2020-02-21 15:07:24 |
Dan Streetman |
bug |
|
|
added bug |
2020-02-21 15:07:45 |
Dan Streetman |
bug watch added |
|
https://github.com/jaraco/keyring/issues/372 |
|
2020-02-21 15:07:45 |
Dan Streetman |
bug task added |
|
python-keyring |
|
2020-02-21 15:07:58 |
Dan Streetman |
python-keyring (Ubuntu): importance |
Undecided |
Medium |
|
2020-02-21 15:26:36 |
Bug Watch Updater |
python-keyring: status |
Unknown |
New |
|
2020-02-21 15:38:51 |
Dan Streetman |
description |
[impact]
when no backends are available for python-keyring, it will sometimes silently ignore all requests to set or get credentials, and sometimes it will raise RuntimeError for all requests.
[test case]
when there are no backends, there are 2 built-in backends that will be the only ones available, the 'chainer' backend and the 'fail' backend. The 'fail' backend always has priority 0, while the 'chainer' backend has priority 10 if it contains any actual backends, and priority 0 if it is empty. So in the situtation where there are no actual backends, both 'chainer' and 'fail' will have priority 0. Since the 'backends' class stores its backend implementation instances in a python set(), which is unordered, it is non-deterministic which of those backends are used at any given time.
Since the behavior is non-deterministic, simply trying this multiple times may result in each behavior. Rebooting or logout/login can help 'switch' the behavior.
>>> import keyring
>>> [keyring.backend.get_all_keyring()]
the above python code will show the current list of backends, and since they both have the same priority (in this situation) the first in the list will be used. If the list looks like:
[[<keyring.backends.chainer.ChainerBackend object at 0x7f1f7018f3d0>, <keyring.backends.fail.Keyring object at 0x7f1f6fff0820>]]
with 'ChainerBackend' first, all keyring functions will return silently with None, e.g.:
>>> keyring.set_password('test', 'test', 'test')
>>> keyring.get_password('test', 'test')
>>>
with 'fail.Keyring' first, all keyring functions will raise RuntimeError:
>>> import keyring
>>> [keyring.backend.get_all_keyring()]
[[<keyring.backends.fail.Keyring object at 0x7f3b6ade73d0>, <keyring.backends.chainer.ChainerBackend object at 0x7f3b6ac48820>]]
>>> keyring.set_password('test', 'test', 'test')
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "<stdin>", line 1, in <module>
File "/usr/lib/python3/dist-packages/keyring/core.py", line 63, in set_password
_keyring_backend.set_password(service_name, username, password)
File "/usr/lib/python3/dist-packages/keyring/backends/fail.py", line 24, in get_password
raise RuntimeError(msg)
RuntimeError: No recommended backend was available. Install a recommended 3rd party backend package; or, install the keyrings.alt package if you want to use the non-recommended backends. See https://pypi.org/project/keyring for details.
>>> keyring.get_password('test', 'test')
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "<stdin>", line 1, in <module>
File "/usr/lib/python3/dist-packages/keyring/core.py", line 57, in get_password
return _keyring_backend.get_password(service_name, username)
File "/usr/lib/python3/dist-packages/keyring/backends/fail.py", line 24, in get_password
raise RuntimeError(msg)
RuntimeError: No recommended backend was available. Install a recommended 3rd party backend package; or, install the keyrings.alt package if you want to use the non-recommended backends. See https://pypi.org/project/keyring for details.
[regression potential]
TBD as this is still an upstream bug
[scope]
this still affects upstream, as well as all Debian and Ubuntu releases
[other info]
this affects any application that uses the python-launchpadlib library, as that internally uses keyrings. |
[impact]
when no backends are available for python-keyring, it will sometimes silently ignore all requests to set or get credentials, and sometimes it will raise RuntimeError for all requests.
[test case]
when there are no backends, there are 2 built-in backends that will be the only ones available, the 'chainer' backend and the 'fail' backend. The 'fail' backend always has priority 0, while the 'chainer' backend has priority 10 if it contains any actual backends, and priority 0 if it is empty. So in the situtation where there are no actual backends, both 'chainer' and 'fail' will have priority 0. Since the 'backends' class stores its backend implementation instances in a python set(), which is unordered, it is non-deterministic which of those backends are used at any given time.
Since the behavior is non-deterministic, simply trying this multiple times may result in each behavior. Rebooting or logout/login can help 'switch' the behavior.
>>> import keyring
>>> [keyring.backend.get_all_keyring()]
the above python code will show the current list of backends, and since they both have the same priority (in this situation) the first in the list will be used. If the list looks like:
[[<keyring.backends.chainer.ChainerBackend object at 0x7f1f7018f3d0>, <keyring.backends.fail.Keyring object at 0x7f1f6fff0820>]]
with 'ChainerBackend' first, all keyring functions will return silently with None, e.g.:
>>> keyring.set_password('test', 'test', 'test')
>>> keyring.get_password('test', 'test')
>>>
with 'fail.Keyring' first, all keyring functions will raise RuntimeError:
>>> import keyring
>>> [keyring.backend.get_all_keyring()]
[[<keyring.backends.fail.Keyring object at 0x7f3b6ade73d0>, <keyring.backends.chainer.ChainerBackend object at 0x7f3b6ac48820>]]
>>> keyring.set_password('test', 'test', 'test')
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "<stdin>", line 1, in <module>
File "/usr/lib/python3/dist-packages/keyring/core.py", line 63, in set_password
_keyring_backend.set_password(service_name, username, password)
File "/usr/lib/python3/dist-packages/keyring/backends/fail.py", line 24, in get_password
raise RuntimeError(msg)
RuntimeError: No recommended backend was available. Install a recommended 3rd party backend package; or, install the keyrings.alt package if you want to use the non-recommended backends. See https://pypi.org/project/keyring for details.
>>> keyring.get_password('test', 'test')
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "<stdin>", line 1, in <module>
File "/usr/lib/python3/dist-packages/keyring/core.py", line 57, in get_password
return _keyring_backend.get_password(service_name, username)
File "/usr/lib/python3/dist-packages/keyring/backends/fail.py", line 24, in get_password
raise RuntimeError(msg)
RuntimeError: No recommended backend was available. Install a recommended 3rd party backend package; or, install the keyrings.alt package if you want to use the non-recommended backends. See https://pypi.org/project/keyring for details.
[regression potential]
TBD as this is still an upstream bug
[scope]
This affects Eoan and later, including upstream.
This does not affect Bionic or earlier, as they do not have the commit that introduces the bug.
this was introduced upstream by commit 0114733e91f249246c8fec9e659cd7ba2388ea0d which was first included in version 16.1.0.
[other info]
this affects any application that uses the python-launchpadlib library, as that internally uses keyrings. |
|
2020-02-21 15:39:24 |
Dan Streetman |
nominated for series |
|
Ubuntu Eoan |
|
2020-02-21 15:39:24 |
Dan Streetman |
bug task added |
|
python-keyring (Ubuntu Eoan) |
|
2020-02-21 15:39:24 |
Dan Streetman |
nominated for series |
|
Ubuntu Focal |
|
2020-02-21 15:39:24 |
Dan Streetman |
bug task added |
|
python-keyring (Ubuntu Focal) |
|
2020-02-21 15:39:35 |
Dan Streetman |
python-keyring (Ubuntu Eoan): importance |
Undecided |
Medium |
|
2020-02-21 18:36:59 |
Dan Streetman |
bug task added |
|
python-launchpadlib (Ubuntu) |
|
2020-02-21 18:37:10 |
Dan Streetman |
python-launchpadlib (Ubuntu Eoan): importance |
Undecided |
Medium |
|
2020-02-21 18:37:11 |
Dan Streetman |
python-launchpadlib (Ubuntu Focal): importance |
Undecided |
Medium |
|
2020-02-22 17:50:50 |
Dan Streetman |
description |
[impact]
when no backends are available for python-keyring, it will sometimes silently ignore all requests to set or get credentials, and sometimes it will raise RuntimeError for all requests.
[test case]
when there are no backends, there are 2 built-in backends that will be the only ones available, the 'chainer' backend and the 'fail' backend. The 'fail' backend always has priority 0, while the 'chainer' backend has priority 10 if it contains any actual backends, and priority 0 if it is empty. So in the situtation where there are no actual backends, both 'chainer' and 'fail' will have priority 0. Since the 'backends' class stores its backend implementation instances in a python set(), which is unordered, it is non-deterministic which of those backends are used at any given time.
Since the behavior is non-deterministic, simply trying this multiple times may result in each behavior. Rebooting or logout/login can help 'switch' the behavior.
>>> import keyring
>>> [keyring.backend.get_all_keyring()]
the above python code will show the current list of backends, and since they both have the same priority (in this situation) the first in the list will be used. If the list looks like:
[[<keyring.backends.chainer.ChainerBackend object at 0x7f1f7018f3d0>, <keyring.backends.fail.Keyring object at 0x7f1f6fff0820>]]
with 'ChainerBackend' first, all keyring functions will return silently with None, e.g.:
>>> keyring.set_password('test', 'test', 'test')
>>> keyring.get_password('test', 'test')
>>>
with 'fail.Keyring' first, all keyring functions will raise RuntimeError:
>>> import keyring
>>> [keyring.backend.get_all_keyring()]
[[<keyring.backends.fail.Keyring object at 0x7f3b6ade73d0>, <keyring.backends.chainer.ChainerBackend object at 0x7f3b6ac48820>]]
>>> keyring.set_password('test', 'test', 'test')
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "<stdin>", line 1, in <module>
File "/usr/lib/python3/dist-packages/keyring/core.py", line 63, in set_password
_keyring_backend.set_password(service_name, username, password)
File "/usr/lib/python3/dist-packages/keyring/backends/fail.py", line 24, in get_password
raise RuntimeError(msg)
RuntimeError: No recommended backend was available. Install a recommended 3rd party backend package; or, install the keyrings.alt package if you want to use the non-recommended backends. See https://pypi.org/project/keyring for details.
>>> keyring.get_password('test', 'test')
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "<stdin>", line 1, in <module>
File "/usr/lib/python3/dist-packages/keyring/core.py", line 57, in get_password
return _keyring_backend.get_password(service_name, username)
File "/usr/lib/python3/dist-packages/keyring/backends/fail.py", line 24, in get_password
raise RuntimeError(msg)
RuntimeError: No recommended backend was available. Install a recommended 3rd party backend package; or, install the keyrings.alt package if you want to use the non-recommended backends. See https://pypi.org/project/keyring for details.
[regression potential]
TBD as this is still an upstream bug
[scope]
This affects Eoan and later, including upstream.
This does not affect Bionic or earlier, as they do not have the commit that introduces the bug.
this was introduced upstream by commit 0114733e91f249246c8fec9e659cd7ba2388ea0d which was first included in version 16.1.0.
[other info]
this affects any application that uses the python-launchpadlib library, as that internally uses keyrings. |
[impact]
when no backends are available for python-keyring, it will sometimes silently ignore all requests to set or get credentials, and sometimes it will raise RuntimeError for all requests.
[test case]
when there are no backends, there are 2 built-in backends that will be the only ones available, the 'chainer' backend and the 'fail' backend. The 'fail' backend always has priority 0, while the 'chainer' backend has priority 10 if it contains any actual backends, and priority 0 if it is empty. So in the situtation where there are no actual backends, both 'chainer' and 'fail' will have priority 0. Since the 'backends' class stores its backend implementation instances in a python set(), which is unordered, it is non-deterministic which of those backends are used at any given time.
Since the behavior is non-deterministic, simply trying this multiple times may result in each behavior. Rebooting or logout/login can help 'switch' the behavior.
>>> import keyring
>>> [keyring.backend.get_all_keyring()]
the above python code will show the current list of backends, and since they both have the same priority (in this situation) the first in the list will be used. If the list looks like:
[[<keyring.backends.chainer.ChainerBackend object at 0x7f1f7018f3d0>, <keyring.backends.fail.Keyring object at 0x7f1f6fff0820>]]
with 'ChainerBackend' first, all keyring functions will return silently with None, e.g.:
>>> keyring.set_password('test', 'test', 'test')
>>> keyring.get_password('test', 'test')
>>>
with 'fail.Keyring' first, all keyring functions will raise RuntimeError:
>>> import keyring
>>> [keyring.backend.get_all_keyring()]
[[<keyring.backends.fail.Keyring object at 0x7f3b6ade73d0>, <keyring.backends.chainer.ChainerBackend object at 0x7f3b6ac48820>]]
>>> keyring.set_password('test', 'test', 'test')
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "<stdin>", line 1, in <module>
File "/usr/lib/python3/dist-packages/keyring/core.py", line 63, in set_password
_keyring_backend.set_password(service_name, username, password)
File "/usr/lib/python3/dist-packages/keyring/backends/fail.py", line 24, in get_password
raise RuntimeError(msg)
RuntimeError: No recommended backend was available. Install a recommended 3rd party backend package; or, install the keyrings.alt package if you want to use the non-recommended backends. See https://pypi.org/project/keyring for details.
>>> keyring.get_password('test', 'test')
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "<stdin>", line 1, in <module>
File "/usr/lib/python3/dist-packages/keyring/core.py", line 57, in get_password
return _keyring_backend.get_password(service_name, username)
File "/usr/lib/python3/dist-packages/keyring/backends/fail.py", line 24, in get_password
raise RuntimeError(msg)
RuntimeError: No recommended backend was available. Install a recommended 3rd party backend package; or, install the keyrings.alt package if you want to use the non-recommended backends. See https://pypi.org/project/keyring for details.
[regression potential]
TBD as this is still an upstream bug
[scope]
This affects Eoan and later, including upstream.
This does not affect Bionic or earlier, as they do not have the commit that introduces the bug.
this was introduced upstream by commit 0114733e91f249246c8fec9e659cd7ba2388ea0d which was first included in version 16.1.0.
[other info]
this affects any application that uses the python-launchpadlib library, as that internally uses keyrings.
Opened upstream PR to at least make the behavior deterministic:
https://github.com/jaraco/keyring/pull/424
Also adds new 'NoKeyringError' so callers can catch that specific error instead of raising generic RuntimeError. |
|
2020-02-22 17:52:29 |
Dan Streetman |
description |
[impact]
when no backends are available for python-keyring, it will sometimes silently ignore all requests to set or get credentials, and sometimes it will raise RuntimeError for all requests.
[test case]
when there are no backends, there are 2 built-in backends that will be the only ones available, the 'chainer' backend and the 'fail' backend. The 'fail' backend always has priority 0, while the 'chainer' backend has priority 10 if it contains any actual backends, and priority 0 if it is empty. So in the situtation where there are no actual backends, both 'chainer' and 'fail' will have priority 0. Since the 'backends' class stores its backend implementation instances in a python set(), which is unordered, it is non-deterministic which of those backends are used at any given time.
Since the behavior is non-deterministic, simply trying this multiple times may result in each behavior. Rebooting or logout/login can help 'switch' the behavior.
>>> import keyring
>>> [keyring.backend.get_all_keyring()]
the above python code will show the current list of backends, and since they both have the same priority (in this situation) the first in the list will be used. If the list looks like:
[[<keyring.backends.chainer.ChainerBackend object at 0x7f1f7018f3d0>, <keyring.backends.fail.Keyring object at 0x7f1f6fff0820>]]
with 'ChainerBackend' first, all keyring functions will return silently with None, e.g.:
>>> keyring.set_password('test', 'test', 'test')
>>> keyring.get_password('test', 'test')
>>>
with 'fail.Keyring' first, all keyring functions will raise RuntimeError:
>>> import keyring
>>> [keyring.backend.get_all_keyring()]
[[<keyring.backends.fail.Keyring object at 0x7f3b6ade73d0>, <keyring.backends.chainer.ChainerBackend object at 0x7f3b6ac48820>]]
>>> keyring.set_password('test', 'test', 'test')
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "<stdin>", line 1, in <module>
File "/usr/lib/python3/dist-packages/keyring/core.py", line 63, in set_password
_keyring_backend.set_password(service_name, username, password)
File "/usr/lib/python3/dist-packages/keyring/backends/fail.py", line 24, in get_password
raise RuntimeError(msg)
RuntimeError: No recommended backend was available. Install a recommended 3rd party backend package; or, install the keyrings.alt package if you want to use the non-recommended backends. See https://pypi.org/project/keyring for details.
