2.3.1 — diff review from 2.3.0 only (current)
From mozilla/supply-chain copy of hg. Audited without comment by Valentin Gosu.
These reviews are from cargo-vet. To add your review, set up cargo-vet
and submit your URL to its registry.
2.3.1 — diff review from 2.3.0 only (current)
From mozilla/supply-chain copy of hg. Audited without comment by Valentin Gosu.
2.3.1 (current)
From kornelski/crev-proofs copy of salsa.debian.org.
2.3.1 (current)
From kornelski/crev-proofs copy of git.savannah.gnu.org.
Packaged for Guix (crates-io)
The current version of percent-encoding is 2.3.1.
2.3.0 — diff review from 2.2.0 only (older version)
From google/supply-chain copy of chromium. Audited without comment by George Burgess IV.
2.2.0 (older version)
From google/supply-chain copy of chromium. Audited without comment by ChromeOS.
2.2.0 (older version)
From bytecodealliance/wasmtime. By Alex Crichton.
This crate is a single-file crate that does what it says on the tin. There are
a few unsafe
blocks related to utf-8 validation which are locally verifiable
as correct and otherwise this crate is good to go.
cargo-vet does not verify reviewers' identity. You have to fully trust the source the audits are from.
This crate can be compiled, run, and tested on a local workstation or in controlled automation without surprising consequences. More…
Inspection reveals that the crate in question does not attempt to implement any cryptographic algorithms on its own.
Note that certification of this does not require an expert on all forms of cryptography: it's expected for crates we import to be "good enough" citizens, so they'll at least be forthcoming if they try to implement something cryptographic. When in doubt, please ask an expert.
All crypto algorithms in this crate have been reviewed by a relevant expert.
Note: If a crate does not implement crypto, use does-not-implement-crypto
,
which implies crypto-safe
, but does not require expert review in order to
audit for.
This crate will not introduce a serious security vulnerability to production software exposed to untrusted input. More…
May have been packaged automatically without a review
These reviews are from Crev, a distributed system for code reviews. To add your review, set up cargo-crev
.
The current version of percent-encoding is 2.3.1.
2.1.0 (older version) Thoroughness: Medium Understanding: High
by gitlab.com/chrysn on 2020-01-31
The crate is compact and straight-forward. It is refreshingly unopinionated in that it leaves it up to the user to pick what to escape; consequently, there was little to check against RFC3986 other than that the default uppercasing rule is followed. A minor issue about unsafe code was found and reported (https://github.com/servo/rust-url/pull/583), but it's more theoretical then likely to cause practical trouble.
2.0.0 (older version) Thoroughness: Low Understanding: Medium
Approved without comment by gitlab.com/KonradBorowski on 2019-07-31
1.0.1 (older version) Thoroughness: Low Understanding: Medium
Approved without comment by kornelski on 2019-07-22
Lib.rs has been able to verify that all files in the crate's tarball are in the crate's repository with a git tag matching the version. Please note that this check is still in beta, and absence of this confirmation does not mean that the files don't match.
Crates in the crates.io registry are tarball snapshots uploaded by crates' publishers. The registry is not using crates' git repositories, so there is a possibility that published crates have a misleading repository URL, or contain different code from the code in the repository.
To review the actual code of the crate, it's best to use cargo crev open percent-encoding
. Alternatively, you can download the tarball of percent-encoding v2.3.1 or view the source online.
Only in debcargo (unstable). Changelog: