qemu/docs/u2f.txt
Philippe Mathieu-Daudé 5135fe7110 docs: Spell QEMU all caps
Replace Qemu -> QEMU.

Signed-off-by: Philippe Mathieu-Daudé <philmd@redhat.com>
Reviewed-by: Darren Kenny <darren.kenny@oracle.com>
Reviewed-by: Markus Armbruster <armbru@redhat.com>
Message-Id: <20211118143401.4101497-1-philmd@redhat.com>
Signed-off-by: Paolo Bonzini <pbonzini@redhat.com>
2021-11-19 10:16:58 +01:00

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QEMU U2F Key Device Documentation.
Contents
1. USB U2F key device
2. Building
3. Using u2f-emulated
4. Using u2f-passthru
5. Libu2f-emu
1. USB U2F key device
U2F is an open authentication standard that enables relying parties
exposed to the internet to offer a strong second factor option for end
user authentication.
The standard brings many advantages to both parties, client and server,
allowing to reduce over-reliance on passwords, it increases authentication
security and simplifies passwords.
The second factor is materialized by a device implementing the U2F
protocol. In case of a USB U2F security key, it is a USB HID device
that implements the U2F protocol.
In QEMU, the USB U2F key device offers a dedicated support of U2F, allowing
guest USB FIDO/U2F security keys operating in two possible modes:
pass-through and emulated.
The pass-through mode consists of passing all requests made from the guest
to the physical security key connected to the host machine and vice versa.
In addition, the dedicated pass-through allows to have a U2F security key
shared on several guests which is not possible with a simple host device
assignment pass-through.
The emulated mode consists of completely emulating the behavior of an
U2F device through software part. Libu2f-emu is used for that.
2. Building
To ensure the build of the u2f-emulated device variant which depends
on libu2f-emu: configuring and building:
./configure --enable-u2f && make
The pass-through mode is built by default on Linux. To take advantage
of the autoscan option it provides, make sure you have a working libudev
installed on the host.
3. Using u2f-emulated
To work, an emulated U2F device must have four elements:
* ec x509 certificate
* ec private key
* counter (four bytes value)
* 48 bytes of entropy (random bits)
To use this type of device, this one has to be configured, and these
four elements must be passed one way or another.
Assuming that you have a working libu2f-emu installed on the host.
There are three possible ways of configurations:
* ephemeral
* setup directory
* manual
Ephemeral is the simplest way to configure, it lets the device generate
all the elements it needs for a single use of the lifetime of the device.
qemu -usb -device u2f-emulated
Setup directory allows to configure the device from a directory containing
four files:
* certificate.pem: ec x509 certificate
* private-key.pem: ec private key
* counter: counter value
* entropy: 48 bytes of entropy
qemu -usb -device u2f-emulated,dir=$dir
Manual allows to configure the device more finely by specifying each
of the elements necessary for the device:
* cert
* priv
* counter
* entropy
qemu -usb -device u2f-emulated,cert=$DIR1/$FILE1,priv=$DIR2/$FILE2,counter=$DIR3/$FILE3,entropy=$DIR4/$FILE4
4. Using u2f-passthru
On the host specify the u2f-passthru device with a suitable hidraw:
qemu -usb -device u2f-passthru,hidraw=/dev/hidraw0
Alternately, the u2f-passthru device can autoscan to take the first
U2F device it finds on the host (this requires a working libudev):
qemu -usb -device u2f-passthru
5. Libu2f-emu
The u2f-emulated device uses libu2f-emu for the U2F key emulation. Libu2f-emu
implements completely the U2F protocol device part for all specified
transport given by the FIDO Alliance.
For more information about libu2f-emu see this page:
https://github.com/MattGorko/libu2f-emu.