>>> keyring.get_password('test', 'test')
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "<stdin>", line 1, in <module>
File "/usr/lib/python3/dist-packages/keyring/core.py", line 57, in get_password
return _keyring_backend.get_password(service_name, username)
File "/usr/lib/python3/dist-packages/keyring/backends/fail.py", line 24, in get_password
raise RuntimeError(msg)
RuntimeError: No recommended backend was available. Install a recommended 3rd party backend package; or, install the keyrings.alt package if you want to use the non-recommended backends. See https://pypi.org/project/keyring for details.
[regression potential]
TBD as this is still an upstream bug
[scope]
This affects Eoan and later, including upstream.
This does not affect Bionic or earlier, as they do not have the commit that introduces the bug.
this was introduced upstream by commit 0114733e91f249246c8fec9e659cd7ba2388ea0d which was first included in version 16.1.0.
[other info]
this affects any application that uses the python-launchpadlib library, as that internally uses keyrings.
Opened upstream PR to at least make the behavior deterministic:
https://github.com/jaraco/keyring/pull/424
Also adds new 'NoKeyringError' so callers can catch that specific error instead of raising generic RuntimeError. |
[impact]
when no backends are available for python-keyring, it will sometimes silently ignore all requests to set or get credentials, and sometimes it will raise RuntimeError for all requests.
[test case]
when there are no backends, there are 2 built-in backends that will be the only ones available, the 'chainer' backend and the 'fail' backend. The 'fail' backend always has priority 0, while the 'chainer' backend has priority 10 if it contains any actual backends, and priority 0 if it is empty. So in the situtation where there are no actual backends, both 'chainer' and 'fail' will have priority 0. Since the 'backends' class stores its backend implementation instances in a python set(), which is unordered, it is non-deterministic which of those backends are used at any given time.
Since the behavior is non-deterministic, simply trying this multiple times may result in each behavior. Rebooting or logout/login can help 'switch' the behavior, although simply re-running the test multiple times should be enough to eventually test both backends.
>>> import keyring
>>> [keyring.backend.get_all_keyring()]
the above python code will show the current list of backends, and since they both have the same priority (in this situation) the first in the list will be used. If the list looks like:
[[<keyring.backends.chainer.ChainerBackend object at 0x7f1f7018f3d0>, <keyring.backends.fail.Keyring object at 0x7f1f6fff0820>]]
with 'ChainerBackend' first, all keyring functions will return silently with None, e.g.:
>>> keyring.set_password('test', 'test', 'test')
>>> keyring.get_password('test', 'test')
>>>
with 'fail.Keyring' first, all keyring functions will raise RuntimeError:
>>> import keyring
>>> [keyring.backend.get_all_keyring()]
[[<keyring.backends.fail.Keyring object at 0x7f3b6ade73d0>, <keyring.backends.chainer.ChainerBackend object at 0x7f3b6ac48820>]]
>>> keyring.set_password('test', 'test', 'test')
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "<stdin>", line 1, in <module>
File "/usr/lib/python3/dist-packages/keyring/core.py", line 63, in set_password
_keyring_backend.set_password(service_name, username, password)
File "/usr/lib/python3/dist-packages/keyring/backends/fail.py", line 24, in get_password
raise RuntimeError(msg)
RuntimeError: No recommended backend was available. Install a recommended 3rd party backend package; or, install the keyrings.alt package if you want to use the non-recommended backends. See https://pypi.org/project/keyring for details.
>>> keyring.get_password('test', 'test')
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "<stdin>", line 1, in <module>
File "/usr/lib/python3/dist-packages/keyring/core.py", line 57, in get_password
return _keyring_backend.get_password(service_name, username)
File "/usr/lib/python3/dist-packages/keyring/backends/fail.py", line 24, in get_password
raise RuntimeError(msg)
RuntimeError: No recommended backend was available. Install a recommended 3rd party backend package; or, install the keyrings.alt package if you want to use the non-recommended backends. See https://pypi.org/project/keyring for details.
