diff --git a/modules/ROOT/pages/using-yubikeys.adoc b/modules/ROOT/pages/using-yubikeys.adoc index 066c339..d710eeb 100644 --- a/modules/ROOT/pages/using-yubikeys.adoc +++ b/modules/ROOT/pages/using-yubikeys.adoc @@ -40,17 +40,34 @@ For some features private keys and other secrets are stored on the YubiKey. Each == Using a YubiKey to authenticate to a machine running Fedora -Local system authentication uses https://www.redhat.com/sysadmin/pluggable-authentication-modules-pam[Pluggable Authentication Modules (PAM)]. There are two ways to configure the YubiKey PAM module to authenticate users. Either via the YubiCloud or using challenge-response. The YubiCloud is the standard method but depends on Yubico's cloud to validate your OTPs and hence requires constant internet access. +Local system authentication uses https://www.redhat.com/sysadmin/pluggable-authentication-modules-pam[Pluggable Authentication Modules (PAM)]. You have two options here: pam_yubico and pam_u2f. The former is required for YubiKeys without FIDO2/U2F. If your key supports the FIDO2 standard depends on firmware and hardware model. -The setup is as follows: install the PAM module, register a YubiKey with your user account, create base configuration for either of the two authentication options and then choose the PAM configuration you want to use the YubiKey. +The setup is as follows: install the PAM module, register a YubiKey with your user account, create base configuration for either of the two authentication options and then choose the PAM configuration you want to use the YubiKey with. + +=== Dependencies + +The packages required for both PAM modules are available in the official repositories. + +==== For pam_yubico Install the PAM yubico module from the official repositories: [source, bash] […]$ sudo dnf install pam_yubico +==== For pam_u2f + +Install the PAM u2f module and the CLI tool from the official repositories: + +[source, bash] +[…]$ sudo dnf install pam-u2f pamu2fcfg + === Base configuration files +==== For pam_yubico + +There are two ways to configure the YubiKey PAM module to authenticate users. Either via the YubiCloud or using challenge-response. The YubiCloud is the standard method but depends on Yubico's cloud to validate your OTPs and hence requires constant internet access. + Create two base configuration files in /etc/pam.d. yubikey-required and yubikey-sufficient. For YubiCloud use the following: @@ -98,8 +115,27 @@ You may add the debug option at the end of these lines right after the mode opti If you want to use both methods for different use-cases just create the respective configuration files and use them as includes as described in the next section accordingly. +==== For pam_u2f + +Create two base configuration files in /etc/pam.d. u2f-required and u2f-sufficient. + +[source] +#%PAM-1.0 +auth required pam_u2f.so + +[source] +#%PAM-1.0 +auth sufficient pam_u2f.so + +[NOTE] +==== +You may add the debug option at the end of these lines right after the mode option to get troubleshooting information in journald. +==== + === Register YubiKey(s) with your local account(s) +==== For pam_yubico + If you use the online YubiCloud method you need the ID of your YubiKey. For this just enter the key and retrieve an OTP code with a short press on the button and extract the first 12 characters - this is your key ID. [source] @@ -121,6 +157,19 @@ Or for any other system user using sudo. [source, bash] […]$ sudo -u someuser ykpamcfg -2 +==== For pam_u2f + +Use the tool pamu2fcfg to retrieve a configuration line that goes into ~/.config/Yubico/u2f_keys. This configuration line consists of a username and a part tied to a key separated by colon. + +[source] +fedora-user:owBYtPIH2yzjlSQaRrVcxB...Pg==,es256,+presence + +If the key is PIN protected you'll be asked to enter the PIN for this operation. + +[source, bash] +[…]$ mkdir -p ~/.config/Yubico +[…]$ pamu2fcfg >> ~/.config/Yubico/u2f_keys + === Configure desired PAM modules Next configure PAM to accept a YubiKey as a means of authentication. There are many options in /etc/pam.d to modify and add a YubiKey, but the most common use-cases are: @@ -130,7 +179,7 @@ Next configure PAM to accept a YubiKey as a means of authentication. There are m - /etc/pam.d/sudo - /etc/pam.d/sshd -In a PAM configuration file if using yubikey-sufficient add an include line before or if using yubikey-required add it after a line that reads "auth substack system-auth" or "auth include system-auth". An include of yubikey-sufficient looks like this: +In a PAM configuration file if using {yubikey,u2f}-sufficient add an include line before or if using {yubikey,u2f}-required add it after a line that reads "auth substack system-auth" or "auth include system-auth". An include of yubikey-sufficient looks like this: [source] auth include yubikey-sufficient