Skip to main content

MOSIP Claim 169 QR Code decoder library

Project description

claim169

Alpha Software: This library is under active development. APIs may change without notice. Not recommended for production use without thorough testing.

PyPI Python License: MIT

A Python library for encoding and decoding MOSIP Claim 169 QR codes. Built on Rust for performance and security.

Installation

pip install claim169

Overview

MOSIP Claim 169 defines a standard for encoding identity data in QR codes using:

  • CBOR encoding with numeric keys for compactness
  • CWT (CBOR Web Token) for standard claims
  • COSE_Sign1 for digital signatures
  • COSE_Encrypt0 for optional encryption
  • zlib compression + Base45 encoding for QR-friendly output

Quick Start

import claim169

# Decode a QR code (recommended: with signature verification)
qr_text = "6BF5YZB2..."  # Base45-encoded QR content
result = claim169.decode(qr_text, verify_with_ed25519=public_key_bytes)

# Access identity data
print(f"ID: {result.claim169.id}")
print(f"Name: {result.claim169.full_name}")
print(f"DOB: {result.claim169.date_of_birth}")

# Access CWT metadata
print(f"Issuer: {result.cwt_meta.issuer}")
print(f"Expires: {result.cwt_meta.expires_at}")

Encoding

Create Claim 169 QR code data with various signing and encryption options. In production, keys are typically provisioned and managed externally (HSM/KMS or secure key management). The examples below assume you already have key bytes.

from claim169 import Claim169Input, CwtMetaInput, encode_with_ed25519, encode_signed_encrypted

# Create identity data
claim = Claim169Input(id="123456", full_name="John Doe")
claim.date_of_birth = "1990-01-15"
claim.email = "john@example.com"

# Create CWT metadata
meta = CwtMetaInput(issuer="https://issuer.example.com", expires_at=1800000000)

# Encode with Ed25519 signature (32-byte private key)
qr_data = encode_with_ed25519(claim, meta, private_key_bytes)

# Encode with signature and AES-256 encryption
qr_data = encode_signed_encrypted(claim, meta, sign_key_bytes, encrypt_key_bytes)

Encoding Functions

from claim169 import (
    encode_with_ed25519,           # Ed25519 signed
    encode_with_ecdsa_p256,        # ECDSA P-256 signed
    encode_signed_encrypted,       # Signed + AES-256-GCM encrypted
    encode_signed_encrypted_aes128,# Signed + AES-128-GCM encrypted
    encode_with_signer,            # Custom signer (HSM, cloud KMS, etc.)
    encode_with_signer_and_encryptor,  # Custom signer + encryptor
    encode_unsigned,               # Unsigned (testing only)
    generate_nonce,                # Generate random 12-byte nonce
)

# Ed25519 signed (recommended)
qr_data = encode_with_ed25519(claim, cwt_meta, private_key)  # 32-byte key

# ECDSA P-256 signed
qr_data = encode_with_ecdsa_p256(claim, cwt_meta, private_key)  # 32-byte key

# Signed and encrypted (AES-256-GCM)
qr_data = encode_signed_encrypted(claim, cwt_meta, sign_key, encrypt_key)

# Signed and encrypted (AES-128-GCM)
qr_data = encode_signed_encrypted_aes128(claim, cwt_meta, sign_key, encrypt_key)

# Unsigned (for testing only - not recommended for production)
qr_data = encode_unsigned(claim, cwt_meta)

# Generate a random 12-byte nonce for encryption
nonce = generate_nonce()

Custom Signer (HSM/Cloud KMS)

For integrating with external crypto providers like HSMs, cloud KMS (AWS KMS, Google Cloud KMS, Azure Key Vault), smart cards, TPMs, or remote signing services:

from claim169 import encode_with_signer, encode_with_signer_and_encryptor

def my_signer(algorithm: str, key_id: bytes | None, data: bytes) -> bytes:
    """Custom signer callback.