[regression potential]
TBD as this is still an upstream bug
[scope]
This affects Eoan and later, including upstream.
This does not affect Bionic or earlier, as they do not have the commit that introduces the bug.
this was introduced upstream by commit 0114733e91f249246c8fec9e659cd7ba2388ea0d which was first included in version 16.1.0.
[other info]
this affects any application that uses the python-launchpadlib library, as that internally uses keyrings.
Opened upstream PR to at least make the behavior deterministic:
https://github.com/jaraco/keyring/pull/424
Also adds new 'NoKeyringError' so callers can catch that specific error instead of raising generic RuntimeError. |
|
2020-02-27 12:21:21 |
Launchpad Janitor |
python-keyring (Ubuntu): status |
New |
Confirmed |
|
2020-02-27 12:21:21 |
Launchpad Janitor |
python-launchpadlib (Ubuntu): status |
New |
Confirmed |
|
2020-02-27 12:21:21 |
Launchpad Janitor |
python-keyring (Ubuntu Eoan): status |
New |
Confirmed |
|
2020-02-27 12:21:21 |
Launchpad Janitor |
python-launchpadlib (Ubuntu Eoan): status |
New |
Confirmed |
|
2020-02-27 12:28:48 |
Dan Streetman |
python-keyring (Ubuntu Focal): assignee |
|
Dan Streetman (ddstreet) |
|
2020-02-27 12:28:49 |
Dan Streetman |
python-keyring (Ubuntu Eoan): assignee |
|
Dan Streetman (ddstreet) |
|
2020-02-27 12:28:51 |
Dan Streetman |
python-launchpadlib (Ubuntu Eoan): assignee |
|
Dan Streetman (ddstreet) |
|
2020-02-27 12:28:52 |
Dan Streetman |
python-launchpadlib (Ubuntu Focal): assignee |
|
Dan Streetman (ddstreet) |
|
2020-02-27 12:28:55 |
Dan Streetman |
python-launchpadlib (Ubuntu Focal): status |
Confirmed |
In Progress |
|
2020-02-27 12:28:56 |
Dan Streetman |
python-launchpadlib (Ubuntu Eoan): status |
Confirmed |
In Progress |
|
2020-02-27 12:28:58 |
Dan Streetman |
python-keyring (Ubuntu Focal): status |
Confirmed |
In Progress |
|
2020-02-27 12:29:00 |
Dan Streetman |
python-keyring (Ubuntu Eoan): status |
Confirmed |
In Progress |
|
2020-03-14 11:54:27 |
Dan Streetman |
description |
[impact]
when no backends are available for python-keyring, it will sometimes silently ignore all requests to set or get credentials, and sometimes it will raise RuntimeError for all requests.
[test case]
when there are no backends, there are 2 built-in backends that will be the only ones available, the 'chainer' backend and the 'fail' backend. The 'fail' backend always has priority 0, while the 'chainer' backend has priority 10 if it contains any actual backends, and priority 0 if it is empty. So in the situtation where there are no actual backends, both 'chainer' and 'fail' will have priority 0. Since the 'backends' class stores its backend implementation instances in a python set(), which is unordered, it is non-deterministic which of those backends are used at any given time.
Since the behavior is non-deterministic, simply trying this multiple times may result in each behavior. Rebooting or logout/login can help 'switch' the behavior, although simply re-running the test multiple times should be enough to eventually test both backends.
