gnupg-pkcs11-scd(1) | General Commands Manual | gnupg-pkcs11-scd(1) |
NAME¶
gnupg-pkcs11-scd
—
GnuPG-compatible smart-card daemon with PKCS#11
support
SYNOPSIS¶
gnupg-pkcs11-scd |
[--server] [--multi-server] [--daemon] [--homedir dir] [--uid-acl uid] [--verbose] [--quiet] [--sh] [--csh] [--options file] [--no-detach] [--log-file file] [--help] |
DESCRIPTION¶
gnupg-pkcs11-scd
is a drop-in replacement
for the smart-card daemon (scd) shipped with the next-generation GnuPG
(gnupg-2). The daemon interfaces to smart-cards by using RSA Security Inc.
PKCS#11 Cryptographic Token Interface (Cryptoki).
The interface with GnuPG is restricted to feching existing keys from the card. Neither new key generation nor key transfer is possible through this interface. Instead, when the smart-card is asked to generate a key in a particular slot, the existing public key in that slot is returned. This facilitates the transfer of keys on the smart-card to usage as a subkey on an existing GnuPG master key. See the GNUPG INTEGRATION section for example usage.
The following options are available:
- --server
- Run in server mode (foreground). If not redirected, input and output are over stdin/stdout.
- --multi-server
- Run in multi-server mode (foreground). In addition to communicating over stdin/stdout, the server also opens an additional listening UNIX socket.
- --daemon
- Detach and run in background.
- --homedir dir
- Use this home directory instead of guessing.
- --uid-acl uid
- Create unix socket as world read/write and apply access control that accepts only remote processes of this uid. Usable for proxy scenario.
- --verbose
- Be verbose while running.
- --quiet
- Be as quiet as possible.
- --sh
- Output sh-style environment variable definition.
- --csh
- Output csh-style environment variable definition.
- --options file
- Read options from file. Some of the configuration options can only be set in the configuration file (see the CONFIGURATION section).
- --no-detach
- Do not detach from console (useful for debugging purposes).
- --log-file file
- Output log to file.
- --help
- Print help information.
When the daemon receives any of the SIGHUP, SIGTERM and SIGINT signals, it cleans up and exits.
gnupg-pkcs11-scd
works only
with already personalized
cards, and supports (for the time being) only RSA key pairs. The
following constraints must be satisfied:
- For each private key object, a certificate object must exist on the card. The existence of the corresponding public key object is not important (since the certificate includes public key).
- The certificate and the corresponding private key must have identical CKA_ID attribute.
The PKCS#11 implementation is not obliged to enforce any of the above rules. However, practice has shown that popular PKCS#11 implementations found "in the wild" seem to respect them.
NOTES¶
Unlike gpg-agent, gnupg-pkcs11-scd
supports more than one token available at the same time. In order to make
gpg-agent happy, gnupg-pkcs11-scd
always returns the
same card serial number to gpg-agent. When unavailable token is requested,
gnupg-pkcs11-scd
will use NEEDPIN callback in order
to ask for the requested token. When and if gpg-agent will support more than
one serial number or NEEDTOKEN callback, this behavior will be modified.
ENVIRONMENT¶
- HOME
- Used to locate the home directory.
- GNUPGHOME
- Used instead of ~/.gnupg.
- USERPROFILE
- Used only on Win32 to locate the home directory.
- GNUPG_PKCS11_SOCKETDIR
- Create sockets in this directory, default to TMPDIR.
Additionally, the \\Software\\GNU\\GnuPG\\HomeDir registry key is used on Win32 to locate the default GNUPGHOME.
FILES¶
Files affecting the operation of
gnupg-pkcs11-scd
:
- ~/.gnupg/gnupg-pkcs11-scd.conf
gnupg-pkcs11-scd
uses this as a default configuration file.- /etc/gnupg-pkcs11-scd.conf
gnupg-pkcs11-scd
uses this as a default system wide configuration file.- ~/.gnupg/gpg-agent.conf
- Default configuration file for gpg-agent.
CONFIGURATION¶
To tell gpg-agent to use another smart-card daemon, the following needs to be put in ~/.gnupg/gpg-agent.conf:
scdaemon-program /usr/bin/gnupg-pkcs11-scd pinentry-program /usr/bin/pinentry-qt
The first line is mandatory in order to use
gnupg-pkcs11-scd
. With the second line you can set
your preferred pinentry program (it has to be one compatible with GnuPG). Of
course, you need to adjust the paths according to your system setup.
An example ~/.gnupg/gnupg-pkcs11-scd.conf file (lines beginning with # are comments):
# Log file. #log-file log1 # Default is not verbose. #verbose # Default is no debugging. #debug-all # Pin cache period in seconds; default is infinite. #pin-cache 20 # Use the gnupg PIN cache (>=gnupg-2.3.0) #use-gnupg-pin-cache # Comma-separated list of available provider names. Then set # attributes for each provider using the provider-[name]-attribute # syntax. providers p1 # Provider attributes (see below for detailed description) provider-p1-library /usr/lib/pkcs11/p1.so #provider-p1-allow-protected-auth #provider-p1-cert-private #provider-p1-private-mask 0 # The following are for >=gnupg-2.0 and <gnupg-2.1.19 #openpgp-sign 5C661B8C07CFD957F7D98D5B9A0F31D236BFAC2A #openpgp-encr D2DC0BD1EDD185969748B6025B452816F97CBA57 #openpgp-auth A7B8C1A3A8F71FCEC018886F8767927B9C8D871F
The following attributes can be set for each provider:
- library
- Full path to the PKCS#11 shared library (= provider).
