@deque/axe-auth 1.1.0-next.ac35e028 → 1.1.0-next.b1986c00

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Files changed (44) hide show
  1. package/README.md +20 -26
  2. package/credits.json +53 -0
  3. package/dist/cli/commonArgs.d.ts +53 -37
  4. package/dist/cli/commonArgs.help.d.ts +1 -1
  5. package/dist/cli/commonArgs.help.js +12 -11
  6. package/dist/cli/commonArgs.js +37 -66
  7. package/dist/cli/errors.d.ts +0 -10
  8. package/dist/cli/errors.js +1 -16
  9. package/dist/cli/testUtils.js +3 -3
  10. package/dist/cli/types.d.ts +8 -11
  11. package/dist/commands/login.d.ts +3 -0
  12. package/dist/commands/login.help.d.ts +1 -1
  13. package/dist/commands/login.help.js +11 -5
  14. package/dist/commands/login.js +38 -14
  15. package/dist/commands/logout.d.ts +1 -1
  16. package/dist/commands/logout.help.d.ts +1 -1
  17. package/dist/commands/logout.help.js +5 -4
  18. package/dist/commands/logout.js +1 -15
  19. package/dist/commands/token.d.ts +2 -7
  20. package/dist/commands/token.help.d.ts +1 -1
  21. package/dist/commands/token.help.js +5 -5
  22. package/dist/commands/token.js +10 -22
  23. package/dist/index.js +23 -51
  24. package/dist/oauth/authorize.d.ts +7 -0
  25. package/dist/oauth/authorize.js +2 -1
  26. package/dist/oauth/discoverOIDC.js +31 -1
  27. package/dist/oauth/discoverSSOConfig.d.ts +47 -0
  28. package/dist/oauth/discoverSSOConfig.js +105 -0
  29. package/dist/oauth/errors.d.ts +2 -0
  30. package/dist/oauth/getValidAccessToken.js +1 -0
  31. package/dist/oauth/openBrowser.d.ts +14 -3
  32. package/dist/oauth/openBrowser.js +22 -5
  33. package/dist/oauth/refreshTokens.js +2 -0
  34. package/dist/oauth/revokeToken.js +5 -1
  35. package/dist/oauth/tokenExchange.js +2 -0
  36. package/dist/oauth/tokenStore.d.ts +75 -3
  37. package/dist/oauth/tokenStore.js +405 -18
  38. package/dist/userAgent.d.ts +12 -0
  39. package/dist/userAgent.js +18 -0
  40. package/docs/architecture.md +201 -0
  41. package/docs/callback-page.md +24 -0
  42. package/docs/callback-server.md +21 -0
  43. package/docs/oauth-flow.md +15 -0
  44. package/package.json +7 -2
@@ -1,7 +1,12 @@
1
1
  "use strict";
2
2
  Object.defineProperty(exports, "__esModule", { value: true });
3
3
  exports.KeyringTokenStore = exports.STORED_BLOB_VERSION = void 0;
4
+ exports.shouldChunkForKeyring = shouldChunkForKeyring;
4
5
  exports.parseAndMigrateBlob = parseAndMigrateBlob;
6
+ exports.keyringErrorMessage = keyringErrorMessage;
7
+ exports.isKeyringSizeError = isKeyringSizeError;
8
+ exports.platformKeyringHint = platformKeyringHint;
9
+ exports.chunkBlobForKeyring = chunkBlobForKeyring;
5
10
  const errors_1 = require("./errors");
6
11
  const keyringBinding_1 = require("./keyringBinding");
7
12
  // On macOS: Keychain generic password item with the service name below.
@@ -9,16 +14,45 @@ const keyringBinding_1 = require("./keyringBinding");
9
14
  // Exposed as a human-readable string because these all surface the service
10
15
  // name in OS UIs (Keychain Access, credmgr.exe, seahorse).
11
16
  const SERVICE_NAME = "axe-auth";
12
- // Single keychain entry per machine. The blob it holds is fully
13
- // self-describing (issuerURL, clientId, allowInsecureIssuer, plus the
14
- // tokens), so verbs that don't pass `--server` / `--realm` /
15
- // `--client-id` can resolve their config from the entry.
17
+ // Single keychain entry per machine on macOS / Linux. (Windows splits
18
+ // across `credentials.0`, `credentials.1`, see `CHUNK_LIMIT`
19
+ // below.) The blob it holds is fully self-describing (issuerURL,
20
+ // clientId, allowInsecureIssuer, plus the tokens), so verbs that
21
+ // don't pass `--server` / `--realm` / `--client-id` can resolve their
22
+ // config from the entry.
16
23
  //
17
24
  // Account name is human-readable so users investigating the entry in
18
25
  // macOS Keychain Access (or `secret-tool` on Linux, credmgr on
19
26
  // Windows) can tell what it is. Not versioned: the schema version
20
- // lives inside the blob and migrators handle the upgrade path.
27
+ // lives inside the blob and migrators handle the upgrade path. Note:
28
+ // Windows entries hold base64-encoded JSON rather than the raw JSON
29
+ // macOS / Linux store, so a Windows user inspecting their Credential
30
+ // Manager will see opaque base64; that's a side effect of chunking.
21
31
  const ACCOUNT_NAME = "credentials";
32
+ // Windows Credential Manager caps stored values at 2560 UTF-16 code
33
+ // units, which large OAuth access-token JWTs (many groups/roles
34
+ // claims) routinely exceed. On Windows we work around this by
35
+ // splitting the JSON blob across multiple entries with account names
36
+ // `credentials.0`, `credentials.1`, … . `CHUNK_LIMIT` leaves margin
37
+ // under the platform cap; `MAX_CHUNKS` is a safety bound — we should
38
+ // never get close in practice, even with maximally-claimed tokens.
39
+ //
40
+ // macOS Keychain and Linux libsecret have no comparable limit, so
41
+ // chunking there would just multiply per-entry ACL prompts (each
42
+ // keychain entry is independently lockable on macOS) for no gain.
43
+ // Chunking is therefore Windows-only, gated by `shouldChunkForKeyring`.
44
+ const CHUNK_LIMIT = 2500;
45
+ const MAX_CHUNKS = 32;
46
+ /**
47
+ * Whether `KeyringTokenStore` should split the stored blob across
48
+ * multiple keychain entries on this platform. Windows-only because of
49
+ * Credential Manager's 2560 UTF-16 character per-entry cap. Exported
50
+ * (parameterized for tests) so the chunking path can be exercised
51
+ * deterministically.
52
+ */
53
+ function shouldChunkForKeyring(platform = process.platform) {
54
+ return platform === "win32";
55
+ }
22
56
  /**
23
57
  * Current on-disk blob schema version. Exported so consumers can
24
58
  * display "stored v:N, expected v:M" diagnostics when `load()` returns
@@ -72,7 +106,9 @@ function isLatestBlob(blob) {
72
106
  (b.refreshToken === undefined || typeof b.refreshToken === "string") &&
73
107
  typeof b.issuerURL === "string" &&
74
108
  typeof b.clientId === "string" &&
75
- typeof b.allowInsecureIssuer === "boolean");
109
+ typeof b.allowInsecureIssuer === "boolean" &&
110
+ typeof b.walnutURL === "string" &&
111
+ b.walnutURL.length > 0);
76
112
  }
77
113
  function blobToEntry(blob) {
78
114
  const tokens = {
@@ -86,6 +122,7 @@ function blobToEntry(blob) {
86
122
  issuerURL: blob.issuerURL,
87
123
  clientId: blob.clientId,
88
124
  allowInsecureIssuer: blob.allowInsecureIssuer,
125
+ walnutURL: blob.walnutURL,
89
126
  };
90
127
  }
91
128
  function entryToBlob(entry) {
@@ -96,6 +133,7 @@ function entryToBlob(entry) {
96
133
  issuerURL: entry.issuerURL,
97
134
  clientId: entry.clientId,
98
135
  allowInsecureIssuer: entry.allowInsecureIssuer,
136
+ walnutURL: entry.walnutURL,
99
137
  };
100
138
  if (entry.tokens.refreshToken)
101
139
  blob.refreshToken = entry.tokens.refreshToken;
@@ -149,32 +187,184 @@ function parseAndMigrateBlob(raw, expectedVersion = exports.STORED_BLOB_VERSION,
149
187
  return { ok: true, blob: current };
150
188
  }
151
189
  function wrapKeyringError(op, cause) {
152
- throw new errors_1.OAuthFlowError("KEYRING_UNAVAILABLE", `System keychain ${op} failed. On Linux this usually means no D-Bus Secret Service is running.`, { cause });
190
+ // Pass-through pre-wrapped OAuthFlowErrors so we don't double-wrap
191
+ // our own error type. The most common source today is
192
+ // `defaultEntryFactory` throwing `KEYRING_UNAVAILABLE` when the
193
+ // native binding can't be loaded — relabelling that as another
194
+ // `KEYRING_UNAVAILABLE` with a duplicate message and a possibly
195
+ // misleading platform hint helps nobody.
196
+ if (cause instanceof errors_1.OAuthFlowError) {
197
+ throw cause;
198
+ }
199
+ throw new errors_1.OAuthFlowError("KEYRING_UNAVAILABLE", keyringErrorMessage(op, cause), {
200
+ cause,
201
+ });
202
+ }
203
+ /**
204
+ * Builds the user-facing keychain error message. Platform is a
205
+ * parameter (defaulting to `process.platform`) so tests can drive each
206
+ * branch without mocking the runtime; mirrors the pattern in
207
+ * `platformKeyringHint`.
208
+ *
209
+ * The Windows-specific size-limit message is only used when the
210
+ * underlying error matches the binding's "longer than the platform
211
+ * limit" wording AND the runtime is win32 — that combination is the
212
+ * only way the size cap actually manifests in practice. On other
213
+ * platforms (or for any other binding error) we fall back to the
214
+ * generic per-platform hint.
215
+ */
216
+ function keyringErrorMessage(op, cause, platform = process.platform) {
217
+ if (platform === "win32" && isKeyringSizeError(cause)) {
218
+ return `System keychain ${op} failed: Windows Credential Manager limits stored values to 2560 UTF-16 characters. Large OAuth access-token JWTs (many groups/roles claims) commonly exceed this.`;
219
+ }
220
+ const causeMessage = cause instanceof Error ? cause.message : String(cause);
221
+ return `System keychain ${op} failed: ${causeMessage}. ${platformKeyringHint(platform)}`;
222
+ }
223
+ /**
224
+ * Detects the `@napi-rs/keyring` error string for "value too large".
225
+ * In practice only Windows Credential Manager triggers this — its
226
+ * stored values are capped at 2560 UTF-16 chars; macOS Keychain and
227
+ * Linux libsecret have no comparable limit. Exported (but not
228
+ * re-exported from the package index) so tests can exercise the
229
+ * detector independently of the wrap path.
230
+ */
231
+ function isKeyringSizeError(cause) {
232
+ if (!(cause instanceof Error))
233
+ return false;
234
+ return /longer than the platform limit/.test(cause.message);
235
+ }
236
+ /**
237
+ * Returns a per-platform hint appended to keychain error messages so
238
+ * users see actionable guidance for their OS instead of generic or
239
+ * Linux-only advice. Exported (but not re-exported from the package
240
+ * index) so tests can exercise each branch without mocking
241
+ * `process.platform`.
242
+ */
243
+ function platformKeyringHint(platform = process.platform) {
244
+ switch (platform) {
245
+ case "darwin":
246
+ return "On macOS this usually means Keychain Access denied or cancelled the prompt.";
247
+ case "win32":
248
+ return "On Windows this usually means Credential Manager rejected the operation.";
249
+ case "linux":
250
+ return "On Linux this usually means no D-Bus Secret Service is running (e.g. GNOME Keyring or KWallet).";
251
+ default:
252
+ return `Underlying platform: ${platform}.`;
253
+ }
254
+ }
255
+ /**
256
+ * Parses chunk 0's `<N>\n<rest>` header. Returns the chunk count and
257
+ * the data part following the newline, or `null` for any malformed /
258
+ * out-of-range / non-canonically-encoded header. Centralised here
259
+ * (rather than open-coded twice in `#loadChunked` and
260
+ * `#previousChunkN`) so the canonical-encoding contract has one
261
+ * authoritative implementation.
262
+ */
263
+ function parseChunkHeader(first) {
264
+ const newlineIdx = first.indexOf("\n");
265
+ if (newlineIdx <= 0)
266
+ return null;
267
+ const nStr = first.slice(0, newlineIdx);
268
+ const n = parseInt(nStr, 10);
269
+ // Reject non-canonical encodings ("01", " 3", "3abc"). parseInt is
270
+ // permissive about those; we want a single canonical encoding so
271
+ // two different headers can't decode to the same N.