>>> import keyring
>>> [keyring.backend.get_all_keyring()]
the above python code will show the current list of backends, and since they both have the same priority (in this situation) the first in the list will be used. If the list looks like:
[[<keyring.backends.chainer.ChainerBackend object at 0x7f1f7018f3d0>, <keyring.backends.fail.Keyring object at 0x7f1f6fff0820>]]
with 'ChainerBackend' first, all keyring functions will return silently with None, e.g.:
>>> keyring.set_password('test', 'test', 'test')
>>> keyring.get_password('test', 'test')
>>>
with 'fail.Keyring' first, all keyring functions will raise RuntimeError:
>>> import keyring
>>> [keyring.backend.get_all_keyring()]
[[<keyring.backends.fail.Keyring object at 0x7f3b6ade73d0>, <keyring.backends.chainer.ChainerBackend object at 0x7f3b6ac48820>]]
>>> keyring.set_password('test', 'test', 'test')
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "<stdin>", line 1, in <module>
File "/usr/lib/python3/dist-packages/keyring/core.py", line 63, in set_password
_keyring_backend.set_password(service_name, username, password)
File "/usr/lib/python3/dist-packages/keyring/backends/fail.py", line 24, in get_password
raise RuntimeError(msg)
RuntimeError: No recommended backend was available. Install a recommended 3rd party backend package; or, install the keyrings.alt package if you want to use the non-recommended backends. See https://pypi.org/project/keyring for details.
>>> keyring.get_password('test', 'test')
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "<stdin>", line 1, in <module>
File "/usr/lib/python3/dist-packages/keyring/core.py", line 57, in get_password
return _keyring_backend.get_password(service_name, username)
File "/usr/lib/python3/dist-packages/keyring/backends/fail.py", line 24, in get_password
raise RuntimeError(msg)
RuntimeError: No recommended backend was available. Install a recommended 3rd party backend package; or, install the keyrings.alt package if you want to use the non-recommended backends. See https://pypi.org/project/keyring for details.
[regression potential]
TBD as this is still an upstream bug
[scope]
This affects Eoan and later, including upstream.
This does not affect Bionic or earlier, as they do not have the commit that introduces the bug.
this was introduced upstream by commit 0114733e91f249246c8fec9e659cd7ba2388ea0d which was first included in version 16.1.0.
[other info]
this affects any application that uses the python-launchpadlib library, as that internally uses keyrings.
Opened upstream PR to at least make the behavior deterministic:
https://github.com/jaraco/keyring/pull/424
Also adds new 'NoKeyringError' so callers can catch that specific error instead of raising generic RuntimeError. |
[impact]
when no backends are available for python-keyring, it will sometimes silently ignore all requests to set or get credentials, and sometimes it will raise RuntimeError for all requests.
[test case]
when there are no backends, there are 2 built-in backends that will be the only ones available, the 'chainer' backend and the 'fail' backend. The 'fail' backend always has priority 0, while the 'chainer' backend has priority 10 if it contains any actual backends, and priority 0 if it is empty. So in the situtation where there are no actual backends, both 'chainer' and 'fail' will have priority 0. Since the 'backends' class stores its backend implementation instances in a python set(), which is unordered, it is non-deterministic which of those backends are used at any given time.
Since the behavior is non-deterministic, simply trying this multiple times may result in each behavior. Rebooting or logout/login can help 'switch' the behavior, although simply re-running the test multiple times should be enough to eventually test both backends.
>>> import keyring
>>> [keyring.backend.get_all_keyring()]
the above python code will show the current list of backends, and since they both have the same priority (in this situation) the first in the list will be used. If the list looks like:
[[<keyring.backends.chainer.ChainerBackend object at 0x7f1f7018f3d0>, <keyring.backends.fail.Keyring object at 0x7f1f6fff0820>]]
with 'ChainerBackend' first, all keyring functions will return silently with None, e.g.:
>>> keyring.set_password('test', 'test', 'test')
>>> keyring.get_password('test', 'test')
>>>
with 'fail.Keyring' first, all keyring functions will raise RuntimeError:
>>> import keyring
>>> [keyring.backend.get_all_keyring()]
[[<keyring.backends.fail.Keyring object at 0x7f3b6ade73d0>, <keyring.backends.chainer.ChainerBackend object at 0x7f3b6ac48820>]]
>>> keyring.set_password('test', 'test', 'test')
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "<stdin>", line 1, in <module>
File "/usr/lib/python3/dist-packages/keyring/core.py", line 63, in set_password
_keyring_backend.set_password(service_name, username, password)
File "/usr/lib/python3/dist-packages/keyring/backends/fail.py", line 24, in get_password
raise RuntimeError(msg)
RuntimeError: No recommended backend was available. Install a recommended 3rd party backend package; or, install the keyrings.alt package if you want to use the non-recommended backends. See https://pypi.org/project/keyring for details.