    Args:
        algorithm: COSE algorithm name ("EdDSA" or "ES256")
        key_id: Optional key identifier
        data: The data to sign (COSE Sig_structure)

    Returns:
        Signature bytes (64 bytes for EdDSA, 64 bytes for ES256)
    """
    return my_hsm.sign(key_id, data)

# Sign with custom signer
qr_data = encode_with_signer(claim, meta, my_signer, "EdDSA")

# Sign with custom signer and key_id
qr_data = encode_with_signer(claim, meta, my_signer, "EdDSA", key_id=b"my-key-123")

# Sign with custom signer (ES256)
qr_data = encode_with_signer(claim, meta, my_signer, "ES256")

Custom Encryptor (HSM/Cloud KMS)

def my_encryptor(algorithm: str, key_id: bytes | None, nonce: bytes, aad: bytes, plaintext: bytes) -> bytes:
    """Custom encryptor callback.

    Args:
        algorithm: COSE algorithm name ("A256GCM" or "A128GCM")
        key_id: Optional key identifier
        nonce: 12-byte IV for AES-GCM
        aad: Additional authenticated data
        plaintext: Data to encrypt

    Returns:
        Ciphertext with authentication tag appended
    """
    return my_hsm.encrypt(key_id, nonce, aad, plaintext)

# Sign with custom signer and encrypt with custom encryptor
qr_data = encode_with_signer_and_encryptor(
    claim, meta,
    my_signer, "EdDSA",
    my_encryptor, "A256GCM"
)

Signature Verification

Ed25519 Verification (Recommended)

# Decode with Ed25519 signature verification
public_key = bytes.fromhex("d75a980182b10ab7...")  # 32 bytes
result = claim169.decode_with_ed25519(qr_text, public_key)

if result.is_verified():
    print("Signature is valid!")

ECDSA P-256 Verification

# Decode with ECDSA P-256 signature verification
public_key = bytes.fromhex("04...")  # SEC1-encoded (33 or 65 bytes)
result = claim169.decode_with_ecdsa_p256(qr_text, public_key)

Custom Verifier (HSM/Cloud KMS)

For integrating with external crypto providers like HSMs, cloud KMS (AWS KMS, Google Cloud KMS, Azure Key Vault), smart cards, or TPMs:

def my_verifier(algorithm: str, key_id: bytes | None, data: bytes, signature: bytes):
    """Custom verifier callback.

    Args:
        algorithm: COSE algorithm name ("EdDSA" or "ES256")
        key_id: Optional key identifier from COSE header
        data: The signed data (COSE Sig_structure)
        signature: The signature bytes

    Raises:
        Exception: If verification fails
    """
    # Delegate to your crypto provider
    my_hsm.verify(key_id, data, signature)

result = claim169.decode_with_verifier(qr_text, my_verifier)

Encrypted Payloads

AES-GCM Decryption

# Decrypt with AES-256-GCM key
aes_key = bytes.fromhex("000102030405...")  # 32 bytes for AES-256
result = claim169.decode_encrypted_aes(qr_text, aes_key, allow_unverified=True)  # testing only

With Nested Signature Verification

def verify_callback(algorithm, key_id, data, signature):
    public_key.verify(signature, data)

result = claim169.decode_encrypted_aes(
    qr_text,
    aes_key,
    verifier=verify_callback
)

Custom Decryptor (HSM/Cloud KMS)

def my_decryptor(algorithm: str, key_id: bytes | None, nonce: bytes, aad: bytes, ciphertext: bytes) -> bytes:
    """Custom decryptor callback.

    Args:
        algorithm: COSE algorithm name ("A256GCM" or "A128GCM")
        key_id: Optional key identifier from COSE header
        nonce: 12-byte IV from COSE header
        aad: Additional authenticated data (COSE Enc_structure)
        ciphertext: The encrypted data with auth tag

    Returns:
        Decrypted plaintext bytes
    """
    return my_hsm.decrypt(key_id, nonce, aad, ciphertext)

# Provide a verifier for the inner COSE_Sign1 (recommended)
result = claim169.decode_with_decryptor(qr_text, my_decryptor, verifier=my_verifier)

Decode Options

# Skip biometric data for faster parsing
result = claim169.decode(
    qr_text,
    verify_with_ed25519=public_key_bytes,
    skip_biometrics=True,
)

