in category Ecommerce
One of tasks I was working on recently is related to password policies. Of course, everything is configurable in code right now. In this note I want to tell you about some my decisions and how I got to them.
My first idea was creating an interface that any policy will have to satisfy.
type PasswordPolicy interface {
Verify(pass string) error
}
That make sense, doesn’t it? When I was working on specific policy implementation I had a feeling that the type doesn’t have to be an interface. A regular function should be enough. I rewroted it into fuctions then.
type PasswordPolicy func(string) error
What if we need to make them configurable? Nothing simpler, let’s use more functional-style code.
func MinLength(n int) PasswordPolicy {
return func(password string) error {
if len(password) < n {
return ErrPasswordTooShort
}
return nil
}
}
Another thing that I changed a few times are errors. At the very beginning, I had only one error declared
var ErrPasswordTooWeak = errors.New("passowrd is too weak")
This error code worked OK for very long but when I added a check for maximal password length the error didn’t fit. password is too weak
sounds very generic too. The user wouldn’t know why the code is considered weak. I started adding more specific errors vor each function as shown below.
var ErrPasswordTooShort = errors.New("password is too short")
var ErrPasswordLeaked = errors.New("password leaked")
var ErrPasswordTooLong = errors.New("password too long")
var ErrPasswordDoesNotContainLowercase = errors.New("password does not contain lowercase letter")
var ErrPasswordDoesNotContainUppercase = errors.New("password does not contain uppercase letter")
var ErrPasswordDoesNotContainNumber = errors.New("password does not contain number")
var ErrPasswordDoesNotContainSpecialChar = errors.New("password does not contain special character")
The good point is that every policy will have a specific error so it will be easy to test it. On the other hand, the number of errors is increasing what doesn’t have a good impact on the readability. After some time, I decided to replace all errors with a custom type.
type PasswordPolicyError string
func (e PasswordPolicyError) Error() string {
return string(e)
}
It implements the error
interface so it can be used as a regular error. In every place where I want to return an error, I just create a new instance of the custom type with a proper error message.
func MinLength(n int) PasswordPolicy {
return func(password string) error {
if len(password) < n {
return PasswordPolicyError("password is too short")
}
return nil
}
}
Probably, I’ll have to extend this type but until now it looks fine for me.
I have plans to add another policy that will restrict using a password that already leaked but I have to postpone the idea until I resolve an issue with access to the API. The haveibeenpwned API is quite expensive. I have plans to write a small service where I’ll download all leaked passwords and expose them as a free API. The database is quite big (about 200 gb) so I have to import it in parts.
Buy me a coffeeTags: #auth #golang