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34 lines
1.5 KiB
Plaintext
34 lines
1.5 KiB
Plaintext
PAM configuration is somewhat complex, but a typical use-case is to
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require both a password and Yubikey to allow access. This can be
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achieved by a PAM configuration like this:
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```
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auth requisite pam_yubico.so id=42
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auth required pam_unix.so use_first_pass
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```
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The first line makes pam_yubico check the OTP. Use either a per-user
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file called ~/.yubico/authorized_yubikeys, or a system wide file called
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/etc/yubikey_mappings to specify which Yubikeys that can be used to log
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in as specific users. See the https://github.com/Yubico/yubico-pam/wiki/ReadMe for more details about this.
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The "use_first_pass" on the next line says that the password the pam_unix
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module should check should be received from the earlier PAM modules
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and that the module should not query for passwords.
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Of course, if you use username/password verification from a SQL
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database or LDAP, you need to change the second line above. But the
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module you use needs to support "use_first_pass" for this to work.
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Most modules support this.
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Be sure to comment out any other 'auth' lines in your PAM configuration,
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unless you want those. For example, Debian contains a
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'@include common-auth' which would confuse the configuration.
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To log in, you now need to enter both your Unix password and enter an
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OTP using your Yubikey. When prompted for the password, enter the Unix
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password first and then (without pressing enter) push the button on your
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Yubikey.
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If it doesn't work, enable debugging (see https://github.com/Yubico/yubico-pam/wiki/ReadMe) and try again.
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