package jwt import ( "errors" "strings" ) var ( ErrInvalidKey = errors.New("key is invalid") ErrInvalidKeyType = errors.New("key is of invalid type") ErrHashUnavailable = errors.New("the requested hash function is unavailable") ErrTokenMalformed = errors.New("token is malformed") ErrTokenUnverifiable = errors.New("token is unverifiable") ErrTokenSignatureInvalid = errors.New("token signature is invalid") ErrTokenRequiredClaimMissing = errors.New("token is missing required claim") ErrTokenInvalidAudience = errors.New("token has invalid audience") ErrTokenExpired = errors.New("token is expired") ErrTokenUsedBeforeIssued = errors.New("token used before issued") ErrTokenInvalidIssuer = errors.New("token has invalid issuer") ErrTokenInvalidSubject = errors.New("token has invalid subject") ErrTokenNotValidYet = errors.New("token is not valid yet") ErrTokenInvalidId = errors.New("token has invalid id") ErrTokenInvalidClaims = errors.New("token has invalid claims") ErrInvalidType = errors.New("invalid type for claim") ) // joinedError is an error type that works similar to what [errors.Join] // produces, with the exception that it has a nice error string; mainly its // error messages are concatenated using a comma, rather than a newline. type joinedError struct { errs []error } func (je joinedError) Error() string { msg := []string{} for _, err := range je.errs { msg = append(msg, err.Error()) } return strings.Join(msg, ", ") } // joinErrors joins together multiple errors. Useful for scenarios where // multiple errors next to each other occur, e.g., in claims validation. func joinErrors(errs ...error) error { return &joinedError{ errs: errs, } }