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  1. Scute
  2. =====
  3. This is a PKCS #11 implementation for the GnuPG Agent using the GnuPG
  4. Smart Card Daemon. Currently, only the OpenPGP card is supported.
  5. TOC
  6. ===
  7. * Purpose
  8. * Prerequisites
  9. * Installation
  10. * Client Authentication
  11. * Troubleshooting
  12. * Features and Limitations
  13. * Development
  14. * Mozilla Bugs
  15. * Copyright and License
  16. Purpose
  17. =======
  18. Scute enables you to use your OpenPGP smart card for client
  19. authentication with SSL in Mozilla. See below for more details on how
  20. to get this working.
  21. In the future, Scute will enable you to use your OpenPGP smart card
  22. for email decryption and signing with Thunderbird, using the X.509
  23. protocol.
  24. Prerequisites
  25. =============
  26. For the compilation:
  27. * libgpg-error 1.14
  28. * libassuan 2.0.0
  29. At runtime:
  30. * Mozilla (or any other supported application using PKCS #11).
  31. * GnuPG 2.0, in particular: gpg-agent, scdaemon
  32. * Pinentry
  33. Installation
  34. ============
  35. To install the PKCS #11 Module, follow the generic installation
  36. instructions in the file INSTALL that accompanies this software. You
  37. also need to install the Mozilla Personal Security Manager (PSM),
  38. which may come with your GNU/Linux distribution in a package named
  39. mozilla-psm or similar.
  40. After installation, you can configure Mozilla to use Scute by
  41. visiting the preferences dialog in the "advanced" category, under
  42. "Security Devices". There you can "load" the module from its
  43. installed path, e.g. "/usr/lib/libscute.so".
  44. Client Authentication
  45. =====================
  46. For client authentication to work, several steps need to be completed.
  47. Depending on your situation, some of these steps may be performed by
  48. third parties, like service providers. However, they can also all be
  49. performed locally, if use of client authentication with a local
  50. service is desired.
  51. For this introduction, we assume an Apache web server with SSL at the
  52. server side, and a connecting client running Firefox. As a
  53. certification authority (CA) we use OpenSSL. Scute provides a PKCS #11
  54. compatible security device to Firefox for client authentication. This
  55. security device gives Firefox access to the client's OpenPGP smart
  56. card.
  57. The Client Perspective
  58. ----------------------
  59. To get things started, we have to prepare an initialised OpenPGP smart
  60. card by uploading an off-card key or generating a key on the card.
  61. The card you got may already have been initialised. Otherwise, you
  62. can find more information on this step in the smartcard HowTo, which
  63. also documents other basic card operations:
  64. http://www.gnupg.org/(en)/howtos/card-howto/en/smartcard-howto.html
  65. Once the card is initialised, we have to generate a certificate
  66. signing request (CSR) to get the authentication key of the card
  67. (OPENPGP.3, the third key on the card) certified by the CA. This can
  68. be done using "gpgsm --gen-key". For the CSR, a distinguished name
  69. (DN) is required. Your CA will have more information about what this
  70. DN should contain. Below we use an example for a test-employee
  71. "Floppy Head" of the test-CA that ships with OpenSSL ("Snake Oil,
  72. Ltd.").
  73. Generating the CSR is then just a matter of answering a few questions:
  74. $ gpgsm --gen-key > client.csr
  75. Please select what kind of key you want:
  76. (1) RSA
  77. (2) Existing key
  78. (3) Existing key from card
  79. Your selection? 3
  80. Serial number of the card: 355F9746499F0D4B4ECEE4928B007D16
  81. Available keys:
  82. (1) D53137B94C38D9BF6A199706EA6D5253 OPENPGP.1
  83. (2) B0CD1A9DFC3539A1D6A8B851A11C8665 OPENPGP.2
  84. (3) 53DB41052CC590A40B403F3E6350E5DC OPENPGP.3
  85. Your selection? 3
  86. Possible actions for a RSA key:
  87. (1) sign, encrypt
  88. (2) sign
  89. (3) encrypt
  90. Your selection? 2
  91. Enter the X.509 subject name: CN=Floppy Head,OU="Webserver Team",O="Snake Oil, Ltd",L="Snake Town",ST="Snake Desert",C=XY
  92. Enter email addresses (end with an empty line):
  93. > floppy.head@example.org
  94. >
  95. Enter DNS names (optional; end with an empty line):
  96. >
  97. Enter URIs (optional; end with an empty line):
  98. >
  99. Create self-signed certificate? (y/N) n
  100. These parameters are used:
  101. Key-Type: card:OPENPGP.3
  102. Key-Length: 1024
  103. Key-Usage: sign
  104. Name-DN: CN=Floppy Head,OU="Webserver Team",O="Snake Oil, Ltd",L="Snake Town",ST="Snake Desert",C=XY
  105. Name-Email: floppy.head@example.org
  106. Proceed with creation? (y/N) y
  107. Now creating certificate request. This may take a while ...
  108. gpgsm: about to sign the CSR for key: &53DB41052CC590A40B403F3E6350E5DC
  109. gpgsm: certificate request created
  110. Ready. You should now send this request to your CA.
  111. It is required to enter the signing PIN of the card to complete this
  112. step. The certificate can then be found in the file "/tmp/floppy.csr".
  113. This file should then be sent to the CA for certification (see below).
  114. The CA will return to the client a certificate "/tmp/floppy.crt", who
  115. can then import the issuer certificate of the CA (in this example, we
  116. access directly the local server certificate) and its own certificate
  117. with gpgsm:
  118. $ gpgsm --import /etc/apache/ssl.crt/snakeoil-ca-rsa.crt
  119. gpgsm: total number processed: 1
  120. gpgsm: imported: 1
  121. marcus@ulysses:~/g10/projects/pkcs11-for-scdaemon/ca/usercert/card3$ gpgsm --import /tmp/floppy.crt
  122. gpgsm: total number processed: 1
  123. gpgsm: unchanged: 1
  124. $ gpgsm --list-keys Floppy
  125. Serial number: 08
  126. Issuer: /CN=Snake Oil CA/OU=Certificate Authority/O=Snake Oil, Ltd/L=Snake Town/ST=Snake Desert/C=XY/EMail=ca@snakeoil.dom
  127. Subject: /CN=Floppy Head/OU=Webserver Team/O=Snake Oil, Ltd/ST=Snake Desert/C=XY
  128. validity: 2006-10-11 13:17:08 through 2007-10-11 13:17:08
  129. key type: 1024 bit RSA
  130. fingerprint: C9:08:0E:86:92:6C:7B:4B:8C:23:1C:9D:D7:15:BF:D4:A4:00:54:11
  131. Now the client can configure his web browser. If desired, the client
  132. can install the web servers certificate (alternatively, Firefox will
  133. ask when establishing the initial connection).
  134. To actually perform the client authentication, the client needs to set
  135. up the web browser for use with Scute. The Scute PKCS #11 module,
  136. installed under /usr/lib/libscute.so by default, needs to be loaded as
  137. a security device in Firefox under
  138. Preferences->Advanced->Security->Certificates->Security Devices->Load
  139. When the security device is loaded, card insertion should cause the
  140. security device list be updated with the inserted token (the card), and the certificate that has been imported into gpgsm should be visible under
  141. Preferences->Advanced->Security->Certificates->View Certificates
  142. automatically.
  143. Firefox will by default select the certificate to be used for client
  144. authentication automatically from the list of available certificates.
  145. This setting can be changed if desired in
  146. Preferences->Advanced->Security->Certificates ("Select one
  147. automatically" vs. "Ask me every time")
  148. When the client then attempts to open the URL "https://localhost/" in
  149. this example, the web server will require SSL authentication, which
  150. causes Firefox to look (or ask) for a client certificate. If the
  151. certificate on the card is suitable (or selected), the user will have
  152. to enter the PIN number on the card to sign into the web site.
  153. The CA Perspective
  154. ------------------
  155. The CA will have to process the CSR submitted by the client. After
  156. verifying the identity of the submitter by some external means, the CA
  157. may use for example this OpenSSL command to create a certificate (we
  158. use the example CA shipping with the Apache SSL module on Ubuntu):
  159. # cd /etc/apache/ssl.crt/
  160. # openssl ca -in /tmp/floppy.csr -cert /etc/apache/ssl.crt/snakeoil-ca-rsa.crt -keyfile /etc/apache/ssl.key/snakeoil-ca-rsa.key -out /tmp/floppy.crt
  161. Using configuration from /usr/lib/ssl/openssl.cnf
  162. Check that the request matches the signature
  163. Signature ok
  164. Certificate Details:
  165. Serial Number: 8 (0x8)
  166. Validity
  167. Not Before: Oct 11 13:17:08 2006 GMT
  168. Not After : Oct 11 13:17:08 2007 GMT
  169. Subject:
  170. countryName = XY
  171. stateOrProvinceName = Snake Desert
  172. organizationName = Snake Oil, Ltd
  173. organizationalUnitName = Webserver Team
  174. commonName = Floppy Head
  175. X509v3 extensions:
  176. X509v3 Basic Constraints:
  177. CA:FALSE
  178. Netscape Comment:
  179. OpenSSL Generated Certificate
  180. X509v3 Subject Key Identifier:
  181. 72:AF:B8:13:3D:3D:9D:02:93:E4:D4:56:0C:06:90:4C:26:85:85:5D
  182. X509v3 Authority Key Identifier:
  183. DirName:/C=XY/ST=Snake Desert/L=Snake Town/O=Snake Oil, Ltd/OU=Certificate Authority/CN=Snake Oil CA/emailAddress=ca@snakeoil.dom
  184. serial:00
  185. Certificate is to be certified until Oct 11 13:17:08 2007 GMT (365 days)
  186. Sign the certificate? [y/n]:y
  187. 1 out of 1 certificate requests certified, commit? [y/n]y
  188. Write out database with 1 new entries
  189. Data Base Updated
  190. The resulting file, "/tmp/floppy.crt" is sent back from the CA to the
  191. client along with the issuer certificate.
  192. For more information how to set up and work with a CA using OpenSSL,
  193. please see the OpenSSL documentation.
  194. The Server Perspective
  195. ----------------------
  196. The service provider will set up an Apache web server with SSL
  197. support, and configure it to accept certificates from the CA. This
  198. step is quite involved. Garex has a concise HowTo online at
  199. http://www.garex.net/apache/ about how to do this. Beside the
  200. creation of a certificate that has its own fully qualified domain name
  201. (FQDN) as common name (CN part of the DN), this involves installing
  202. the Apache SSL module and configuration for it, for example in
  203. httpd.conf:
  204. SSLEngine on
  205. SSLCertificateFile /etc/apache/ssl.crt/server.crt
  206. SSLCertificateKeyFile /etc/apache/ssl.key/server.key
  207. SSLVerifyClient require
  208. SSLVerifyDepth 1
  209. SSLCACertificateFile /etc/apache/ssl.crt/snakeoil-ca-rsa.crt
  210. The file server.key is not protected by a passphrase (if it is, this
  211. passphrase needs to be provided when starting up Apache), and
  212. server.crt has "CN=localhost" as part of its DN for this example.
  213. Troubleshooting
  214. ===============
  215. Symptom: Loading the Scute security device in the security device
  216. manager of Firefox fails with "Unable to load module".
  217. Solution: Make sure that Scute is correctly installed, and that all
  218. libraries and executables are available. Make sure that gpg-agent is
  219. running and can be found via the environment variable GPG_AGENT_INFO.
  220. Symptom: Client authentication fails with "<example.com> has received
  221. an incorrect or unexpected message. Error code: -12227".
  222. Solution: Make sure that the correct OpenPGP card is inserted and the
  223. certificate available in GPGSM. Check that the OpenPGP card is
  224. detected correctly in the security device manager and the
  225. corresponding certificate is displayed in the certificate manager of
  226. Firefox.
  227. Symptom: The OpenPGP card is detected and displayed in the security
  228. device manager in Firefox, but no corresponding certificate is
  229. displayed in the certificate manager of Firefox.
  230. Solution: Make sure that the corresponding certificate is imported in
  231. GPGSM.
  232. Features and Limitations
  233. ========================
  234. Scute implements version 2.20 of the PKCS #11 specification.
  235. The OpenPGP smart card application is supported in read-only mode.
  236. The following functions are not supported:
  237. * C_Initialize: No support for native thread package. Locking
  238. callbacks must be provided if multi-threaded operation is desired.
  239. * C_WaitForSlotEvent: Not implemented. The interface as specified by
  240. PKCS #11 is broken anyway, as the function can not safely be
  241. canceled. Thus, we require polling.
  242. * C_GetOperationState, C_SetOperationState: Not supported.
  243. * C_InitToken, C_InitPIN, C_SetPIN: Not supported. No write
  244. operations are allowed. To configure the token, please use the
  245. tools accompanying the GnuPG software suite.
  246. * C_Login, C_Logout: Not supported. No login into the token by the
  247. software is required. Passphrase queries are implemented by the use
  248. of GPG Agent and Pinentry.
  249. * C_EncryptInit, C_Encrypt, C_EncryptUpdate, C_EncryptFinal,
  250. C_DigestInit, C_Digest, C_DigestUpdate, C_DigestKey, C_DigestFinal,
  251. C_VerifyInit, C_Verify, C_VerifyUpdate, C_VerifyFinal,
  252. C_VerifyRecoverInit, C_VerifyRec: Not supported. Only secret key
  253. operations are supported.
  254. * C_SignInit, C_Sign: Currently, only signing 36 bytes
  255. (MD5+SHA1) hashes is supported (used for client authentication).
  256. * C_DecryptInit, C_Decrypt: Not yet supported, but will be in the
  257. future.
