Yubikey for LUKS
This package is inspired and based on https://github.com/tfheen/ykfde.
This enables you to use the yubikey as 2FA for LUKS. The Password you enter is used as challenge for the yubikey
The keyscript allows to boot the machine with either the password and the Yubikey or with a normal password from any key slot.
luksSuspend/luksResume integration is inspired and based on https://github.com/zhongfu/ubuntu-luks-suspend
Initialize Yubikey
Initialize the Yubikey for challenge response in slot 2
ykpersonalize -2 -ochal-resp -ochal-hmac -ohmac-lt64 -oserial-api-visible
Install package
Build the package (without signing it):
make builddeb NO_SIGN=1
Install the package:
dpkg -i DEBUILD/yubikey-luks_0.*-1_all.deb
Assign a Yubikey to an LUKS slot
You can now assign the Yubikey to a slot using the tool
yubikey-luks-enroll
Technically this is done by writing the response to your password (1st factor knowledge) created by the Yubikey (2nd factor possession) to a key slot.
Admitted - If the attacker was able to phish this response which looks like this: bd438575f4e8df965c80363f8aa6fe1debbe9ea9 it can be used as normal password.
If you set CONCATENATE=1 option in the file /etc/ykluks.cfg then both your password and Yubikey response will be bundled together and written to key slot: passwordbd438575f4e8df965c80363f8aa6fe1debbe9ea9
If you set HASH=1 option in the file /etc/ykluks.cfg then your password will be hashed with sha256 algorithm before using as challenge for yubikey: printf password | sha256sum | awk '{print $1}' 5e884898da28047151d0e56f8dc6292773603d0d6aabbdd62a11ef721d1542d8
Changing the welcome text
If you want to change the welcome text a.k.a. the passphrase prompt you can edit the file /etc/ykluks.cfg.
After changing this file, you need to run
update-initramfs -u
so that the changes get transferred to the initramfs.
Use 1FA to allow unattended, passwordless boot
In order to bypass the password prompt and allow the system to boot when the paired Yubikey is present without requiring interactive input of the challenge password, then you must edit /etc/ykluks.cfg to contain the challenge password that you previously enrolled (and which should be bypassed). Example:
YUBIKEY_CHALLENGE="enrolled-challenge-password"
Leave this empty, if you want to do 2FA -- i.e. being asked for the password during boot time.
Note that 1FA, when using this feature, will weaken security as it no longer prompts for the chalenge password and will decrypt the volume with only the Yubikey being present at boot time.
After changing this file, you need to run
update-initramfs -u
so that the changes get transferred to the initramfs.
Enable yubikey-luks initramfs module
In order to use yubikey-luks for unlocking LUKS encrypted volume at boot you must append keyscript=/usr/share/yubikey-luks/ykluks-keyscript to the /etc/crypttab file. Example:
cryptroot /dev/sda none luks,keyscript=/usr/share/yubikey-luks/ykluks-keyscript
After changing this file, you need to run
update-initramfs -u
so that the changes get transferred to the initramfs.
Alternatively you may add keyscript=/sbin/ykluks-keyscript to your boot cmdline in cryptoptions. Example:
cryptoptions=target=cryptroot,source=/dev/sda,keyscript=/sbin/ykluks-keyscript
Enable yubikey-luks-suspend module
You can enable yubikey-luks-suspend module which allows for automatically locking encrypted LUKS containers and wiping keys from memory on suspend and unlocking them on resume by using luksSuspend, luksResume commands.
systemctl enable yubikey-luks-suspend.service
Open LUKS container protected with yubikey-luks
You can open LUKS container protected with yubikey-luks on running system
yubikey-luks-open
Manage several Yubikeys and Machines
It is possible to manage several Yubikeys and machines. You need to use privacyIDEA to manage the Yubikeys and the privacyIDEA admin client to push the Yubikey responses to the LUKS slots.
See https://github.com/privacyidea/privacyideaadm and https://github.com/privacyidea/privacyidea