Previously a bug in the first test would lead to a 'not implemented'
console error, which isn't the actual problem. This ensures alert()
is just a simple no-op, so we can concentrate on actual errors.
This follows the same approach as for window.fetch, using the Jest
before/afterAll() blocks to handle the idiosynchrosies of whether
the object/function is defined in the test environment.
This passes existing credentials in the server response, to allow
the browser to prevent re-registering the same key for the same
user. Registering the same key multiple times doesn't seem to be
an issue technically; the user has likely got their keys mixed up.
- Chrome says "you don't need to register it again".
- Safari exits with an InvalidStateError.
- Firefox exits with a DOMException.
This adds Yubico's FIDO2 library and two APIs for working with the
"navigator.credentials.create()" function in JavaScript. The GET
API uses the library to generate options for the "create()" function,
and the POST API decodes and verifies the resulting credential. While
the options and response are dict-like, CBOR is necessary to encode
some of the byte-level values, which can't be represented in JSON.
Much of the code here is based on the Yubico library example [1][2].
Implementation notes:
- There are definitely better ways to alert the user about failure, but
window.alert() will do for the time being. Using location.reload() is
also a bit jarring if the page scrolls, but not a major issue.
- Ideally we would use window.fetch() to do AJAX calls, but we don't
have a polyfill for this, and we use $.ajax() elsewhere [3]. We need
to do a few weird tricks [6] to stop jQuery trashing the data.
- The FIDO2 server doesn't serve web requests; it's just a "server" in
the sense of WebAuthn terminology. It lives in its own module, since it
needs to be initialised with the app / config.
- $.ajax returns a promise-like object. Although we've used ".fail()"
elsewhere [3], I couldn't find a stub object that supports it, so I've
gone for ".catch()", and used a Promise stub object in tests.
- WebAuthn only works over HTTPS, but there's an exception for "localhost"
[4]. However, the library is a bit too strict [5], so we have to disable
origin verification to avoid needing HTTPS for dev work.
[1]: c42d9628a4/examples/server/server.py
[2]: c42d9628a4/examples/server/static/register.html
[3]: 91453d3639/app/assets/javascripts/updateContent.js (L33)
[4]: https://stackoverflow.com/questions/55971593/navigator-credentials-is-null-on-local-server
[5]: c42d9628a4/fido2/rpid.py (L69)
[6]: https://stackoverflow.com/questions/12394622/does-jquery-ajax-or-load-allow-for-responsetype-arraybuffer
When showing what auth type user uses to sign in, add a text
for users with webauthn.
On password change or sign in, throw not implemented error
if user uses webauthn auth.
Adding ‘all networks’ whenever we mention the using the test channel
without a restriction to a single network should help reinforce that
this sends real alerts.
Only the test channel has the option to isolate messages to one network.
This commits makes the choices less confusing by only showing the
network choice to those who have selected the test channel.
We have been asked to support the government channel so that:
- it can be tested
- the option to use it is available for the most severe of emergencies,
where the public’s choice to opt-out is outweighed by the widespread
risk to life
It feels quite dangerous that it’s just one click to make an emergency
alerts service live.
This commit adds a confirmation step which explains the consequences of
what you’re about to do.
This adds a new platform admin settings row, leading a page which
shows any existing keys and allows a new one to be registered. Until
the APIs for this are implemented, the user API client just returns
some stubbed data for manual testing.
This also includes a basic JavaScript module to do the main work of
registering a new authenticator, to be implemented in the next commits.
Some more minor notes:
- Setting the headings in the mapping_table is necessary to get the
horizontal rule along the top (to match the design).
- Setting caption to False in the mapping_table is necessary to stop
an extra margin appearing at the top.
This adds a note about automatically re-running JavaScript tests.
I've moved and rewritten the old content about re-building JS code
to match the new style.
The current_service.allowed_broadcast_provider is now always "all" or
one of the four providers, which means we can simply the code by not
checking if it is None.
Until all the data is updated to always be "all", we have to handle the
case of provider_restriction being set to None or "all" (which mean the
same thing).
The code can be tidied up once the broadcast provider_restriction is never None.
We're replacing the value of None with the value of all. API has been
updated to accept both values
(1767535def)
so this change starts sending notifications-api the value of "all".
This is the first step in making the UI easier for setting the
options for a broadcast service. Here we remove the options for
"Training mode" test channels. When we create a broadcast message for a trail mode service it is marked as stubbed and does not create a broadcast event that is sent to a provider.
The label for the form and setting page have been updated to reflect the
change.
Previously there was no indication that a service was suspended.
While this could also be shown for archived/deleted services, the
meaning is similar enough that it makes sense there too - the name
of the archived service should distinguish it as being archived.