTP window, or an
error code.
Since: 1.6.0
int oath_totp_validate2 (const char *secret
,size_t secret_length
,time_t now
,unsigned time_step_size
,time_t start_offset
,size_t window
,int *otp_pos
,const char *otp
);
Validate an OTP according to OATH TOTP algorithm per RFC 6238.
Currently only OTP lengths of 6, 7 or 8 digits are supported. This restrictions may be lifted in future versions, although some limitations are inherent in the protocol.
secret |
the shared secret string |
|
secret_length |
length of |
|
now |
Unix time value to validate TOTP for |
|
time_step_size |
time step system parameter (typically 30) |
|
start_offset |
Unix time of when to start counting time steps (typically 0) |
|
window |
how many OTPs after/before start OTP to test |
|
otp_pos |
output search position in search window (may be NULL). |
|
otp |
the OTP to validate. |
Returns absolute value of position in OTP window (zero is
first position), or OATH_INVALID_OTP
if no OTP was found in OTP
window, or an error code.
Since: 1.10.0
int oath_totp_validate2_callback (const char *secret
,size_t secret_length
,time_t now
,unsigned time_step_size
,time_t start_offset
,unsigned digits
,size_t window
,int *otp_pos
,oath_validate_strcmp_function strcmp_otp
,void *strcmp_handle
);
Validate an OTP according to OATH TOTP algorithm per RFC 6238.
Validation is implemented by generating a number of potential OTPs
and performing a call to the strcmp_otp
function, to compare the
potential OTP against the given otp
. It has the following
prototype:
int (*oath_validate_strcmp_function) (void *handle, const char *test_otp);
The function should be similar to strcmp in that it return 0 only on matches. It differs by permitting use of negative return codes as indication of internal failures in the callback. Positive values indicate OTP mismatch.
This callback interface is useful when you cannot compare OTPs
directly using normal strcmp, but instead for example only have a
hashed OTP. You would then typically pass in the hashed OTP in the
strcmp_handle
and let your implementation of strcmp_otp
hash the
test_otp OTP using the same hash, and then compare the results.
Currently only OTP lengths of 6, 7 or 8 digits are supported. This restrictions may be lifted in future versions, although some limitations are inherent in the protocol.
secret |
the shared secret string |
|
secret_length |
length of |
|
now |
Unix time value to compute TOTP for |
|
time_step_size |
time step system parameter (typically 30) |
|
start_offset |
Unix time of when to start counting time steps (typically 0) |
|
digits |
number of requested digits in the OTP |
|
window |
how many OTPs after start counter to test |
|
otp_pos |
output search position in search window (may be NULL). |
|
strcmp_otp |
function pointer to a strcmp-like function. |
|
strcmp_handle |
caller handle to be passed on to |
Returns absolute value of position in OTP window (zero is
first position), or OATH_INVALID_OTP
if no OTP was found in OTP
window, or an error code.
Since: 1.10.0
int oath_totp_validate3 (const char *secret
,size_t secret_length
,time_t now
,unsigned time_step_size
,time_t start_offset
,size_t window
,int *otp_pos
,uint64_t *otp_counter
,const char *otp
);
Validate an OTP according to OATH TOTP algorithm per RFC 6238.
Currently only OTP lengths of 6, 7 or 8 digits are supported. This restrictions may be lifted in future versions, although some limitations are inherent in the protocol.
secret |
the shared secret string |
|
secret_length |
length of |
|
now |
Unix time value to validate TOTP for |
|
time_step_size |
time step system parameter (typically 30) |
|
start_offset |
Unix time of when to start counting time steps (typically 0) |
|
window |
how many OTPs after/before start OTP to test |
|
otp_pos |
output search position in search window (may be NULL). |
|
otp_counter |
counter value used to calculate OTP value (may be NULL). |
|
otp |
the OTP to validate. |
Returns absolute value of position in OTP window (zero is
first position), or OATH_INVALID_OTP
if no OTP was found in OTP
window, or an error code.
Since: 2.4.0
int oath_totp_validate3_callback (const char *secret
,size_t secret_length
,time_t now
,unsigned time_step_size
,time_t start_offset
,unsigned digits
,size_t window
,int *otp_pos
,uint64_t *otp_counter
,oath_validate_strcmp_function strcmp_otp
,void *strcmp_handle
);
Validate an OTP according to OATH TOTP algorithm per RFC 6238.
