node-mpw
v0.2.0
Published
Implementation of Master Password for nodejs and browser
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node-mpw
Implementation of Master Password for nodejs and browser
Installation
Requirements:
- Node.js (v4.0.0+)
Note: this package uses scrypt
which is built with node-gyp
so you might need to compile C code. Blame node-gyp
.
First, install Node.js, and then open a terminal and run node -v
and npm -v
to make sure Node is installed correctly.
Now we can install the package.
$ npm install --save node-mpw
Once it's installed and in your node_modules
folder, you can now run the script! Here's an example:
import * as mpw from 'node-mpw'
const username = 'username'
const password = 'password'
const site = 'example.com'
const key = mpw.generateKey(username, password)
const generated = mpw.generatePassword(site, key, 1, 'long', 3)
API Reference
generateKey
mpw.generateKey(name: string, password: string, version?: string, namespace?: string): Buffer
Calculate the master key from a user's name and master password.
Parameters
name: string
The desired username.password: string
The desired master password.version?: string
The algorithm version being used for this process.namespace? string
The namespace used as a salt to calculate the key.
Returns: a key generated from the scrypt
algorithm.
generatePassword
mpw.generatePassword(site: string, key: Buffer, counter?: number, template?: string, version?: number, namespace?: string): string
Encode a site password using the site's type template.
Parameters
site: string
The site name. The bare domain name is an ideal choice.key: Buffer
Anscrypt
-hashed key generated from thegenerateKey()
function.counter?: number
An integer that can be incremented when the user needs a new password for the site.template?: string
The password template that the user chooses.version?: number
The algorithm version being used for this process.namespace?: string
The namespace used as a salt to calculate the seed.
Returns: the final, generated password.
Contributing
Issues and Pull Requests are welcome! Please read our Contributing Guidelines & Code of Conduct beforehand.
Reading the commit log
Our commit logs are Commitizen-friendly. With Commitizen, the header of every commit message has to include a type
, an optional scope
and a subject
with the following format:
<type>(<scope>): <subject>
You can use one of the following methods to use Commitizen.
Option 1: Install Commitizen by running npm install -g commitizen
, and run git cz
instead of git commit
when you want to commit. Follow the instructions on the next screen.
Option 2: When you run npm install
the core commitizen
library is also saved as devDependencies
. You can simply run npm run commit
instead of git commit
to enable Commitizen. Follow the instructions on the next screen.
Option 3: Manually typing the commits altogether. We use the following Commitizen tags.
- feat: A new feature
- fix: A bug fix
- docs: Documentation only changes
- style: Changes that do not affect the meaning on the code (white-space, formatting, missing semi-colons, etc)
- refactor: A code change that neither fixes a bug or adds a feature
- perf: A code change that improves performance
- test: Adding missing tests
- build: Changes that affect the build system or external dependencies (example scopes: gulp, broccoli, npm)
- ci: Changes to our CI configuration files and scripts (example scopes: Travis, Circle, BrowserStack, SauceLabs)
- chore: Changes to the build process or auxiliary tools and libraries such as documentation generation
- revert: Reverts a previous commit