libgocryptfs/masterkey.go
Jakob Unterwurzacher 0c80cca674 toggledlog: convert remaing naked fmt.Print*
Several fatal errors were just printed to stdout, which
meant they were invisible when running the test suite.

Fix this by introducing toggledlog.Fatal and convert as
follows:

Fatal errors     -> toggledlog.Fatal
Warnings         -> toggledlog.Warn
Password prompts -> fmt.Fprintf
2016-06-05 14:32:07 +02:00

56 lines
1.3 KiB
Go

package main
import (
"encoding/hex"
"os"
"strings"
"github.com/rfjakob/gocryptfs/internal/cryptocore"
"github.com/rfjakob/gocryptfs/internal/toggledlog"
)
// printMasterKey - remind the user that he should store the master key in
// a safe place
func printMasterKey(key []byte) {
h := hex.EncodeToString(key)
var hChunked string
// Try to make it less scary by splitting it up in chunks
for i := 0; i < len(h); i += 8 {
hChunked += h[i : i+8]
if i < 52 {
hChunked += "-"
}
if i == 24 {
hChunked += "\n "
}
}
toggledlog.Info.Printf(`
Your master key is:
%s
If the gocryptfs.conf file becomes corrupted or you ever forget your password,
there is only one hope for recovery: The master key. Print it to a piece of
paper and store it in a drawer.
`, colorGrey+hChunked+colorReset)
}
// parseMasterKey - Parse a hex-encoded master key that was passed on the command line
// Calls os.Exit on failure
func parseMasterKey(masterkey string) []byte {
masterkey = strings.Replace(masterkey, "-", "", -1)
key, err := hex.DecodeString(masterkey)
if err != nil {
toggledlog.Fatal.Printf("Could not parse master key: %v\n", err)
os.Exit(1)
}
if len(key) != cryptocore.KeyLen {
toggledlog.Fatal.Printf("Master key has length %d but we require length %d\n", len(key), cryptocore.KeyLen)
os.Exit(1)
}
return key
}