  258. * C_SignUpdate, C_SignFinal, C_DecryptUpdate, C_DecryptFinal: No
  259. progressive crypto-operations are supported.
  260. * C_SignRecoverInit, C_SignRecover: Not supported.
  261. * C_DigestEncryptUpdate, C_DecryptDigestUpdate, C_SignEncryptUpdate,
  262. C_DecryptVerifyUpdate: Dual-purpose cryptographic functions are not
  263. supported.
  264. * C_GenerateKey, C_GenerateKeyPair, C_WrapKey, C_UnwrapKey,
  265. C_DeriveKey: Key management functions are not supported. Please use
  266. the tools accompanying the GnuPG software suite to generate and
  267. import keys for use with the token.
  268. * C_SeedRandom, C_GenerateRandom: Not supported at this point.
  269. C_GenerateRandom may be supported in the future, though.
  270. * C_CreateObject, C_CopyObject, C_DestroyObject, C_SetAttributeValue:
  271. Only read-only operations are supported on objects.
  272. * C_GetObjectSize: Not supported.
  273. * CKO_CERTIFICATE:
  274. The label specifies the key on the card used (e.g. OPENPGP.3). The
  275. ID is the fingerprint.
  276. * CKO_PRIVATE_KEY:
  277. The CKA_LOCAL attribute can not be supported by the OpenPGP card.
  278. It is always set to false (as the key on the card may be copied to
  279. the card from an external source).
  280. Development
  281. ===========
  282. Scute is single-threaded. There is a global lock that is taken in all
  283. entry points of Scute, except for C_Initialize, C_Finalize,
  284. C_GetFunctionList, and stubs.
  285. Here are a couple of hints on how to develop PKCS #11 modules for
  286. Mozilla:
  287. libopensc2 ships with a pkcs11-spy library that can be loaded as a
  288. wrapper around the PKCS #11 library you want to use to log all
  289. functions invoked by Mozilla. Here is how to use it:
  290. Set the PKCS11SPY_OUTPUT environment variable to a filename.
  291. pkcs11-spy appends its log messages at the end of this file. Set the
  292. PKCS11SPY environment variable to the filename of the PKCS #11 module
  293. you actually want to use. Start Mozilla within this environment.
  294. There is a different, probably more powerful way to debug Mozilla PKCS
  295. #11 libraries. However, to be able to use it, you need to configure
  296. and compile the Mozilla NSS sources with --enable-debug. Instructions
  297. can be found at:
  298. http://www.mozilla.org/projects/security/pki/nss/tech-notes/tn2.html
  299. Here are a couple of links to more information about implementing a
  300. PKCS #11 module for Mozilla:
  301. Implementing PKCS #11 for the Netscape Security Library
  302. (Caution: The content may be out of date)
  303. http://docs.sun.com/source/816-6150-10/index.htm
  304. http://docs.sun.com/source/816-6150-10/pkcs.htm
  305. Common PKCS #11 Implementation Problems
  306. http://www.mozilla.org/projects/security/pki/pkcs11/netscape/problems.html
  307. PKCS #11 Conformance Testing
  308. http://www.mozilla.org/projects/security/pki/pkcs11/
  309. And of course the Mozilla NSS web page:
  310. http://www.mozilla.org/projects/security/pki/nss/
  311. Mozilla Bugs
  312. ============
  313. Mozilla has a bug that causes the security devices list to become
  314. corrupt when a security device is unloaded: The wrong entry is removed
  315. from the list. This is corrected by waiting for a refresh or closing
  316. and reopening the security device manager.
  317. Copyright and License
  318. =====================
  319. Scute is copyrighted by g10 Code GmbH and licensed under the GNU
  320. General Pubic License version 2 or later with this exception:
  321. In addition, as a special exception, g10 Code GmbH gives permission
  322. to link this library: with the Mozilla Foundation's code for
  323. Mozilla (or with modified versions of it that use the same license
  324. as the "Mozilla" code), and distribute the linked executables. You
  325. must obey the GNU General Public License in all respects for all of
  326. the code used other than "Mozilla". If you modify the software, you
  327. may extend this exception to your version of the software, but you
  328. are not obligated to do so. If you do not wish to do so, delete this
  329. exception statement from your version and from all source files.
  330. g10 Code GmbH
  331. marcus@g10code.com
  332. Copyright 2006, 2009 g10 Code GmbH
  333. This file is free software; as a special exception the author gives
  334. unlimited permission to copy and/or distribute it, with or without
  335. modifications, as long as this notice is preserved.
  336. This file is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but
  337. WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY, to the extent permitted by law; without even the
  338. implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.