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Store and access your passwords safely.

Project description

Installing and Using Python Keyring Lib

What is Python keyring lib?

The Python keyring lib provides a easy way to access the system keyring service from python. It can be used in any application that needs safe password storage.

The keyring services supported by the Python keyring lib:

  • OSXKeychain: supports the Keychain service in Mac OS X.

  • KDEKWallet: supports the KDE’s Kwallet service.

  • GnomeKeyring: for Gnome 2 environment.

  • SecretServiceKeyring: for newer GNOME and KDE environments.

Besides these native password storing services provided by operating systems. Python keyring lib also provides following build-in keyrings.

  • Win32CryptoKeyring: for Windows 2k+.

  • CryptedFileKeyring: a command line interface keyring base on PyCrypto.

  • UncryptedFileKeyring: a keyring which leaves passwords directly in file.

Installation Instructions

easy_install or pip

Run easy_install or pip:

$ easy_install keyring
$ pip install keyring

Source installation

Download the source tarball, and uncompress it, then run the install command:

$ wget http://pypi.python.org/packages/source/k/keyring/keyring-0.3.tar.gz
$ tar -xzvf keyring-0.3.tar.gz
$ cd keyring-0.3
$ python setup.py install

Configure your keyring lib

The python keyring lib contains implementations for several backends, including OSX Keychain, Gnome Keyring, KDE Kwallet and etc. The lib will automatically choose the keyring that is most suitable for your current environment. You can also specify the keyring you like to be used in the config file or by calling the set_keyring() function.

Customize your keyring by config file

This section is about how to change your option in the config file.

Config file path

The configuration of the lib is stored in a file named “keyringrc.cfg”. The file can be stored in either of following two paths.

  1. The working directory of the python

  2. The home directory for current user

The lib will first look for the config file in the working directory. If no config file exists or the config file is not write properly, the lib will look up in the home folder.

Config file content

To specify a keyring backend, you need tell the lib the module name of the backend, such as keyring.backend.OSXKeychain. If the backend is not shipped with the lib, in another word, is made by you own, you need also tell the lib the path of your own backend module. The module name should be written after the default-keyring option, while the module path belongs the keyring-path option.

Here’s a sample config file(The full demo can be accessed in the demo/keyring.py):

[backend]
default-keyring=simplekeyring.SimpleKeyring
keyring-path=/home/kang/pyworkspace/python-keyring-lib/demo/

Write your own keyring backend

The interface for the backend is defined by keyring.backend.KeyringBackend. By extending this base class and implementing the three functions supported(), get_password() and set_password(), you can easily create your own backend for keyring lib.

The usage of the three functions:

  • supported(self) : Return if this backend is supported in current environment. The returned value can be 0, 1 , or -1. 0 means suitable; 1 means recommended and -1 means this backend is not available for current environment.

  • get_password(self, service, username) : Return the stored password for the username of the service.

  • set_password(self, service, username, password) : Store the password for username of the service in the backend.

For an instance, there’s the source code of the demo mentioned above. It’s a simple keyring which stores the password directly in memory.

"""
simplekeyring.py

A simple keyring class for the keyring_demo.py

Created by Kang Zhang on 2009-07-12
"""
from keyring.backend import KeyringBackend

class SimpleKeyring(KeyringBackend):
    """Simple Keyring is a keyring which can store only one
    password in memory.
    """
    def __init__(self):
        self.password = ''

    def supported(self):
        return 0

    def get_password(self, service, username):
        return self.password

    def set_password(self, service, username, password):
        self.password = password
        return 0

Set the keyring in runtime

Besides setting the backend through the config file, you can also set the backend to use by calling the api set_keyring(). The backend you passed in will be used to store the password in your application.

Here’s a code snippet from the keyringdemo.py. It shows the usage of set_keyring()

# define a new keyring class which extends the KeyringBackend
import keyring.backend
class TestKeyring(keyring.backend.KeyringBackend):
    """A test keyring which always outputs same password
    """
    def supported(self): return 0
    def set_password(self, servicename, username, password): return 0
    def get_password(self, servicename, username):
        return "password from TestKeyring"

# set the keyring for keyring lib
import keyring
keyring.set_keyring(TestKeyring())

# invoke the keyring lib
try:
    keyring.set_password("demo-service", "tarek", "passexample")
    print "password stored sucessfully"
except keyring.backend.PasswordError:
    print "failed to store password"
print "password", keyring.get_password("demo-service", "tarek")

Integrate the keyring lib with your application

API interface

The keyring lib has two functions:

  • get_password(service, username) : Returns the password stored in keyring. If the password does not exist, it will return None.

  • set_password(service, username, password) : Store the password in the keyring.

Example

Here’s an example of using keyring for application authorization. It can be found in the demo folder of the repository. Note that the faked auth function only returns true when the password equals to the username.