Validation is implemented by generating a number of potential OTPs
and performing a call to the strcmp_otp
function, to compare the
potential OTP against the given otp
. It has the following
prototype:
int (*oath_validate_strcmp_function) (void *handle, const char *test_otp);
The function should be similar to strcmp in that it return 0 only on matches. It differs by permitting use of negative return codes as indication of internal failures in the callback. Positive values indicate OTP mismatch.
This callback interface is useful when you cannot compare OTPs
directly using normal strcmp, but instead for example only have a
hashed OTP. You would then typically pass in the hashed OTP in the
strcmp_handle
and let your implementation of strcmp_otp
hash the
test_otp OTP using the same hash, and then compare the results.
Currently only OTP lengths of 6, 7 or 8 digits are supported. This restrictions may be lifted in future versions, although some limitations are inherent in the protocol.
secret |
the shared secret string |
|
secret_length |
length of |
|
now |
Unix time value to compute TOTP for |
|
time_step_size |
time step system parameter (typically 30) |
|
start_offset |
Unix time of when to start counting time steps (typically 0) |
|
digits |
number of requested digits in the OTP |
|
window |
how many OTPs after start counter to test |
|
otp_pos |
output search position in search window (may be NULL). |
|
otp_counter |
counter value used to calculate OTP value (may be NULL). |
|
strcmp_otp |
function pointer to a strcmp-like function. |
|
strcmp_handle |
caller handle to be passed on to |
Returns absolute value of position in OTP window (zero is
first position), or OATH_INVALID_OTP
if no OTP was found in OTP
window, or an error code.
Since: 2.4.0
int oath_totp_validate4 (const char *secret
,size_t secret_length
,time_t now
,unsigned time_step_size
,time_t start_offset
,size_t window
,int *otp_pos
,uint64_t *otp_counter
,int flags
,const char *otp
);
Validate an OTP according to OATH TOTP algorithm per RFC 6238.
Currently only OTP lengths of 6, 7 or 8 digits are supported. This restrictions may be lifted in future versions, although some limitations are inherent in the protocol.
The flags
parameter may be used to change the MAC function, for
example OATH_TOTP_HMAC_SHA256
or OATH_TOTP_HMAC_SHA512
.
secret |
the shared secret string |
|
secret_length |
length of |
|
now |
Unix time value to validate TOTP for |
|
time_step_size |
time step system parameter (typically 30) |
|
start_offset |
Unix time of when to start counting time steps (typically 0) |
|
window |
how many OTPs after/before start OTP to test |
|
otp_pos |
output search position in search window (may be NULL). |
|
otp_counter |
counter value used to calculate OTP value (may be NULL). |
|
flags |
flags indicating mode, one of oath_totp_flags |
|
otp |
the OTP to validate. |
Returns absolute value of position in OTP window (zero is
first position), or OATH_INVALID_OTP
if no OTP was found in OTP
window, or an error code.
Since: 2.6.0
int oath_totp_validate4_callback (const char *secret
,size_t secret_length
,time_t now
,unsigned time_step_size
,time_t start_offset
,unsigned digits
,size_t window
,int *otp_pos
,uint64_t *otp_counter
,int flags
,oath_validate_strcmp_function strcmp_otp
,void *strcmp_handle
);
Validate an OTP according to OATH TOTP algorithm per RFC 6238.
Validation is implemented by generating a number of potential OTPs
and performing a call to the strcmp_otp
function, to compare the
potential OTP against the given otp
. It has the following
prototype:
int (*oath_validate_strcmp_function) (void *handle, const char *test_otp);
The function should be similar to strcmp in that it return 0 only on matches. It differs by permitting use of negative return codes as indication of internal failures in the callback. Positive values indicate OTP mismatch.
This callback interface is useful when you cannot compare OTPs
directly using normal strcmp, but instead for example only have a
hashed OTP. You would then typically pass in the hashed OTP in the
strcmp_handle
and let your implementation of strcmp_otp
hash the
test_otp OTP using the same hash, and then compare the results.
Currently only OTP lengths of 6, 7 or 8 digits are supported. This restrictions may be lifted in future versions, although some limitations are inherent in the protocol.