272
+ if (!Number.isInteger(n) || n < 1 || n > MAX_CHUNKS || String(n) !== nStr) {
273
+ return null;
274
+ }
275
+ return { n, rest: first.slice(newlineIdx + 1) };
153
276
  }
154
277
  /**
155
278
  * `TokenStore` backed by the operating system's native keychain via
156
279
  * `@napi-rs/keyring` (macOS Keychain, Windows Credential Manager, Linux
157
- * Secret Service). One entry per machine, keyed by a fixed account
158
- * name; the blob carries its own issuer/client coordinates so verbs
159
- * can recover full config without per-issuer keying.
280
+ * Secret Service). On macOS and Linux the blob lives in a single entry
281
+ * keyed by the fixed `credentials` account name. On Windows the blob
282
+ * is split across `credentials.0`, `credentials.1`, entries to fit
283
+ * under Credential Manager's 2560 UTF-16 character per-entry cap; see
284
+ * `shouldChunkForKeyring`.
285
+ *
286
+ * The blob carries its own issuer/client coordinates so verbs can
287
+ * recover full config without per-issuer keying.
160
288
  */
161
289
  class KeyringTokenStore {
162
- #entry;
290
+ #entryFactory;
291
+ #chunked;
292
+ /**
293
+ * @param entryFactory Injection seam for `@napi-rs/keyring` entries.
294
+ * Defaults to the production lazy-resolved factory; tests pass a
295
+ * recording / faking variant.
296
+ */
163
297
  constructor(entryFactory = keyringBinding_1.defaultEntryFactory) {
164
- this.#entry = entryFactory(SERVICE_NAME, ACCOUNT_NAME);
298
+ this.#entryFactory = entryFactory;
299
+ this.#chunked = shouldChunkForKeyring();
300
+ }
301
+ /**
302
+ * @internal Test seam. Constructs a store with an explicit chunking
303
+ * decision instead of the platform-determined default, so the
304
+ * chunked path can be exercised on macOS/Linux CI and the unchunked
305
+ * path on Windows CI. Production code must use the regular
306
+ * constructor and let `shouldChunkForKeyring()` decide — passing
307
+ * `chunked: true` on macOS would write data that the regular
308
+ * constructor wouldn't be able to read.
309
+ */
310
+ static forTesting(entryFactory, chunked) {
311
+ const store = new KeyringTokenStore(entryFactory);
312
+ store.#chunked = chunked;
313
+ return store;
314
+ }
315
+ #entry(account) {
316
+ return this.#entryFactory(SERVICE_NAME, account);
165
317
  }
166
318
  async save(entry) {
167
- try {
168
- this.#entry.setPassword(JSON.stringify(entryToBlob(entry)));
319
+ const jsonBlob = JSON.stringify(entryToBlob(entry));
320
+ if (this.#chunked) {
321
+ // Encode + chunk OUTSIDE the try/catch so a TOKEN_TOO_LARGE from
322
+ // `chunkBlobForKeyring` surfaces unchanged. The keychain
323
+ // operations stay inside the try and get wrapped as
324
+ // KEYRING_UNAVAILABLE if they fail.
325
+ const encoded = Buffer.from(jsonBlob, "utf8").toString("base64");
326
+ const parts = chunkBlobForKeyring(encoded);
327
+ try {
328
+ this.#saveChunked(parts);
329
+ }
330
+ catch (cause) {
331
+ wrapKeyringError("write", cause);
332
+ }
169
333
  }
170
- catch (cause) {
171
- wrapKeyringError("write", cause);
334
+ else {
335
+ try {
336
+ this.#entry(ACCOUNT_NAME).setPassword(jsonBlob);
337
+ }
338
+ catch (cause) {
339
+ wrapKeyringError("write", cause);
340
+ }
172
341
  }
173
342
  }
174
343
  async load() {
175
344
  let raw;
176
345
  try {
177
- raw = this.#entry.getPassword();
346
+ if (this.#chunked) {
347
+ const result = this.#loadChunked();
348
+ if (result.kind === "present") {
349
+ raw = result.blob;
350
+ }
351
+ else if (result.kind === "empty") {
352
+ // First-time-upgrade fallback: a Windows dev who upgraded
353
+ // across the chunking change has data at the bare
354
+ // `credentials` account but no chunks yet. Read that legacy
355
+ // entry; the next save() migrates it. Note we only fall
356
+ // back when chunked data is *empty* — when chunked data is
357
+ // *corrupt* we surface that directly rather than restoring
358
+ // potentially stale legacy data underneath the corruption.
