
Security News
Package Maintainers Call for Improvements to GitHub’s New npm Security Plan
Maintainers back GitHub’s npm security overhaul but raise concerns about CI/CD workflows, enterprise support, and token management.
@tauri-apps/plugin-authenticator
Advanced tools
Use hardware security-keys in your Tauri App.
This plugin requires a Rust version of at least 1.65
There are three general methods of installation that we can recommend.
Install the Core plugin by adding the following to your Cargo.toml
file:
src-tauri/Cargo.toml
# you can add the dependencies on the `[dependencies]` section if you do not target mobile
[target."cfg(not(any(target_os = \"android\", target_os = \"ios\")))".dependencies]
tauri-plugin-authenticator = "2.0.0-alpha"
# alternatively with Git:
tauri-plugin-authenticator = { git = "https://github.com/tauri-apps/plugins-workspace", branch = "v2" }
You can install the JavaScript Guest bindings using your preferred JavaScript package manager:
Note: Since most JavaScript package managers are unable to install packages from git monorepos we provide read-only mirrors of each plugin. This makes installation option 2 more ergonomic to use.
pnpm add @tauri-apps/plugin-authenticator
# or
npm add @tauri-apps/plugin-authenticator
# or
yarn add @tauri-apps/plugin-authenticator
Alternatively with Git:
pnpm add https://github.com/tauri-apps/tauri-plugin-authenticator#v2
# or
npm add https://github.com/tauri-apps/tauri-plugin-authenticator#v2
# or
yarn add https://github.com/tauri-apps/tauri-plugin-authenticator#v2
First you need to register the core plugin with Tauri:
src-tauri/src/main.rs
fn main() {
tauri::Builder::default()
.setup(|app| {
#[cfg(desktop)]
app.handle().plugin(tauri_plugin_authenticator::init())?;
Ok(())
})
.run(tauri::generate_context!())
.expect("error while running tauri application");
}
Afterwards all the plugin's APIs are available through the JavaScript guest bindings:
import { Authenticator } from "@tauri-apps/plugin-authenticator";
const auth = new Authenticator();
auth.init(); // initialize transports
// generate a 32-bytes long random challenge
const arr = new Uint32Array(32);
window.crypto.getRandomValues(arr);
const b64 = btoa(String.fromCharCode.apply(null, arr));
// web-safe base64
const challenge = b64.replace(/\+/g, "-").replace(/\//g, "_");
const domain = "https://tauri.app";
// attempt to register with the security key
const json = await auth.register(challenge, domain);
const registerResult = JSON.parse(json);
// verify te registration was successfull
const r2 = await auth.verifyRegistration(
challenge,
app,
registerResult.registerData,
registerResult.clientData
);
const j2 = JSON.parse(r2);
// sign some data
const json = await auth.sign(challenge, app, keyHandle);
const signData = JSON.parse(json);
// verify the signature again
const counter = await auth.verifySignature(
challenge,
app,
signData.signData,
clientData,
keyHandle,
pubkey
);
if (counter && counter > 0) {
console.log("SUCCESS!");
}
PRs accepted. Please make sure to read the Contributing Guide before making a pull request.
Code: (c) 2015 - Present - The Tauri Programme within The Commons Conservancy.
MIT or MIT/Apache 2.0 where applicable.
FAQs
Use hardware security-keys in your Tauri App.
The npm package @tauri-apps/plugin-authenticator receives a total of 12 weekly downloads. As such, @tauri-apps/plugin-authenticator popularity was classified as not popular.
We found that @tauri-apps/plugin-authenticator demonstrated a not healthy version release cadence and project activity because the last version was released a year ago. It has 0 open source maintainers collaborating on the project.
Did you know?
Socket for GitHub automatically highlights issues in each pull request and monitors the health of all your open source dependencies. Discover the contents of your packages and block harmful activity before you install or update your dependencies.
Security News
Maintainers back GitHub’s npm security overhaul but raise concerns about CI/CD workflows, enterprise support, and token management.
Product
Socket Firewall is a free tool that blocks malicious packages at install time, giving developers proactive protection against rising supply chain attacks.
Research
Socket uncovers malicious Rust crates impersonating fast_log to steal Solana and Ethereum wallet keys from source code.