>>> keyring.get_password('test', 'test')
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "<stdin>", line 1, in <module>
File "/usr/lib/python3/dist-packages/keyring/core.py", line 57, in get_password
return _keyring_backend.get_password(service_name, username)
File "/usr/lib/python3/dist-packages/keyring/backends/fail.py", line 24, in get_password
raise RuntimeError(msg)
RuntimeError: No recommended backend was available. Install a recommended 3rd party backend package; or, install the keyrings.alt package if you want to use the non-recommended backends. See https://pypi.org/project/keyring for details.
[regression potential]
And regressions would likely occur when no keyring backends, or only a single keyring backend, are/is availble, since this lowers the priority of the 'chainer' keyring backend, and the intention of this is to fix the existing problem when there is no keyring backend.
It should be noted that because the current behavior is non-deterministic, alternating between no error at all and raised RuntimeError, some existing users of python-keyring that occasionally do not see any error (but then also occasionally see RuntimeError raised) will now always see NoKeyringError raised (which does inherit from RuntimeError, to keep backwards compatibility for users that currently catch RuntimeError).
That is not actually a regression, since the behavior was non-deterministic; one way had to be chosen, and always raising error when there are no keyring backends is more appropriate than always silently failing when there are no keyring backends.
[scope]
This affects Eoan and later, including upstream.
This does not affect Bionic or earlier, as they do not have the commit that introduces the bug.
this was introduced upstream by commit 0114733e91f249246c8fec9e659cd7ba2388ea0d which was first included in version 16.1.0.
[other info]
this affects any application that uses the python-launchpadlib library, as that internally uses keyrings.
Opened upstream PR to at least make the behavior deterministic:
https://github.com/jaraco/keyring/pull/424
Also adds new 'NoKeyringError' so callers can catch that specific error instead of raising generic RuntimeError. |
|
2020-03-14 15:04:22 |
Launchpad Janitor |
python-keyring (Ubuntu Focal): status |
In Progress |
Fix Released |
|
2020-03-20 20:31:00 |
Brian Murray |
python-keyring (Ubuntu Eoan): status |
In Progress |
Fix Committed |
|
2020-03-20 20:31:06 |
Brian Murray |
bug |
|
|
added subscriber Ubuntu Stable Release Updates Team |
2020-03-20 20:31:09 |
Brian Murray |
bug |
|
|
added subscriber SRU Verification |
2020-03-20 20:31:15 |
Brian Murray |
tags |
|
verification-needed verification-needed-eoan |
|
2020-03-25 19:33:21 |
Dan Streetman |
tags |
verification-needed verification-needed-eoan |
verification-done verification-done-eoan |
|
2020-03-30 11:14:46 |
Launchpad Janitor |
python-keyring (Ubuntu Eoan): status |
Fix Committed |
Fix Released |
|
2020-03-30 11:14:50 |
Łukasz Zemczak |
removed subscriber Ubuntu Stable Release Updates Team |
|
|
|
2020-04-14 11:21:16 |
Colin Watson |
branch linked |
|
lp:~ddstreet/launchpadlib/nosudo |
|
2020-04-14 11:21:33 |
Colin Watson |
bug task added |
|
launchpadlib |
|
2020-04-14 11:35:08 |
Colin Watson |
launchpadlib: status |
New |
Fix Released |
|
2020-04-14 11:35:08 |
Colin Watson |
launchpadlib: milestone |
|
1.10.11 |
|
2020-04-14 11:35:08 |
Colin Watson |
launchpadlib: assignee |
|
Dan Streetman (ddstreet) |
|
2020-04-14 11:45:29 |
Colin Watson |
launchpadlib: importance |
Undecided |
High |
|
2020-04-20 11:55:25 |
Launchpad Janitor |
python-launchpadlib (Ubuntu Focal): status |
In Progress |
Fix Released |
|
2020-08-18 16:58:26 |
Brian Murray |
python-launchpadlib (Ubuntu Eoan): status |
In Progress |
Won't Fix |
|
2021-03-28 00:15:55 |
Bug Watch Updater |
python-keyring: status |
New |
Fix Released |
|