Hardware Tokens: Difference between revisions
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In libreswan, you configure a certificate as normal, | In libreswan, you configure a certificate as normal, except you use a specific leftcert= syntax to specify your token slot: | ||
<pre> | |||
conn yourvpn | |||
leftcert="pwouters:CAC ID Certificate" | |||
[....] | |||
</pre> | |||
Once the connection is loaded (auto=add in the config file, or by running ipsec auto --add yourvpn) you should be able to see the certificate and the private key: | |||
<pre> | <pre> |
Revision as of 04:46, 9 June 2017
All hardware tokens supported by NSS should be supported by libreswan.
Yubi Key
The yuibkey 4-series and the yubikey Neo support asymmetric encryption such as RSA operations that are required for libreswan.
If you use lsusb, the following message is seen for a supported key:
Yubico.com Yubikey 4 OTP+U2F+CCID
The older U2F-only yubikey's such as the github ones do not support RSA operations. They appear as follows:
USB HID v1.10 Device [Yubico Security Key by Yubico] on usb-0000:00:1a.0-1.1/input0
Installation
sudo yum install yubico-piv-tool libykneomgr coolkey pcsc-lite sudo systemctl enable pcscd sudo systemctl start pcscd
To test the key, insert it and run:
ykneomgr --set-mode=06
If you see an error "error: ykneomgr_discover_match (-4): Backend error" then your yubikey only supports U2F (such as the github yubikey)
For more information about the yubikey command line tools, see https://developers.yubico.com/yubico-piv-tool/
configuration
The easiest way to switch or use a yubikey is to generate a PKCS#12 (.p12) file, and import that onto the yubikey. Of course you can also generate a cert request from the key and then get your VPN Certificate Agency to sign that. But most people will just have their CA give them a .p12 file.
First, tell the libreswan NSS database that you want to use a hardware token:
modutil -dbdir sql:/etc/ipsec.d -add coolkey -libfile /usr/lib64/pkcs11/libcoolkeypk11.so
If you want to not have to use the pincode, you can store the pincode in /etc/ipsec.d/nsspasswd:
nicknameofcert:pincode
To import a PKCS#12 file:
yubico-piv-tool -s9c filename.p12 -KPKCS12 -aset-chuid -aimport-key -aimport-cert
You can get a status of the yubikey to see the certificate, which will roughly look like:
yubico-piv-tool -a status CHUID: XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX CCC: YYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYY Slot 9a: Algorithm: RSA2048 Subject DN: C=CA, ST=Ontario, L=Ottawa, O=No Hats Corporation, OU=Clients, CN=pwouters/emailAddress=pwouters@users.nohats.ca Issuer DN: C=CA, ST=Ontario, L=Ottawa, O=No Hats Corporation, OU=Clients, CN=Certificate Agency (CA)/emailAddress=info@nohats.ca Fingerprint: f094793012a211d6b65621664c1961ba1942e14a5651ca90eb10f5a06479d962 Not Before: Jun 5 21:24:30 2017 GMT Not After: Jun 4 21:24:30 2027 GMT Slot 9c: Algorithm: RSA2048 Subject DN: C=CA, ST=Ontario, L=Ottawa, O=No Hats Corporation, OU=Clients, CN=pwouters/emailAddress=pwouters@users.nohats.ca Issuer DN: C=CA, ST=Ontario, L=Ottawa, O=No Hats Corporation, OU=Clients, CN=Certificate Agency (CA)/emailAddress=info@nohats.ca Fingerprint: f094793012a211d6b65621664c1961ba1942e14a5651ca90eb10f5a06479d962 Not Before: Jun 5 21:24:30 2017 GMT Not After: Jun 4 21:24:30 2027 GMT Slot 9e: Algorithm: RSA2048 Subject DN: C=CA, ST=Ontario, L=Ottawa, O=No Hats Corporation, OU=Clients, CN=pwouters/emailAddress=pwouters@users.nohats.ca Issuer DN: C=CA, ST=Ontario, L=Ottawa, O=No Hats Corporation, OU=Clients, CN=Certificate Agency (CA)/emailAddress=info@nohats.ca Fingerprint: f094793012a211d6b65621664c1961ba1942e14a5651ca90eb10f5a06479d962 Not Before: Jun 5 21:24:30 2017 GMT Not After: Jun 4 21:24:30 2027 GMT
The yubikey does not store the public CA certificate within the token, so this file needs to be installed separately in NSS. You can extract the CA certificate from the PKCS#12 file and import it into the NSS software token:
openssl pkcs12 -in certificate.p12 -cacerts -nokeys -out ca.crt certutil -A CA.crt -d sql:/etc/ipsec.d -n "YourCAnickname" -t CT,, ipsec restart
In libreswan, you configure a certificate as normal, except you use a specific leftcert= syntax to specify your token slot:
conn yourvpn leftcert="pwouters:CAC ID Certificate" [....]
Once the connection is loaded (auto=add in the config file, or by running ipsec auto --add yourvpn) you should be able to see the certificate and the private key:
# ipsec auto --listpubkeys 000 000 List of RSA Public Keys: 000 000 Jun 09 02:27:18 2017, 2048 RSA Key AwEAAdJUb (has private key), until Jun 04 21:24:30 2027 ok 000 ID_DER_ASN1_DN 'C=CA, ST=Ontario, L=Ottawa, O=No Hats Corporation, OU=Clients, CN=pwouters, E=pwouters@users.nohats.ca' 000 Issuer 'C=CA, ST=Ontario, L=Ottawa, O=No Hats Corporation, OU=Clients, CN=Certificate Agency (CA), E=info@nohats.ca' 000 Jun 09 02:27:18 2017, 2048 RSA Key AwEAAdJUb (has private key), until Jun 04 21:24:30 2027 ok 000 ID_USER_FQDN 'pwouters@users.nohats.ca' 000 Issuer 'C=CA, ST=Ontario, L=Ottawa, O=No Hats Corporation, OU=Clients, CN=Certificate Agency (CA), E=info@nohats.ca'
You should see "(has private key"). If you do not see this, you might need to unlock/unblock/activate your token:
And to check if the CA certificate imported correctly:
# ipsec auto --listcacerts 000 000 List of X.509 CA Certificates: 000 000 Root CA certificate "C=CA, ST=Ontario, L=Ottawa, O=No Hats Corporation, OU=Clients, CN=Certificate Agency (CA)/emailAddress=info@nohats.ca" - SN: 0x00 000 subject: C=CA, ST=Ontario, L=Ottawa, O=No Hats Corporation, OU=Clients, CN=Certificate Agency (CA), E=info@nohats.ca 000 issuer: C=CA, ST=Ontario, L=Ottawa, O=No Hats Corporation, OU=Clients, CN=Certificate Agency (CA), E=info@nohats.ca 000 not before: Thu Jan 26 05:47:53 2017 000 not after: Mon Jan 25 05:47:53 2027 000 2048 bit RSA