359
+ raw = this.#entry(ACCOUNT_NAME).getPassword();
360
+ }
361
+ else {
362
+ return { ok: false, reason: "corrupt" };
363
+ }
364
+ }
365
+ else {
366
+ raw = this.#entry(ACCOUNT_NAME).getPassword();
367
+ }
178
368
  }
179
369
  catch (cause) {
180
370
  wrapKeyringError("read", cause);
@@ -188,11 +378,208 @@ class KeyringTokenStore {
188
378
  }
189
379
  async clear() {
190
380
  try {
191
- this.#entry.deletePassword();
381
+ if (this.#chunked) {
382
+ this.#clearChunked();
383
+ }
384
+ else {
385
+ this.#entry(ACCOUNT_NAME).deletePassword();
386
+ }
192
387
  }
193
388
  catch (cause) {
194
389
  wrapKeyringError("delete", cause);
195
390
  }
196
391
  }
392
+ /**
393
+ * Writes `parts` (the output of `chunkBlobForKeyring`) to entries
394
+ * `credentials.0..N-1`.
395
+ *
396
+ * Writes are in **reverse index order** — chunks N-1..1, then chunk
397
+ * 0 with the new header last. Chunk 0's header is what reads use to
398
+ * learn N, so until it's overwritten the previous chunk 0 still
399
+ * references the previous N chunks.
400
+ *
401
+ * Crash recovery is partial, not total. Reverse order helps in one
402
+ * case: when N_new > N_old and the crash happens before chunk 0 is
403
+ * rewritten — writes to indices >= N_old don't disturb old data,
404
+ * the previous chunk 0 still references the previous N chunks, and
405
+ * the prior session survives. The typical refresh case (N_new ==
406
+ * N_old) overwrites chunks 1..N-1 with new data while chunk 0 is
407
+ * still old, so a crash there reads as corrupt and the user
408
+ * re-auths. Reverse order is therefore a marginal improvement over
409
+ * forward order, not a guarantee.
410
+ *
411
+ * Cleanup sweeps `[N_new, N_old)` (bounded by the previous chunk
412
+ * count read from the old chunk 0 header before we overwrite it).
413
+ * For a typical token refresh (same N) this is zero deletes; the
414
+ * full safety sweep up to MAX_CHUNKS only runs as a defensive
415
+ * recovery when the previous N can't be determined. Orphans at
416
+ * indices >= max(N_new, N_old) from interrupted resize-up writes
417
+ * persist until the next `clear()` does the full sweep.
418
+ *
419
+ * Concurrency: this method is not safe to run concurrently against
420
+ * the same OS keychain. Two writers can interleave at chunk
421
+ * boundaries and produce a Frankenstein blob. axe-auth runs as a
422
+ * short-lived CLI so this is unlikely in practice, but a long-lived
423
+ * process refreshing in the background while the CLI is invoked
424
+ * could trip it.
425
+ */
426
+ #saveChunked(parts) {
427
+ // Read previous N before any writes so the cleanup sweep is
428
+ // bounded. If the previous chunk 0 is missing or its header is
429
+ // unparseable we have no upper bound, so fall back to the full
430
+ // safety range as a one-time defensive recovery.
431
+ const previousN = this.#previousChunkN();
432
+ for (let i = parts.length - 1; i >= 1; i--) {
433
+ this.#entry(`${ACCOUNT_NAME}.${i}`).setPassword(parts[i]);
434
+ }
435
+ this.#entry(`${ACCOUNT_NAME}.0`).setPassword(parts[0]);
436
+ // Best-effort sweep: writes have already succeeded, so a sweep
437
+ // failure shouldn't roll back the save. The next save's bounded
438
+ // sweep cleans up anything we miss here. Same reasoning for the
439
+ // legacy delete below.
440
+ const sweepEnd = previousN ?? MAX_CHUNKS;
441
+ for (let i = parts.length; i < sweepEnd; i++) {
442
+ try {
443
+ this.#entry(`${ACCOUNT_NAME}.${i}`).deletePassword();
444
+ }
445
+ catch {
446
+ // Sweep is best-effort; the next save handles leftovers.
