Initiative for Open Authentication

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The Initiative for Open Authentication (OATH) is an industry-wide collaboration to develop an open reference architecture using open standards to promote the adoption of strong authentication. They publish the standard which Google Authenticator and other common 2-factor applications use.

Installation

The following packages can be used to generate, transfer, and validate OATH credentials:

Standards

OATH has created two standards of significance to an Arch user, both based on a Base32-encoded shared secret of arbitrary length:

HOTP
HMAC (Hash-based message authentication code) One-time Password (HOTP). Every time a password is generated, a counter is incremented. This value is concatenated with a secret key, and then hashed to generate a 6-10 digit code. The authenticating party does the same, except it increments a counter when a code is successfully authenticated. To handle desynchronization of the counter, the authenticating party can also check several (30-100) additional values beyond its current counter state.
TOTP
Time-based one-time-password (TOTP), which works much like HOTP except it uses the current time instead of a counter. This solves the desynchronization problem, and eliminates the possibility of an adversary recording OTPs for use later.

URI credential format

Credentials are usually shared in a QR-encoded URI format. All fields must be URI-encoded strings:

otpauth://TYPE/LABEL?PARAMETERS
Warning: A URI formatted credential, and any QR code generated from it, contains all information required to generate valid one-time passwords. Protect it as you would any other password.
TYPE
totp or hotp
LABEL
Identifies which account a key is associated with, optionally prefixed with an issuer string. Example: Arch%20Wiki:alice@archlinux.org
PARAMETERS
Take the standard URI parameter format - ?name=value&name=value...
  • secret - required; this is the Base32 shared secret.
  • issuer - Indicates the provider or service the account is associated with. If this is absent, the issuer prefix of the label will be used. If both are present, they should be equal.
  • algorithm - SHA1 by default. Can also be SHA256 or SHA512.
  • digits - How long passcodes should be. Default is 6, can be 8.
  • counter - Required if using HOTP. Initial counter value.
  • period - Optional if using TOTP. Sets how long a code is valid, 30 seconds by default.

Here is an example:

otpauth://totp/Example%20Company:alice@google.com?secret=JBSWY3DPEHPK3PXP&issuer=Example%20Company
         |type|  issuer prefix  |    account     |         secret        |     issuer            |
              |               label              |                  parameters                   |

Tips and tricks

Decode QR codes

This can be accomplished with tools from zbar. Decode a PNG file:

$ zbarimg my_qr_code.png --quiet --raw

Decode images from a camera:

$ zbarcam /dev/video0

Create QR codes

The qrencode package is useful here.

Encode a URI, save it as a PNG:

$ qrencode -o my_code.png 'MY_URI'

Encode a URI, print a QR code to the terminal:

$ qrencode -t ansiutf8 'MY_URI'

Generate keys

To generate your own key in the proper format, you can use something like the following:

$ head -c 16 /dev/urandom | base32 --wrap 0

Generate OTPs from the command line

Use oathtool(1) from oath-toolkit:

$ oathtool --base32 --totp KEY

Many password managers, including pass and KeePass also offer support for generating these codes.

Linux User authentication with PAM

See either pam_oath or Google Authenticator.

See also