How to enable integrated fingerprint reader with BioAPI
This page describes the process of getting the integrated fingerprint reader to work under Linux. It is based on experiences in Ubuntu on a T43. The same works on Fedora 4, SuSE 9.3, SuSE 10, and Gentoo. |
Basic installation
Installing the bioapi framework
Automated installation script
The Script for enabling the fingerprint reader automates the installation of most components (bioapi framework, driver, pam_bioapi, pam setup, device permissions, pamtester and enrolling), for some Linux distributions.
Binary packages
Debian
- If you're using Debian Sid (the unstable branch) you can try the packages from Michael R. Crusoe's site, either version 1.2.3 (recommended) or older versions which might not work with the steps in this howto.
- This seems to work for Ubuntu Breezy/Dapper too, so save yourself some trouble and grab it.
Gentoo
You can either grab the ebuild, or use the source-install procedure below.
Also see http://toe.ch/~tsa/ibm-fingerprint/ for alternative documentation on installing on Gentoo including ebuilds for all the packages used.
Installing from source
- Get the bioapi source:
- I could not compile bioapi with the graphical Qt tools. To do it manually, do the following:
$ tar xjf bioapi-latest.tar.bz2
$ cd bioapi-1.2.2
$ ./configure --with-Qt-dir=no
$ make
- and then as root
# make install
- If make install fails, be sure you're root and then:
# export LD_LIBRARY_PATH=/usr/local/lib
# make install
- and if you want to compile pam_bioapi for auth later
# cp include/bioapi_util.h include/installdefs.h imports/cdsa/v2_0/inc/cssmtype.h /usr/include
- Be aware that checkinstall will not work!
- (I got through configure with Qt, but got a cryptic build error. It all worked fine with Qt disabled as above)
- buzz: This is due to a wrong qt include path, set it manually in configure and everything should work.
- By default, bioapi will install numerous files in /usr/local/{bin,lib,include}, including files with "self-explanatory" names such as /usr/local/bin/Sample. To prevent this pollution:
- Create a dedicated directory, for example /opt/bioapi .
- Append --prefix=/opt/bioapi to the above ./configure command.
- Append /opt/bioapi/bin to $PATH and /opt/bioapi/lib to $LD_LIBRARY_PATH.
- When installing the driver (below), tell it the new install path:
# sh install.sh /opt/bioapi/lib
Installing and configuring the driver
Installing the driver
- Download TFMESS_BSP_LIN_1.0.zip from the UPEK support site and unzip it into a seperate folder, as it will not create one.
- Change to that folder and do as root:
# sh install.sh
- If you're running Gentoo, use
# sh install.sh /usr/lib
- If that fails, it may be that make install failed up above -- try setting LD_LIBRARY_PATH, do the make install again, and come back here and try this again. You also need
mod_install
from bioapi in your PATH.
Configuring permissions for non-root use
If you want to use PAM-aware applications like xscreensaver that are NOT running with root permissions (as opposed to login, gdm or other authentication mechanisms), you may need to do all or at least some of the things in this section. More details on what is necessary on which distributions would be greately appreciated.
- Create two groups, one for access to BioAPI files and the other for access to the usb files. (This is done for full generality; i.e., you may have other USB devices which you want accessable to other users, without exposing your BioAPI configuration to them). Add your normal user (the one you wish to use PAM-aware applications with) to both of these groups. On Debian this is done with
# addgroup --system bioapi
# addgroup --system usbfs
# adduser yournormaluser bioapi
# adduser yournormaluser usbfs
- (where
yournormaluser
is your normal user name). You will need to log out and log back in for this to take effect.
- Set permissions on the BioAPI config/registry directory:
# chown -R root:bioapi /usr/local/var/bioapi/
# chmod -R 770 /usr/local/var/bioapi/
- (change this path if you used an alternate BioAPI install directory above)
- Set permissions on the files in /proc/bus/usb:
# chown -R root:usbfs /proc/bus/usb
# chmod -R g+X /proc/bus/usb
# chown root:usbfs /proc/bus/usb/`lsusb | sed -ne "/0483:2016/s/Bus\ \(.*\)\ Device\ \(.*\):\ .*/\1\/\2/p"`
# chmod 660 /proc/bus/usb/`lsusb | sed -ne "/0483:2016/s/Bus\ \(.*\)\ Device\ \(.*\):\ .*/\1\/\2/p"`
- You may need to replace
lsusb
with its full path, which is something like/sbin/lsusb
or/usr/bin/lsusb
depending on your distro. It might be necessary to put these lines into a script which is run at startup and resume from suspend/hibernate.
