The following Article appeared on the blog.mardy.it website:
One of the new features of the upcoming Nokia N9 is the unified accounts UI and the Single Sign On (SSO) framework. The developer website hosts a page describing this feature in high level terms — a highly recommended reading — and offers a picture of the account creation flow (the orange circle representing the finger tapping is a bit off target in the pictures, bummer):
The UX designers of the N9 decided to create a centralized place where all the user’s accounts would be managed: all the account providers will be listed in this application, and once the user chooses the provider and enters his credentials (only once), he’ll be prompted to select which services he intends to use on this account, in case the provider account gives access to more than one. Once this is done, all the applications interested in the selected services which have been enabled for the new account will start using it.
This design removes the need to implement account management in every application, because all the accounts and their settings are handled in the accounts UI application. Of course, applications can invoke the accounts UI when an account needs to be created, and they can directly embed the account configuration plugin when a specific account needs to be edited.
The accounts UI provides most of its functionality through account plugins. There are provider plugins, whose task is to create the account and handle those settings that are shared through all the account’s services (such as a global option to enable or disable the account), and service plugins, which add support for a specific service within the account and provide a configuration for its settings (at the very least, a toggle switch to enable or disable the service). This plugin based way of operate on accounts brings the possibility to extend the support for new online services, with plugins possibly coming from different sources, from the OS platform vendor to a user’s community, as well as from a hardware vendor, third party software companies and application stores. And all the new services can be directly accessible from the same applications the user is already familiar with, instead of requiring the installation of one additional stand-alone application.
On the other hand, the Single Sign On framework is mostly transparent to the user (indeed, that’s the goal of any SSO implementation): once the password for one service has been entered, all applications operating on the same account should be able to login without bothering the user with password dialogs. And if the password turns out to be wrong, the SSO framework will ask for it only once, no matter how many applications are using the account.
Security is also tightly bound to the MeeGo SSO implementation: at account creation time it’s possible to specify which applications are allowed to use a certain account (or, more technically, which resource tokens an application must possess in order to be granted access to a certain account’s credentials), and what authentication methods are allowed. For instance, for security reasons we might not want to allow an account to be used with any authentication method where the password is disclosed in plain text to the applications or sent over the network.
Last but not least, the account passwords are stored on the device in encrypted form, and the encrypted storage can be dynamically activated/deactivated by providing/removing a master key, which could be configured to be the user password, or a fingerprint or other biometric checksum, some hardware key (such as a SIM card), or pretty much anything else. When the encrypted password storage is unavailable and some applications need to login to a service, the user will be prompted for the needed service password (again not more than once per account); all this being totally transparent to the application.
Using the framework in other devices/platforms
The UI design for the Accounts & SSO components described above is just one of the possible ways of integrating the MeeGo Accounts & SSO framework into a user device. The framework itself has been written to be flexible and support any UI workflow we could think of, without compromises to performance or security. The deployment of the Accounts & SSO framework in other devices and platforms has also been taken into consideration during the architecture and implementation development and several actions were taken towards this goal.
The core software driving the Accounts & SSO frameworks is all open source (LGPL), and can be found in gitorious.org. The most interesting components are:
- libaccounts-glib: Glib-based API for account management. Depends on SQLite and D-Bus.
- libaccounts-qt: Qt API for account management. Thin wrapper of libaccounts-glib APIs.
- signon: the SSO daemon (written with Qt), which provides a D-Bus API. In the same source tree there’s also the libsignon-qt library, for Qt-based clients.
- libsignon-glib: Glib-based client API for SSO.
Most of the other repositories in the project are probably not very useful outside of MeeGo, and they are not that interesting anyway. What might be more interesting to know, is the list of components that are missing from the gitorious project (because they are not open source), and that another platform/vendor would have to reimplement in order to provide all the functionalities described above. Luckily, there’s not much in this list. Apart from a couple of SSO authentication plugins for specific services, the rest is all about UI parts (because of Nokia’s general policy of not releasing the source code of its UI applications): we don’t have the account application and the account plugins, and the SSO UI daemon serving the password dialogs. This is not a big loss because in the UI would have had to be rewritten anyways to run in other platforms (and for MeeGo as well, as the MeeGoTouch UI library which is used in these Nokia UIs has been deprecated).
Having spent quite a considerable amount of (pleasant) time and energy on this project, I feel rather bound to it even though my employment in Nokia has ended. Therefore, I’m willing to continue to dedicate some of my free time (which, I have to say, is not much) to contribute to it and help its deployment in MeeGo and other Linux based platforms. Don’t hesitate to contact me if you are interested in getting the Accounts & SSO powering the OS you love and would like to know more about it.
Source Mardy