13 releases
0.3.8 | Jul 24, 2024 |
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0.3.6 | Jan 15, 2024 |
0.3.5 | Sep 29, 2023 |
0.3.4 | Jan 25, 2023 |
0.1.1 | Jun 24, 2021 |
#41 in Cryptography
329,467 downloads per month
Used in 36 crates
(13 directly)
365KB
8K
SLoC
COSET
This crate holds a set of Rust types for working with CBOR Object Signing and Encryption (COSE) objects, as defined in
RFC 8152. It builds on the core CBOR
parsing functionality from the ciborium
crate.
See crate docs, or the signature example for documentation on how to use the code.
This repo is under construction and so details of the API and the code may change without warning.
Features
The std
feature of the crate enables an implementation of std::error::Error
for CoseError
.
no_std
Support
This crate supports no_std
(when the std
feature is not set, which is the default), but uses the alloc
crate.
Minimum Supported Rust Version
MSRV is 1.58.
Integer Ranges
CBOR supports integers in the range:
[-18_446_744_073_709_551_616, -1] ∪ [0, 18_446_744_073_709_551_615]
which is [-264, -1] ∪ [0, 264 - 1].
This does not map onto a single Rust integer type, so different CBOR crates take different approaches.
- The
serde_cbor
crate uses a singlei128
integer type for all integer values, which means that all CBOR integer values can be expressed, but there are alsoi128
values that cannot be encoded in CBOR. This also means that data size is larger. - The
ciborium
also uses a singlei128
integer type internally, but wraps it in its ownInteger
type and only implementsTryFrom
(notFrom
) fori128
/u128
conversions so that unrepresentable numbers can be rejected. - The
sk-cbor
crate uses distinct types:- positive numbers as u64, covering [0, 264 - 1]
- negative numbers as i64, covering [-263, -1] (which means that some theoretically-valid large negative values are not represented).
This crate uses a single type to encompass both positive and negative values, but uses i64
for that type to keep data
sizes smaller. This means that:
- positive numbers in
i64
cover [0, 263 - 1] - negative numbers in
i64
cover [-263, -1]
and so there are large values – both positive and negative – which are not supported by this crate.
Working on the Code
Local coding conventions are enforced by the continuous integration jobs and include:
- Build cleanly and pass all tests.
- Free of Clippy warnings.
- Formatted with
rustfmt
using the local rustfmt.toml settings. - Compliance with local conventions:
- All
TODO
markers should be of formTODO(#99)
and refer to an open GitHub issue. - Calls to functions that can panic (
panic!
,unwrap
,expect
) should have a comment on the same line in the form// safe: reason
(or/* safe: reason */
) to document the reason why panicking is acceptable.
- All
Disclaimer
This is not an officially supported Google product.
Dependencies
~0.7–1.3MB
~30K SLoC