- As an alternative to the
chown
/chmod
commands above, you can set mount options for usbfs with a line in /etc/fstab; an example would be
none /proc/bus/usb usbfs defaults,devgid=108,devmode=0660,busgid=108,busmode=0770,listgid=108,listmode=0660 0 0
- where 108 is replaced with the numerical group ID of the usbfs group (you can determine this with something like
cat /etc/group | grep usbfs | cut -d':' -f 3
). Make sure you only have one /proc/bus/usb entry in /etc/fstab. See themount(8)
manpage for more information on these options. This is "cleaner" but seems to have a few weird issues -- see the talk page for details.
- You may also have files in /dev/bus/usb, which the driver will try before /proc/bus/usb. If this is another usbfs mount point (
mount
shows a line containing/dev/bus/usb type usbfs
), then simply follow the above instructions with /dev/bus/usb rather than /proc/bus/usb. Otherwise, you may be running a new kernel (i.e. 2.6.15) that makes usbfs-like files available through /dev/bus/usb. On systems running udev these files are dynamically created; you can configure their permissions by editing a udev config file. On Debian this is done by changing the usb_device line of /etc/udev/permissions.rules to read
SUBSYSTEM=="usb_device", MODE="0660", GROUP="usbfs"
- For the beta versions only, there is a logfile, which needs to exist with the proper permissions:
# touch /var/log/BSP.log && chown root:bioapi /var/log/BSP.log && chmod 660 /var/log/BSP.log
Miscellaneous configuration
- To increase the security level (minimize false accept rate), set this in /etc/tfmessbsp.cfg:
security-level="5"
Testing the driver and enrolling a fingerprint
To test the driver and generate the file containing your fingerprint information, you need a sample program included with the driver. The compilation steps below were discovered by trial and error; if they don't work for you, try the binary Sample
utility that came with the beta versions of the driver (i.e., TFMESS_BSP_LIN_1.0beta2.zip as mentioned above).
Go to the folder where you extracted TFMESS_BSP_LIN_1.0.zip and do:
# cd NonGUI_Sample
- Edit main.c and remove (or comment out) the line
#include "port/bioapi_port.h"
# gcc -o Sample main.c -L/usr/local/lib -lbioapi100 -DUNIX -DLITTLE_ENDIAN
# ./Sample
- Note that Sample may only run as root, unless you've already configured the usbfs file permissions.
- You can try to "e"nroll (to record a fingerprint for an account) and then "v"erify (to test a fingerprint against the one it expects for an account).
- You'll save a step later if you use your own login username as the username to enroll here.
Login via pam_bioapi
The following explains how to add fingerprint authentiation to programs that use the PAM (Pluggable Authentication Modules) framework, such as Gnome's GDM and KDE's KDM and screensaver.
Getting required libs & tools
Installing pam_bioapi
- Prerequisites
- On SuSE 10, I needed to install the pam-devel RPM
- In general, you will need pam itself (standard for most distros) as well as the pam development files (probably an optional package for your distro).
- Get and compile the pam_bioapi module.
$ wget http://www.qrivy.net/~michael/blua/pam_bioapi/pam_bioapi-latest.tar.bz2
$ tar xjf pam_bioapi-latest.tar.bz2
$ cd pam_bioapi-0.2.1
$ wget http://badcode.de/downloads/fingerprint.patch
$ patch -p0 < fingerprint.patch
- If you want to, review the patch. In general you should review all code you download and compile, if possible. The patch comes from this thread.
$ ./configure && make
- and as root
# make install
# cp /usr/local/lib/security/* /lib/security/
- Use the sample tool from the fingerprint reader to create <username>.bir (<username> must be the username you want to login with. gdm will probably break for any login name that has no .bir file).
- As root do:
# SERIAL=`BioAPITest | sed -ne "/Fingerprint/{n;n;s/^.*: \(.\{9\}\)\(.\{4\}\)\(.\{4\}\)\(.\{4\}\)\(.*\)/\1-\2-\3-\4-\5/gp}"`
# echo $SERIAL
should print something like{5550454b-2054-464d-2f45-535320425350}
now.- If it does, do:
# mkdir -p /etc/bioapi/pam/$SERIAL
# cp <username>.bir /etc/bioapi/pam/$SERIAL
- If not, you might just try
# SERIAL={5550454b-2054-464d-2f45-535320425350}
- as this value is hardcoded into the UPEK docs.