447
+ }
448
+ }
449
+ // Clear any pre-chunking single-entry blob from a previous
450
+ // axe-auth release. This is a forever-tax (one extra
451
+ // deletePassword per save even after the migration is done)
452
+ // because we have no per-machine "migration completed" flag;
453
+ // adding one would mean another keychain entry to manage. The
454
+ // cost is one Credential Manager call per refresh — negligible
455
+ // relative to the OAuth round-trip.
456
+ try {
457
+ this.#entry(ACCOUNT_NAME).deletePassword();
458
+ }
459
+ catch {
460
+ // Best-effort; the next save attempts again.
461
+ }
462
+ }
463
+ /**
464
+ * Reads the chunk-count header from `credentials.0` so `#saveChunked`
465
+ * can bound its cleanup sweep. Returns `null` when chunk 0 is
466
+ * missing, when the header is malformed, or when the encoded N is
467
+ * out of range — every "I don't know the previous count" case
468
+ * collapses to a full safety sweep at the call site.
469
+ */
470
+ #previousChunkN() {
471
+ const first = this.#entry(`${ACCOUNT_NAME}.0`).getPassword();
472
+ if (first === null)
473
+ return null;
474
+ return parseChunkHeader(first)?.n ?? null;
475
+ }
476
+ /**
477
+ * Reverse of `#saveChunked`. Returns a discriminated result so the
478
+ * caller can distinguish "no data" from "data is malformed" without
479
+ * reaching for sentinel strings.
480
+ */
481
+ #loadChunked() {
482
+ const first = this.#entry(`${ACCOUNT_NAME}.0`).getPassword();
483
+ if (first === null)
484
+ return { kind: "empty" };
485
+ const header = parseChunkHeader(first);
486
+ if (!header)
487
+ return { kind: "corrupt" };
488
+ const parts = [header.rest];
489
+ for (let i = 1; i < header.n; i++) {
490
+ const part = this.#entry(`${ACCOUNT_NAME}.${i}`).getPassword();
491
+ if (part === null)
492
+ return { kind: "corrupt" };
493
+ parts.push(part);
494
+ }
495
+ // `Buffer.from(_, 'base64')` is permissive — invalid characters
496
+ // are silently dropped rather than throwing. Garbage base64
497
+ // produces garbage UTF-8, which falls through to the upstream
498
+ // JSON.parse and surfaces as `corrupt` from
499
+ // `parseAndMigrateBlob`. So no try/catch is needed here.
500
+ const blob = Buffer.from(parts.join(""), "base64").toString("utf8");
501
+ return { kind: "present", blob };
502
+ }
503
+ #clearChunked() {
504
+ // Sweep the whole safety range rather than break-on-first-missing
505
+ // so chunk holes (from interrupted writes or manual tampering)
506
+ // still get cleaned up. Logout is rare enough that the
507
+ // unconditional sweep cost is irrelevant.
508
+ //
509
+ // Per-entry errors are caught locally so a single throw doesn't
510
+ // strand the remaining chunks (or the legacy entry) in the
511
+ // keychain. After all attempts, we surface the first failure so
512
+ // the user still sees that logout didn't fully complete.
513
+ let firstError = null;
514
+ for (let i = 0; i < MAX_CHUNKS; i++) {
515
+ try {
516
+ this.#entry(`${ACCOUNT_NAME}.${i}`).deletePassword();
517
+ }
518
+ catch (cause) {
519
+ firstError ??= cause;
520
+ }
521
+ }
522
+ // And the pre-chunking single-entry blob, in case a Windows dev
523
+ // had axe-auth installed before chunking shipped.
524
+ try {
525
+ this.#entry(ACCOUNT_NAME).deletePassword();
526
+ }
527
+ catch (cause) {
528
+ firstError ??= cause;
529
+ }
530
+ if (firstError !== null) {
531
+ throw firstError;
532
+ }
533
+ }
197
534
  }
198
535
  exports.KeyringTokenStore = KeyringTokenStore;
536
+ /**
537
+ * Splits `blob` into the N parts that `KeyringTokenStore.#saveChunked`
538
+ * writes to `credentials.0..N-1`. Chunk 0 is prefixed with `<N>\n` so
539
+ * the reader can learn N from a single getPassword call. Each chunk
540
+ * stays under `CHUNK_LIMIT` UTF-16 characters; throws if the blob would
541
+ * require more than `MAX_CHUNKS` chunks. Exported for tests.