"""
auth_demo.py

Created by Kang Zhang 2009-08-14
"""

import keyring
import getpass
import ConfigParser

def auth(username, password):
    """A faked authorization function.
    """
    return username == password

def main():
    """This scrip demos how to use keyring facilite the authorization. The
    username is stored in a config named 'auth_demo.cfg'
    """
    # config file init
    config_file = 'auth_demo.cfg'
    config = ConfigParser.SafeConfigParser({
                'username':'',
                })
    config.read(config_file)
    if not config.has_section('auth_demo_login'):
        config.add_section('auth_demo_login')

    username = config.get('auth_demo_login','username')
    password = None
    if username != '':
        password = keyring.get_password('auth_demo_login', username)

    if password == None or not auth(username, password):

        while 1:
            username = raw_input("Username:\n")
            password = getpass.getpass("Password:\n")

            if auth(username, password):
                break
            else:
                print "Authorization failed."

        # store the username
        config.set('auth_demo_login', 'username', username)
        config.write(open(config_file, 'w'))

        # store the password
        keyring.set_password('auth_demo_login', username, password)

    # the stuff that needs authorization here
    print "Authorization successful."

if __name__ == "__main__":
    main()

Get involved

Python keyring lib is an open community project and highly welcomes new contributors.

Running Tests

In order to be able to run the tests of the project you first have to bootstrap it. In order to do this you can do the following:

  1. python bootstrap # generate the buildbot

  2. bin/buildbot # run the builbot it self.

  3. bin/test # execute the test runner.

For more information about the options that the script provides do execute

> python bin/test –help

If this is the first time you are using a buildbot you can get the bootstrap script the following way:

> svn cat svn://svn.zope.org/repos/main/zc.buildout/trunk/bootstrap/bootstrap.py > /tmp/bootstrap

And from that point you can use the following as step 1:

> python /tmp/bootstrap

Credits

The project was based on Tarek Ziade’s idea in this post. Kang Zhang initially carried it out as a Google Summer of Code project, and Tarek mentored Kang on this project.

See CONTRIBUTORS.txt for a complete list of contributors.

CHANGES

0.9.1

  • Fix for issue where SecretServiceBackend.set_password would raise a UnicodeError on Python 3 or when a unicode password was provided on Python 2.

  • CryptedFileKeyring now uses PBKDF2 to derive the key from the user’s password and a random hash. The IV is chosen randomly as well. All the stored passwords are encrypted at once. Any keyrings using the old format will be automatically converted to the new format (but will no longer be compatible with 0.9 and earlier). The user’s password is no longer limited to 32 characters. PyCrypto 2.5 or greater is now required for this keyring.

0.9

  • Add support for GTK 3 and secret service D-Bus. Fixes #52.

  • Issue #60 - Use correct method for decoding.

0.8.1

  • Fix regression in keyring lib on Windows XP where the LOCALAPPDATA environment variable is not present.

0.8

  • Mac OS X keyring backend now uses subprocess calls to the security command instead of calling the API, which with the latest updates, no longer allows Python to invoke from a virtualenv. Fixes issue #13.

  • When using file-based storage, the keyring files are no longer stored in the user’s home directory, but are instead stored in platform-friendly locations (%localappdata%Python Keyring on Windows and according to the freedesktop.org Base Dir Specification ($XDG_DATA_HOME/python_keyring or $HOME/.local/share/python_keyring) on other operating systems). This fixes #21.

Backward Compatibility Notice

Due to the new storage location for file-based keyrings, keyring 0.8 supports backward compatibility by automatically moving the password files to the updated location. In general, users can upgrade to 0.8 and continue to operate normally. Any applications that customize the storage location or make assumptions about the storage location will need to take this change into consideration. Additionally, after upgrading to 0.8, it is not possible to downgrade to 0.7 without manually moving configuration files. In 1.0, the backward compatibilty will be removed.

0.7.1

  • Removed non-ASCII characters from README and CHANGES docs (required by distutils if we’re to include them in the long_description). Fixes #55.

0.7

  • Python 3 is now supported. All tests now pass under Python 3.2 on Windows and Linux (although Linux backend support is limited). Fixes #28.

  • Extension modules on Mac and Windows replaced by pure-Python ctypes implementations. Thanks to Jerome Laheurte.

  • WinVaultKeyring now supports multiple passwords for the same service. Fixes #47.

  • Most of the tests don’t require user interaction anymore.

  • Entries stored in Gnome Keyring appears now with a meaningful name if you try to browser your keyring (for ex. with Seahorse)

  • Tests from Gnome Keyring no longer pollute the user own keyring.

  • keyring.util.escape now accepts only unicode strings. Don’t try to encode strings passed to it.

0.6.2

  • fix compiling on OSX with XCode 4.0

0.6.1

0.6

  • Added keyring.http for facilitating HTTP Auth using keyring.

  • Add a utility to access the keyring from the command line.

0.5.1

0.5

  • Now using the existing Gnome and KDE python libs instead of custom C++ code.

  • Using the getpass module instead of custom code

0.4

  • Fixed the setup script (some subdirs were not included in the release.)

0.3

  • Fixed keyring.core when the user doesn’t have a cfg, or is not properly configured.

  • Fixed escaping issues for usernames with non-ascii characters

0.2

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