- allow-protected-auth
- Allow protected authentication for provider. This needs to be supported by the provider and you should have appropriate reader hardware.
- cert-private
- Authentication is required before certificates can be accessed. Most configurations store certificates as public, so there is no need to use this option.
- private-mask
- Private key mask mode. Use this only when you have problem using private
key operations. The value is hex encoded mask number.
- 0
- Determine automatically.
- 1
- Force sign.
- 2
- Force sign with recovery.
- 4
- Force decrypt.
- 8
- Force decrypt with unwrap.
- openpgp-sign
- [gnupg-2.0] Hex string (Upper letter, no space) SHA1 of signing public key see GNUPG INTEGRATION how to obtain.
- openpgp-encr
- [gnupg-2.0] Hex string (Upper letter, no space) SHA1 of encryption public key see GNUPG INTEGRATION how to obtain.
- openpgp-auth
- [gnupg-2.0] Hex string (Upper letter, no space) SHA1 of authentication public key see GNUPG INTEGRATION how to obtain.
GNUPG INTEGRATION¶
Typical steps to set up a card for gpgsm usage:
- Import the CA certificate of your issuer:
You should also manually import all self-signed certificates.
gpgsm --import < ca-certificate
- Instruct GnuPG to discover all useful certificates on the card:
gpgsm --learn-card
Signing, verification, etc. work as usual with gpgsm.
Typical steps to set up a card for >=gpg-2.0 and <gpg-2.1.19 usage:
- Acquire key ids:
Enter "SCD LEARN" and look for "KEY-FRIEDNLY" responses, the first field is the hash, the second is the subject name.
gpg-agent --server gpg-connect-agent
- Instruct GnuPG to discover all useful information of card:
You should see valid card status.
gpg --card-status
- Now, you should virtual generate keys, the keys are not actually
generated, but returned to gpg to be registered.
gpg --card-edit
admin
Kill gpg-agent and modify configuration to have sign, encrypt, authenticate key hex ids.generate (DO NOT BACKUP KEYS)
- Alternatively, you can add the existing keys as subkeys on an existing GPG
master key:
gpg --edit-key MASTER_KEY_ID
addcardkey
- In order to reattach a key to smartcard, remove secret key using:
Then regenerate but without replace keys using:
gpg --delete-secret-keys KEY_ID
gpg --card-edit
admin
generate (DO NOT GENERATE KEYS)
Signing, verification, etc. work as usual with gpg.
Typical steps to set up a card for >=gpg-2.1.19 and <gpg-2.3 usage:
- Refresh local key store:
gpg --card-status
- Acquire key ids:
Enter "SCD LEARN" and look for "KEY-FRIEDNLY" responses, the first field is the keygrip, the second is the subject name.
gpg-agent --server gpg-connect-agent
- Create master key based on existing key using:
Select:
gpg --expert --full-generate-key
Enter keygrip to be used as primary key.(13) Existing key
- Continue as usual to setup your primary key, you should probably use signature for master key.
- Add subkey using:
Enter:
gpg --expert --edit-key ${MASTER_KEY_ID}
Select:gpg> addkey
Enter keygrip to be used as subkey.(13) Existing key
- Continue as usual to setup your subkey.
Signing, verification, etc. work as usual with gpg.
Typical steps to set up a card for >=gpg-2.3 usage:
- Create master key based on existing key using:
Select:
gpg --expert --full-generate-key
Select the key from the list.(14) Existing key from card
- Continue as usual to setup your primary key, you should probably use signature for master key.
- Add subkey using:
Enter:
gpg --expert --edit-key ${MASTER_KEY_ID}
Select:gpg> addkey
Select the key from the list.(14) Existing key from card
- Continue as usual to setup your subkey.
Signing, verification, etc. work as usual with gpg.
SECURITY CONSIDERATIONS¶
All communication between components is currently unprotected and in plain text (that's how the Assuan protocol operates). It is trivial to trace (using e.g. the strace(1) program) individual components (e.g. pinentry) and steal sensitive data (such as the smart-card PIN) or even change it (e.g. the hash to be signed).
When using the software in production scenario, be sure to turn off debugging/verbose options in configuration of all components. Otherwise, some sensitive data might be displayed on the screen (most notably, the PIN).
SEE ALSO¶
GnuPG Home Page, http://www.gnupg.org.
gnupg-pkcs11 Home Page, http://gnupg-pkcs11.sourceforge.net.
AUTHORS AND COPYRIGHT¶
Copyright (c) 2006-2007 Zeljko Vrba <zvrba@globalnet.hr>
Copyright (c) 2006-2017 Alon Bar-Lev <alon.barlev@gmail.com>
All rights reserved.
THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED "AS IS", WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO THE WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY, FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE AND NONINFRINGEMENT. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE AUTHORS OR COPYRIGHT HOLDERS BE LIABLE FOR ANY CLAIM, DAMAGES OR OTHER LIABILITY, WHETHER IN AN ACTION OF CONTRACT, TORT OR OTHERWISE, ARISING FROM, OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE SOFTWARE OR THE USE OR OTHER DEALINGS IN THE SOFTWARE.
October 15, 2017 | POSIX-compatible |