Crate veil

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Implements Debug for a struct or enum variant, with certain fields redacted.

The purpose of this macro is to allow for easy, configurable and efficient redaction of sensitive data in structs and enum variants. This can be used to hide sensitive data in logs or anywhere where personal data should not be exposed or stored.

Redaction is unicode-aware. Only alphanumeric characters are redacted. Whitespace, symbols and other characters are left as-is.

Controlling Redaction

Using the #[redact] attribute, you can control which fields are redacted and how.

Fields without this attribute will NOT be redacted and will be shown using their default Debug implementation.

Modifiers can be applied to control how the field is redacted:

ModifierEffectsDefault
#[redact(partial)]If the string is long enough, a small part of the
beginning and end will be exposed. If the string is too short to securely expose a portion of it, it will be redacted entirely.
Disabled. The entire string will be redacted.
#[redact(with = 'X')]Specifies the char the string will be redacted with.'*'
#[redact(fixed = <integer>)]If this modifier is present, the length and contents of
the string are completely ignored and the string will always
be redacted as a fixed number of redaction characters.
Disabled.
#[redact(display)]Overrides the redaction behavior to use the type’s Display implementation instead of Debug.Disabled.

Redacting All Fields in a Struct or Enum Variant

You can also quickly redact all fields in a struct using the #[redact(all)] modifier.

This also works on enum variants and will redact all struct/tuple fields in the variant.

The above modifiers are also accepted as configuration options when using this modifier, for example: #[redact(all, partial, with = 'X')]

This modifier acts as a default for all fields in the struct or enum variant. You can still individually control each field’s redaction using the #[redact(...)] modifier.

Finally, you can also manually turn off redaction for a field by using the #[redact(skip)] modifier. This is of course only allowed when the field is affected by #[redact(all)].

For example:

#[derive(Redact)]
#[redact(all, partial, with = 'X')]
struct Foo {
    redact_me: String,
    also_redact_me: String,

    #[redact(skip)]
    do_not_redact_me: String,
}

Is equivalent to:

#[derive(Redact)]
struct Foo {
    #[redact(partial, with = 'X')]
    redact_me: String,

    #[redact(partial, with = 'X')]
    also_redact_me: String,

    do_not_redact_me: String,
}

Redacting Enum Variants

If the variant names of an enum themselves are sensitive data, you can use the #[redact(variant)] modifier to redact the name of the variant.

All the normal modifiers can be used on a redacted variant name as well.

#[redact(all)] on enum variants will redact all struct/tuple fields in the variant.

If you want to mix #[redact(all)] and #[redact(variant)] on the same enum (to redact the variant’s name and also all of its struct fields), you can simply provide both attributes separately on the variant and this will work as expected. For example:

#[derive(Redact)]
enum Foo {
    #[redact(all, with = 'X')] // redact all fields (`baz`, `qux`, ...) with 'X' as the redaction character
    #[redact(variant, partial)] // also redact the variant name, but only partially
    Bar {
        baz: String,
        qux: String,
    }
}

Redacting All Variants in an Enum

You can also quickly redact all variants in an enum using the #[redact(all, variant)] modifier.

For example:

#[derive(Redact)]
#[redact(all, variant, partial, with = 'X')]
enum Foo {
    Bar,
    Baz,

    #[redact(variant, skip)]
    Qux,
}

Is equivalent to:

#[derive(Redact)]
enum Foo {
    #[redact(variant, partial, with = 'X')]
    Bar,

    #[redact(variant, partial, with = 'X')]
    Baz,

    Qux,
}

Full Example

#[derive(Redact)]
struct CreditCard {
    #[redact(partial)]
    number: String,

    #[redact]
    expiry: String,

    #[redact(fixed = 3)]
    cvv: String,

    #[redact(partial)]
    cardholder_name: String,
}

#[derive(Redact)]
#[redact(all, variant)]
enum CreditCardIssuer {
    MasterCard,
    Visa,
    AmericanExpress,
}

#[derive(Redact)]
#[redact(all, partial)]
struct Vehicle {
    license_plate: String,
    make: String,
    model: String,
    color: String,
}

// This struct doesn't contain any sensitive data, so we can derive `Debug` as normal.
#[derive(Debug)]
struct Policy {
    id: Uuid,
    name: String,
    description: String,
}

#[derive(Redact)]
enum InsuranceStatus {
    #[redact(all, partial)]
    Insured {
        #[redact(fixed = 12)]
        policy: Policy,

        policy_started: String,
        policy_expires: String,

        #[redact(skip)]
        // We already derive `Redact` for `CreditCard`, so we shouldn't re-redact it.
        payment_card: CreditCard,

        #[redact(skip)]
        // Redacting a `Vec<Vehicle>` would redact the entire list, so we disable redaction for this field.
        // This doesn't necessarily mean that the field is not redacted - because we derived `Redact` for `Vehicle`,
        // the `Vehicle`'s struct fields will still be redacted.
        vehicles: Vec<Vehicle>,
    },

    // No redaction is necessary here as `Policy` is not sensitive data in this context.
    Uninsured {
        policies_available: Vec<Policy>,
    },
}

Specializations

Currently, we specialize the implementation for the types below.

Please note that specializations are somewhat heuristic. For example, if you use a type alias in place of a specialized type, the specialization will not be applied as we can’t detect the actual type used.

TypeSpecialization
Option<T>The data inside a Some(...) variant will be redacted.

Limitations

Currently, this macro only supports Debug formatting with no modifiers ({:?}) or the “alternate” modifier ({:#?}). Modifiers like padding, alignment, etc. are not supported as the Rust standard library does not expose any of this behavior for us.

A note on Display

This derive macro does NOT implement Display. If you want to implement it, you can do so manually.

Display should NOT be redacted. It is meant to be human-readable, and also has a snowball effect on ToString as Display automatically implements it, leading to confusing and unexpected behavior.

If you want to use a type’s Display implementation during redaction, you can use the #[redact(display)] flag described in the Controlling Redaction section.

Manually Redacting Data

If you want to manually redact data, you have a few options:

Environmental Awareness

In testing environments it may be useful to disable redaction entirely. You can globally disable Veil’s redaction behavior at runtime by enabling the non-default feature flag toggle and:

  • Setting the VEIL_DISABLE_REDACTION environment variable to “1”, “true” or “on” (case insensitive).

OR

These are only checked ONCE for security reasons.

Modules

  • The Redactor allows for redacting arbitrary strings using a pre-defined set of flags.

Enums

  • Enum describing how Veil should behave when Debug is called on a #[derive(Redact)] item

Traits

  • Types that are sensitive data or PII (Personally Identifiable Information) and can be redact-formatted. This trait can be manually implemented or derived using the Redactable macro.

Functions

  • disabletoggle
    Disables Veil redaction globally.

Derive Macros