Go Keyring Save

Cross-platform keyring interface for Go

Project README

Go Keyring library

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go-keyring is an OS-agnostic library for setting, getting and deleting secrets from the system keyring. It supports OS X, Linux/BSD (dbus) and Windows.

go-keyring was created after its authors searched for, but couldn't find, a better alternative. It aims to simplify using statically linked binaries, which is cumbersome when relying on C bindings (as other keyring libraries do).

Potential Uses

If you're working with an application that needs to store user credentials locally on the user's machine, go-keyring might come in handy. For instance, if you are writing a CLI for an API that requires a username and password, you can store this information in the keyring instead of having the user type it on every invocation.

Dependencies

OS X

The OS X implementation depends on the /usr/bin/security binary for interfacing with the OS X keychain. It should be available by default.

Linux and *BSD

The Linux and *BSD implementation depends on the Secret Service dbus interface, which is provided by GNOME Keyring.

It's expected that the default collection login exists in the keyring, because it's the default in most distros. If it doesn't exist, you can create it through the keyring frontend program Seahorse:

  • Open seahorse
  • Go to File > New > Password Keyring
  • Click Continue
  • When asked for a name, use: login

Example Usage

How to set and get a secret from the keyring:

package main

import (
    "log"

    "github.com/zalando/go-keyring"
)

func main() {
    service := "my-app"
    user := "anon"
    password := "secret"

    // set password
    err := keyring.Set(service, user, password)
    if err != nil {
        log.Fatal(err)
    }

    // get password
    secret, err := keyring.Get(service, user)
    if err != nil {
        log.Fatal(err)
    }

    log.Println(secret)
}

Tests

Running tests

Running the tests is simple:

go test

Which OS you use does matter. If you're using Linux or BSD, it will test the implementation in keyring_unix.go. If running the tests on OS X, it will test the implementation in keyring_darwin.go.

Mocking

If you need to mock the keyring behavior for testing on systems without a keyring implementation you can call MockInit() which will replace the OS defined provider with an in-memory one.

package implementation

import (
    "testing"

    "github.com/zalando/go-keyring"
)

func TestMockedSetGet(t *testing.T) {
    keyring.MockInit()
    err := keyring.Set("service", "user", "password")
    if err != nil {
        t.Fatal(err)
    }

    p, err := keyring.Get("service", "user")
    if err != nil {
        t.Fatal(err)
    }

    if p != "password" {
        t.Error("password was not the expected string")
    }

}

Contributing/TODO

We welcome contributions from the community; please use CONTRIBUTING.md as your guidelines for getting started. Here are some items that we'd love help with:

  • The code base
  • Better test coverage

Please use GitHub issues as the starting point for contributions, new ideas and/or bug reports.

Contact

  • E-Mail: [email protected]
  • Security issues: Please send an email to the maintainers, and we'll try to get back to you within two workdays. If you don't hear back, send an email to [email protected] and someone will respond within five days max.

Contributors

Thanks to:

  • [your name here]

License

See LICENSE file.

Open Source Agenda is not affiliated with "Go Keyring" Project. README Source: zalando/go-keyring
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