# Limit decompressed size (default: 64KB)
result = claim169.decode(
    qr_text,
    verify_with_ed25519=public_key_bytes,
    max_decompressed_bytes=32768,
)

Data Model

DecodeResult

result.claim169           # Claim169 - Identity data
result.cwt_meta           # CwtMeta - Token metadata
result.verification_status  # "verified", "skipped", or "failed"

# Helper methods
result.is_verified()      # True if signature was verified

Claim169Input

Input class for encoding identity data into QR codes.

from claim169 import Claim169Input

claim = Claim169Input(id="123456", full_name="John Doe")

# Set optional fields
claim.first_name = "John"
claim.last_name = "Doe"
claim.date_of_birth = "1990-01-15"
claim.gender = 1  # 1=Male, 2=Female, 3=Other
claim.email = "john@example.com"
claim.phone = "+1234567890"
claim.address = "123 Main St"
claim.nationality = "US"
claim.marital_status = 1

CwtMetaInput

Input class for encoding CWT (CBOR Web Token) metadata.

from claim169 import CwtMetaInput

meta = CwtMetaInput(issuer="https://issuer.example.com", expires_at=1800000000)

# Set optional fields
meta.subject = "user-123"
meta.not_before = 1700000000
meta.issued_at = 1700000000

Claim169

claim = result.claim169

# Demographics
claim.id                  # Unique identifier
claim.full_name           # Full name
claim.first_name          # First name
claim.middle_name         # Middle name
claim.last_name           # Last name
claim.date_of_birth       # ISO 8601 format
claim.gender              # 1=Male, 2=Female, 3=Other
claim.address             # Address
claim.email               # Email address
claim.phone               # Phone number
claim.nationality         # Nationality code
claim.marital_status      # Marital status code

# Biometrics (when present)
claim.face                # List of face biometrics
claim.right_thumb         # Right thumb fingerprint
# ... (all finger/iris/palm biometrics)

# Helper methods
claim.has_biometrics()    # True if any biometric data present
claim.to_dict()           # Convert to dictionary

CwtMeta

meta = result.cwt_meta

meta.issuer               # Token issuer
meta.subject              # Token subject
meta.expires_at           # Expiration timestamp (Unix seconds)
meta.not_before           # Not-before timestamp
meta.issued_at            # Issued-at timestamp

# Helper methods
meta.is_valid_now()       # True if token is currently valid
meta.is_expired()         # True if token has expired

Biometric

bio = claim.face[0]

bio.data                  # Raw biometric data bytes
bio.format                # Biometric format code
bio.sub_format            # Sub-format code (optional)
bio.issuer                # Issuer identifier (optional)

Exception Types

from claim169 import (
    Claim169Exception,       # Base exception
    Base45DecodeError,       # Invalid Base45 encoding
    DecompressError,         # zlib decompression failed
    CoseParseError,          # Invalid COSE structure
    CwtParseError,           # Invalid CWT structure
    Claim169NotFoundError,   # Missing claim 169
    SignatureError,          # Signature verification failed
    DecryptionError,         # Decryption failed
)

Development

Building from Source

# Install maturin
pip install maturin

# Build and install in development mode
cd core/claim169-python
maturin develop

Running Tests

cd core/claim169-python
uv run pytest tests/ -v

License

MIT License - See LICENSE file for details.

Project details


Download files

Download the file for your platform. If you're not sure which to choose, learn more about installing packages.

Source Distribution

claim169-0.2.0a0.tar.gz (165.6 kB view details)

Uploaded Source

Built Distributions

If you're not sure about the file name format, learn more about wheel file names.

claim169-0.2.0a0-cp311-cp311-win_amd64.whl (590.0 kB view details)

Uploaded CPython 3.11Windows x86-64

claim169-0.2.0a0-cp311-cp311-macosx_11_0_arm64.whl (684.0 kB view details)

Uploaded CPython 3.11macOS 11.0+ ARM64

claim169-0.2.0a0-cp38-cp38-manylinux_2_17_x86_64.manylinux2014_x86_64.whl (786.3 kB view details)

Uploaded CPython 3.8manylinux: glibc 2.17+ x86-64

File details

Details for the file claim169-0.2.0a0.tar.gz.