542
+ */
543
+ function chunkBlobForKeyring(blob) {
544
+ // N depends on the header length, which depends on N. Solve by
545
+ // iterating until the chunk count stabilises (converges in <= a
546
+ // couple of steps for any realistic blob). The safety counter is
547
+ // belt-and-suspenders against a future tweak (different
548
+ // CHUNK_LIMIT, different header format) accidentally introducing
549
+ // oscillation; an unbounded loop here would hang `axe-auth login`
550
+ // with no error.
551
+ let n = Math.max(1, Math.ceil(blob.length / CHUNK_LIMIT));
552
+ let safety = 0;
553
+ while (true) {
554
+ if (++safety > 8) {
555
+ throw new Error(`chunkBlobForKeyring: chunk count failed to converge after ${safety} iterations (blob length ${blob.length})`);
556
+ }
557
+ const headerLen = String(n).length + 1; // "<N>\n"
558
+ const chunk0Capacity = CHUNK_LIMIT - headerLen;
559
+ if (chunk0Capacity <= 0) {
560
+ throw new Error(`chunkBlobForKeyring: chunk count ${n} leaves no room for data`);
561
+ }
562
+ const remaining = Math.max(0, blob.length - chunk0Capacity);
563
+ const next = 1 + Math.ceil(remaining / CHUNK_LIMIT);
564
+ if (next === n)
565
+ break;
566
+ n = next;
567
+ }
568
+ if (n > MAX_CHUNKS) {
569
+ // Surfaced as a distinct error code (rather than KEYRING_UNAVAILABLE)
570
+ // because the keystore is healthy — the failure is that the IDP's
571
+ // token has too many claims to fit. Wrapping this as a keychain
572
+ // error would attach a misleading "Credential Manager rejected"
573
+ // platform hint via `wrapKeyringError`'s default path.
574
+ throw new errors_1.OAuthFlowError("TOKEN_TOO_LARGE", `OAuth token blob would require ${n} keyring entries (max ${MAX_CHUNKS}). The IDP may be issuing tokens with unusually many claims; talk to the realm administrator.`);
575
+ }
576
+ const headerLen = String(n).length + 1;
577
+ const chunk0Capacity = CHUNK_LIMIT - headerLen;
578
+ const parts = [`${n}\n${blob.slice(0, chunk0Capacity)}`];
579
+ let pos = chunk0Capacity;
580
+ while (pos < blob.length) {
581
+ parts.push(blob.slice(pos, pos + CHUNK_LIMIT));
582
+ pos += CHUNK_LIMIT;
583
+ }
584
+ return parts;
585
+ }
@@ -0,0 +1,12 @@
1
+ /**
2
+ * `User-Agent` header value sent on all outbound requests, per
3
+ * Service Development Standards §4.4.
4
+ *
5
+ * Format: `axe-auth/v<package-version>` (e.g. `axe-auth/v1.0.2`).
6
+ *
7
+ * The npm scope (`@deque/`) is deliberately omitted from the wire format:
8
+ * `@` and `/` are not valid `tchar` per RFC 9110 §5.6.2, so a token like
9
+ * `@deque/axe-auth` would make the User-Agent malformed and risk WAF
10
+ * rejection (e.g. OWASP CRS rule 920330).
11
+ */
12
+ export declare const USER_AGENT: string;
@@ -0,0 +1,18 @@
1
+ "use strict";
2
+ Object.defineProperty(exports, "__esModule", { value: true });
3
+ exports.USER_AGENT = void 0;
4
+ const node_fs_1 = require("node:fs");
5
+ const node_path_1 = require("node:path");
6
+ const pkg = JSON.parse((0, node_fs_1.readFileSync)((0, node_path_1.join)(__dirname, "..", "package.json"), "utf-8"));
7
+ /**
8
+ * `User-Agent` header value sent on all outbound requests, per
9
+ * Service Development Standards §4.4.
10
+ *
11
+ * Format: `axe-auth/v<package-version>` (e.g. `axe-auth/v1.0.2`).
12
+ *
13
+ * The npm scope (`@deque/`) is deliberately omitted from the wire format:
14
+ * `@` and `/` are not valid `tchar` per RFC 9110 §5.6.2, so a token like
15
+ * `@deque/axe-auth` would make the User-Agent malformed and risk WAF
16
+ * rejection (e.g. OWASP CRS rule 920330).
17
+ */
18
+ exports.USER_AGENT = `axe-auth/v${pkg.version}`;