The flags
parameter may be used to change the MAC function, for
example OATH_TOTP_HMAC_SHA256
or OATH_TOTP_HMAC_SHA512
.
secret |
the shared secret string |
|
secret_length |
length of |
|
now |
Unix time value to compute TOTP for |
|
time_step_size |
time step system parameter (typically 30) |
|
start_offset |
Unix time of when to start counting time steps (typically 0) |
|
digits |
number of requested digits in the OTP |
|
window |
how many OTPs after start counter to test |
|
otp_pos |
output search position in search window (may be NULL). |
|
otp_counter |
counter value used to calculate OTP value (may be NULL). |
|
flags |
flags indicating mode, one of oath_totp_flags |
|
strcmp_otp |
function pointer to a strcmp-like function. |
|
strcmp_handle |
caller handle to be passed on to |
Returns absolute value of position in OTP window (zero is
first position), or OATH_INVALID_OTP
if no OTP was found in OTP
window, or an error code.
Since: 2.6.0
int oath_authenticate_usersfile (const char *usersfile
,const char *username
,const char *otp
,size_t window
,const char *passwd
,time_t *last_otp
);
Authenticate user named username
with the one-time password otp
and (optional) password passwd
. Credentials are read (and
updated) from a text file named usersfile
.
Note that for TOTP the usersfile will only record the last OTP and use that to make sure more recent OTPs have not been seen yet when validating a new OTP. That logics relies on using the same search window for the same user.
usersfile |
string with user credential filename, in UsersFile format |
|
username |
string with name of user |
|
otp |
string with one-time password to authenticate |
|
window |
how many past/future OTPs to search |
|
passwd |
string with password, or NULL to disable password checking |
|
last_otp |
output variable holding last successful authentication |
On successful validation, OATH_OK
is returned. If the
supplied otp
is the same as the last successfully authenticated
one-time password, OATH_REPLAYED_OTP
is returned and the
timestamp of the last authentication is returned in last_otp
.
If the one-time password is not found in the indicated search
window, OATH_INVALID_OTP
is returned. Otherwise, an error code
is returned.
# define OATHAPI __attribute__((__visibility__("default")))
Symbol holding shared library API visibility decorator.
This is used internally by the library header file and should never be used or modified by the application.
https://www.gnu.org/software/gnulib/manual/html_node/Exported-Symbols-of-Shared-Libraries.html
# define OATH_VERSION "2.6.12"
Pre-processor symbol with a string that describe the header file
version number. Used together with oath_check_version()
to verify
header file and run-time library consistency.
# define OATH_VERSION_NUMBER 0x02060c00
Pre-processor symbol with a hexadecimal value describing the header file version number. For example, when the header version is 1.2.3 this symbol will have the value 0x01020300. The last two digits are only used between public releases, and will otherwise be 00.
Return codes for OATH functions. All return codes are negative
except for the successful code OATH_OK
which are guaranteed to be
Positive values are reserved for non-error return codes.
Note that the oath_rc enumeration may be extended at a later date to include new return codes.
Successful return |
||
Internal error in crypto functions |
||
Unsupported number of OTP digits |
||
Error from system printf call |
||
Hex string is invalid |
||
The output buffer is too small |
||
The OTP is not valid |
||
The OTP has been replayed |
||
The password does not match |
||
The counter value is corrupt |
||
The timestamp is corrupt |
||
The supplied filename does not exist |
||
Cannot find information about user |
||
System error when seeking in file |
||
System error when creating file |
||
System error when locking file |
||
System error when renaming file |
||
System error when removing file |
||
System error for time manipulation |
||
A strcmp callback returned an error |
||
Base32 string is invalid |
||
Base32 encoding would overflow |
||
Memory allocation failed |
||
System error when flushing file buffer |
||
System error when syncing file to disk |
||
System error when closing file |
||
System error when changing file ownership |
||
System error when getting file status |
||
Meta-error indicating the last error code, for use when iterating over all error codes or similar. |
# define OATH_HOTP_DYNAMIC_TRUNCATION SIZE_MAX
Pre-processor symbol to indicate that no HOTP truncation should
occur, see oath_hotp_generate()
.
# define oath_hotp_validate_strcmp_function oath_validate_strcmp_function
Pre-processor compatibility definition for
oath_validate_strcmp_function()
.
Since: 1.4.0
# define OATH_TOTP_DEFAULT_TIME_STEP_SIZE 30
Pre-processor symbol to provide a default value for the TOTP
time-step value, see oath_totp_generate()
.
# define OATH_TOTP_DEFAULT_START_TIME ((time_t) 0)
Pre-processor symbol to indicate that you want to use the Unix
epoch as a starting pointer for TOTP, see oath_totp_generate()
.