===================================================================
RCS file: /cvs/palm/Palm-Keyring/lib/Palm/Keyring.pm,v
retrieving revision 1.48
retrieving revision 1.50
diff -u -r1.48 -r1.50
--- palm/Palm-Keyring/lib/Palm/Keyring.pm 2007/09/12 03:44:36 1.48
+++ palm/Palm-Keyring/lib/Palm/Keyring.pm 2007/09/13 01:02:52 1.50
@@ -1,5 +1,5 @@
package Palm::Keyring;
-# $RedRiver: Keyring.pm,v 1.47 2007/09/12 00:30:10 andrew Exp $
+# $RedRiver: Keyring.pm,v 1.49 2007/09/12 03:39:22 andrew Exp $
########################################################################
# Keyring.pm *** Perl class for Keyring for Palm OS databases.
#
@@ -83,7 +83,7 @@
);
-our $VERSION = '0.96_01';
+our $VERSION = '0.96_04';
sub new
{
@@ -1391,17 +1391,12 @@
parses Keyring for Palm OS databases. See
L.
-It has the standard Palm::PDB methods with 2 additional public methods.
-Decrypt and Encrypt.
+It has the standard Palm::PDB methods with 4 additional public methods.
+Unlock, Lock, Decrypt and Encrypt.
It currently supports the v4 Keyring databases as well as
-the pre-release v5 databases. I am not completely happy with the interface
-for accessing v5 databases, so any suggestions on improvements on
-the interface are appreciated.
+the pre-release v5 databases.
-This module doesn't store the plaintext content. It only keeps it until it
-returns it to you or encrypts it.
-
=head1 SYNOPSIS
use Palm::PDB;
@@ -1412,10 +1407,12 @@
my $pdb = new Palm::PDB;
$pdb->Load($file);
+ $pdb->Unlock($pass);
foreach my $rec (@{ $pdb->{records} }) {
- my $plaintext = $pdb->Decrypt($rec, $pass);
- print $plaintext->{0}->{data}, ' - ', $plaintext->{1}->{data}, "\n";
+ print $rec->{plaintext}->{0}->{data}, ' - ',
+ $rec->{plaintext}->{1}->{data}, "\n";
}
+ $pdb->Lock();
=head1 SUBROUTINES/METHODS
@@ -1429,7 +1426,7 @@
Use this method if you're creating a Keyring PDB from scratch otherwise you
can just use Palm::PDB::new() before calling Load().
-If you pass in a password, it will initalize the first record with the encrypted
+If you pass in a password, it will initalize the database with the encrypted
password.
new() now also takes options in other formats
@@ -1453,7 +1450,7 @@
=item cipher
-The cipher to use. Either the number or the name.
+The cipher to use. Either the number or the name. Only used by v5 datbases.
0 => None
1 => DES_EDE3
@@ -1462,12 +1459,8 @@
=item iterations
-The number of iterations to encrypt with.
+The number of iterations to encrypt with. Only used by somy crypts in v5 databases.
-=item options
-
-A hashref of the options that are set
-
=back
=back
@@ -1507,7 +1500,9 @@
=head2 labels
-Pass in the id or the name of the label;
+Pass in the id or the name of the label. The label id is used as a key
+to the different parts of the records.
+See Encrypt() for details on where the label is used.
This is a function, not a method.
@@ -1531,6 +1526,11 @@
=head2 Encrypt
+=head3 B The order of the arguments to Encrypt has
+changed. $password and $plaintext used to be swapped. They changed
+because you can now set $rec->{plaintext} and not pass in $plaintext so
+$password is more important.
+
$pdb->Encrypt($rec[, $password[, $plaintext[, $ivec]]]);
Encrypts an account into a record, either with the password previously
@@ -1565,7 +1565,11 @@
label => 'lastchange',
label_id => 3,
font => 0,
- data => $lastchange,
+ data => {
+ year => $year, # usually the year - 1900
+ mon => $mon, # range 0-11
+ day => $day, # range 1-31
+ },
},
255 => {
label => 'notes',
@@ -1575,8 +1579,8 @@
},
};
-The account name is also stored in $rec->{plaintext}->{0}->{data} for both v4
-and v5 databases.
+The account name is stored in $rec->{plaintext}->{0}->{data} for both v4
+and v5 databases even when the record has not been Decrypt()ed.
$rec->{plaintext}->{0} => {
label => 'name',
@@ -1600,9 +1604,9 @@
my $plaintext = $pdb->Decrypt($rec[, $password]);
Decrypts the record and returns a reference for the plaintext account as
-described under L.
+described under Encrypt().
Also sets $rec->{plaintext} with the same information as $plaintext as
-described in L.
+described in Encrypt().
foreach my $rec (@{ $pdb->{records} }) {
my $plaintext = $pdb->Decrypt($rec);
@@ -1668,7 +1672,7 @@
Unsets $rec->{plaintext} for all records and unsets the saved password.
-This does NOT L any of the records before clearing them, so if
+This does NOT Encrypt() any of the records before clearing them, so if
you are not careful you will lose information.
B This only does "delete $rec->{plaintext}" and the same for the
@@ -1774,15 +1778,17 @@
I am not sure I am 'require module' the best way, but I don't want to
depend on modules that you don't need to use.
-I am not very happy with the data structures used by Encrypt() and
-Decrypt() for v5 databases, but I am not sure of a better way.
-
The date validation for packing new dates is very poor.
I have not gone through and standardized on how the module fails. Some
things fail with croak, some return undef, some may even fail silently.
-Nothing initializes a lasterr method or anything like that. I need
-to fix all that before it is a 1.0 candidate.
+Nothing initializes a lasterr method or anything like that.
+
+This module does not do anything special with the plaintext data. It SHOULD
+treat it somehow special so that it can't be found in RAM or in a swap file
+anywhere. I don't have a clue how to do this.
+
+I need to fix all this before it is a 1.0 candidate.
Please report any bugs or feature requests to
C, or through the web interface at