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libSpookyAction

A library for interfacing with Desfire tags through a PN532

pipeline status

Repo: https://git.mittelab.org/proj/libspookyaction
Documentation: https://proj.mittelab.dev/libspookyaction/
PlatformIO lib: https://platformio.org/lib/show/12999/libSpookyAction

Using the library in your project

  1. This library requires you to enable C++17 (or above) and is developed for ESP-IDF. If you are using another framework, e.g. Arduino, or a different C++ version, it might work, or it might not, but you are on your own.
  2. On ESP32, this requires plain old DES to be enabled in MbedTLS (the library that provides SSL functionalities). This is because it is used in one of the Desfire implementations. So make sure that your sdkconfig.defaults contains the following line:
    CONFIG_MBEDTLS_DES_C=y
  3. Make sure you have enabled C++17. For ESP-IDF, this requires to unset C++11 and C++17. In your platformio.ini:
    [env:your_env]
    platform = espressif32
    framework = espidf
    ; ...
    build_unflags = -std=gnu++11 -std=gnu++14 -std=c++11 -std=c++14 -std=c++17
    ; You can add more flags, but GNU++17 must be present
    build_flags = -std=gnu++17
  4. Check that your app compiles with these settings, first, using pio run or pio test. If it does,
  5. add to platformio.ini the dependency on libSpookyAction:
    [env:your_env]
    ; ... all the above flags, plus:
    lib_deps = mittelab/libSpookyAction
  6. You can now use libSpookyAction. The includes are in the subfolders desfire/ and pn532/, and the objects in the corresponding ::desfire and ::pn532 namespaces. You should check out some of the examples to get started, as you will need to piece together several things to get everything running.
    See for example how to initialize the communication protocol.

Developer guide

Folder structure

Important folders:

  • libspookyaction/
    Library source code, divided in headers, source code, examples.
    • libspookyaction/{include, src, examples}/{pn532, desfire}/
      All sources are placed in the subfolders pn532 and desfire. This reflects the namespace in which all the objects are located, and keeps the includes clean.
    • libspookyaction/examples/sdkconfig.defaults
      This is the default ESP-IDF SDK config file that should be used when building the examples.
    • libspookyaction/{include, src}/esp32/
      All ESP32-specific code should go in a subfolder esp32. In the future we might support more platforms, and we would like to compile this code only conditionally. Currently the ESP32-specific implementation of the cryptographic primitives are isolated here.
  • tests/
    Subfolder containing the unit test project.
    • tests/lib/libspookyaction/
      Symlink to libspookyaction/, to allow the unit tests to pick up the local library folder
    • tests/src/ut
      The UT suite suggested by ESP-IDF, Unity, is somehow limited for extensive C++ testing, so everything reusable, and anything that is not a direct test invocation, is implemented here in a separate ::ut namespace.
    • tests/test
      We need to keep this folder for PlatformIO to believe we are providing unit test in our own custom entry point.

Secondary folders:

  • cicd/ Helper files needed by CI/CD
  • docs/ Doxygen config and additional doxygen sources
  • misc/ Helper files needed for setting up development, logos, non-source material.

Setting up development

  1. Install PlatformIO CLI.
  2. Prepare tests/platformio.ini. You can, for example
    • Customize tests/platformio.ini.sample to your board and setup, or
    • Copy cicd/platformio.ini, the file used by CI/CD
  3. Generate a compilation database for your IDE of choice using
    $> ./misc/gen-compiledb.py tests/platformio.ini       
    You have to regenerate this when a new file is added.
  4. You are now using the unit test project to "host" the library (so you will see all usages of instantiated templates, for example).
  5. Use the provided .clang-format file to format the source, e.g. by
    $> clang-format --style file -i libspookyaction/src/pn532/my_file.cpp

Running the tests

Note on the test project structure. We set up the unit test project in such a way that we can use both pio run and pio test to run the unit tests. The two commands are similar but different enough that some commands are available for one and not the other (for example, the compilation database is generated for pio run but not pio test). We work around this by providing a test transport (similar to the one provided by pio test), our own app_main() function and building sources and tests together.

  1. Make sure you have setup your tests/platformio.ini as above.
  2. Change directory and use either pio test or pio run, as follows:
    $> cd tests/
    $> pio test -vv

Building the documentation

  1. Install Doxygen (or run through Docker), and run
    $> doxygen ./doxygen.conf
  2. The documentation can be seen at ./docs/_build/html/index.html.

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