File metadata

  • Download URL: claim169-0.2.0a0.tar.gz
  • Upload date:
  • Size: 165.6 kB
  • Tags: Source
  • Uploaded using Trusted Publishing? Yes
  • Uploaded via: twine/6.1.0 CPython/3.13.7

File hashes

Hashes for claim169-0.2.0a0.tar.gz
Algorithm Hash digest
SHA256 309b1f6f1c534fc5207f7ec6362b85335ae5dfea53ec022fed9a61840b15b275
MD5 47180d4ac14e8213da4c72571e0cdb8a
BLAKE2b-256 6765d354658ae3c59e126f0caf0223b2a3a28c2f6af6979d3a0f057a4c9f3152

See more details on using hashes here.

Provenance

The following attestation bundles were made for claim169-0.2.0a0.tar.gz:

Publisher: publish-release.yml on jeremi/claim-169

Attestations: Values shown here reflect the state when the release was signed and may no longer be current.

File details

Details for the file claim169-0.2.0a0-cp311-cp311-win_amd64.whl.

File metadata

  • Download URL: claim169-0.2.0a0-cp311-cp311-win_amd64.whl
  • Upload date:
  • Size: 590.0 kB
  • Tags: CPython 3.11, Windows x86-64
  • Uploaded using Trusted Publishing? Yes
  • Uploaded via: twine/6.1.0 CPython/3.13.7

File hashes

Hashes for claim169-0.2.0a0-cp311-cp311-win_amd64.whl
Algorithm Hash digest
SHA256 b8c5b4bb8a8596c17090ba358aeac6277164212c95384bf00002bdf58215f03f
MD5 0f833249c01f7343f4d2ec58519a6f93
BLAKE2b-256 599aebc91bd530075764cc87dfd4a7eca941073580e368b09c74a1c57618ef28

See more details on using hashes here.

Provenance

The following attestation bundles were made for claim169-0.2.0a0-cp311-cp311-win_amd64.whl:

Publisher: publish-release.yml on jeremi/claim-169

Attestations: Values shown here reflect the state when the release was signed and may no longer be current.

File details

Details for the file claim169-0.2.0a0-cp311-cp311-macosx_11_0_arm64.whl.

File metadata

File hashes

Hashes for claim169-0.2.0a0-cp311-cp311-macosx_11_0_arm64.whl
Algorithm Hash digest
SHA256 004f1c3b9274bffe7e1be1f02d59db3d64af1c86732d3a7b15346f5c3419e3ba
MD5 5ab3b0f1321d4f5a6aa6aa8d7a2c3b40
BLAKE2b-256 bca26bde17defb78ec25b7361ba6df050a9c2712fe707c1a89c608dd173265e3

See more details on using hashes here.

Provenance

The following attestation bundles were made for claim169-0.2.0a0-cp311-cp311-macosx_11_0_arm64.whl:

Publisher: publish-release.yml on jeremi/claim-169

Attestations: Values shown here reflect the state when the release was signed and may no longer be current.

File details

Details for the file claim169-0.2.0a0-cp38-cp38-manylinux_2_17_x86_64.manylinux2014_x86_64.whl.

File metadata

File hashes

Hashes for claim169-0.2.0a0-cp38-cp38-manylinux_2_17_x86_64.manylinux2014_x86_64.whl
Algorithm Hash digest
SHA256 1494ea660a09ca8954bcddcf411d54bd44f994de96715feca3537a7c5122af99
MD5 5d90479271e3e1cef891e4c4bc62003e
BLAKE2b-256 02163cd4ca61bbcd7734fcb6b88838e71fce1d73b7d09eecd2426abc2deb5911

See more details on using hashes here.

Provenance

The following attestation bundles were made for claim169-0.2.0a0-cp38-cp38-manylinux_2_17_x86_64.manylinux2014_x86_64.whl:

Publisher: publish-release.yml on jeremi/claim-169

Attestations: Values shown here reflect the state when the release was signed and may no longer be current.

Supported by

AWS Cloud computing and Security Sponsor Datadog Monitoring Depot Continuous Integration Fastly CDN Google Download Analytics Pingdom Monitoring Sentry Error logging StatusPage Status page