Configuring pam
The following part is distribution specific. On Ubuntu or SuSE you can modify /etc/pam.d/common-auth (on Gentoo and Fedora it is /etc/pam.d/system-auth) to look like this:
# # /etc/pam.d/common-auth - authentication settings common to all services # # This file is included from other service-specific PAM config files, # and should contain a list of the authentication modules that define # the central authentication scheme for use on the system # (e.g., /etc/shadow, LDAP, Kerberos, etc.). The default is to use the # traditional Unix authentication mechanisms. # auth sufficient pam_bioapi.so {5550454b-2054-464d-2f45-535320425350} /etc/bioapi/pam/ password sufficient pam_bioapi.so {5550454b-2054-464d-2f45-535320425350} /etc/bioapi/pam/ auth required pam_unix.so nullok_secure
/etc/pam.d/system-auth for Gentoo-Users:
auth sufficient pam_bioapi.so {5550454b-2054-464d-2f45-535320425350} /etc/bioapi/pam/ password sufficient pam_bioapi.so {5550454b-2054-464d-2f45-535320425350} /etc/bioapi/pam/ auth required pam_unix.so nullok_secure auth required pam_env.so auth sufficient pam_unix.so likeauth nullok auth required pam_deny.so account required pam_unix.so password required pam_cracklib.so difok=2 minlen=8 dcredit=2 credit=2 retry=3 password sufficient pam_unix.so nullok md5 shadow use_authtok password required pam_deny.so session required pam_limits.so session required pam_unix.so
With this modification pam immediately starts to use the fingerprint reader to do local authorization (e.g. sudo/gdm use the fingerprint reader).
Note: With a system-auth like above, Gentoo will give you 'account expired' errors. CREATE /etc/pam.d/common-auth like so.
account required pam_unix.so auth sufficient pam_bioapi.so {5550454b-2054-464d-2f45-535320425350} /etc/bioapi/pam/ password sufficient pam_bioapi.so {5550454b-2054-464d-2f45-535320425350} /etc/bioapi/pam/ auth required pam_unix.so nullok_secure session required pam_limits.so session required pam_unix.so
Note that if su/sudo expects to receive the root password (SuSE 10), you need to have fingerprint settings for root (that is, copy in a root.bir as well as a your-username.bir). Otherwise, they get a segmentation fault. Which is a little unfortunate, given that you need to su or sudo to change your settings...
For some applications (kdm, SuSE 10 KDE screen saver), you'll need to enter an empty password (or select the correct user and then enter an empty password) in order to get the fingerprint prompt. kdm didn't give any visual indication it was going to the fingerprint reader, other than the cursor stopped blinking, but I swiped, and it let me in.
Note that sshd may pick up the fingerprint settings from /etc/pam.d/common-auth. I didn't want that, so I removed the "auth include common-auth" line from /etc/pam.d/sshd and replaced it with the lines that were originally in my /etc/pam.d/common-auth. That way most local services use the fingerprint reader, but sshd does not.
Another way to do this is to create a file (/etc/pam.d/bioapi for example) which contains the pam_bioapi.so
lines, and explicitly @include
this before /etc/pam.d/common-auth in the files for services which should use the fingerprint reader. In this case you should leave /etc/pam.d/common-auth alone.
On Fedora, you may need to add /usr/local/lib to your LD_LIBRARY path so that the libraries referenced from pam_bioapi.so get picked up properly. Also the original 'session' terms in /etc/pam.d/system-auth need to be kept.
On Fedora4 or Aurox Linux11, you may need to add /usr/local/lib to ldconfig configuration.
# echo '/usr/local/lib' > /etc/ld.so.conf.d/bioapi.conf
# ldconfig
If you see bioapi libs
# ldconfig -p
then it should work.
Now gdm should pop up an (ugly) image to swipe your finger and... magic - you can login without a password. If you use kdm, there is no pop up. In xdm, enter your username and a blank password, then swipe (there is no popup).
You can do some useful testing with pamtester
, which calls the pam modules as if it were a program of your choice. Examples:
# pamtester xdm yourusername authenticate
$ pamtester xscreensaver yourusername authenticate
where yourusername
is your username. Note that pamtester
should run as root if and only if the program in question does.
Make xscreensaver use the scanner
- Get the needed xscreensaver sources:
$ wget http://www.jwz.org/xscreensaver/xscreensaver-4.23.tar.gz
$ tar xzf xscreensaver-4.23.tar.gz
$ cd xscreensaver-4.23
$ wget http://nax.hn.org/pub/bioapi/xscreensaver-4.22_alternativeAuth.diff
- After reviewing the patch (it's small and straightforward), do
$ patch -p1 < xscreensaver-4.22_alternativeAuth.diff
The patch prevents xscreensaver from opening an authentification window and dispatches the authentification request to another program, in our case pam and pam_bioapi. It should apply with some offset, don't mind that. If it says something about rejected though, then there's a problem.
- Compile with
$ ./configure --with-pam && make
- If you recieve an error like "undefined reference to `XmuPrintDefaultErrorMessage'" then install the libxmu-dev package and run the previous line again
- and then install as root with
$ su -c make install
.
- Make sure that the newly compiled xscreensaver is used:
$ which xscreensaver
should return/usr/local/bin/xscreensaver
.- In case it doesn't, try
$ export PATH=/usr/local/bin:$PATH
and retry.
- Kill the running instance of xscreensaver:
$ xscreensaver-command -exit
- Make sure you have the following line in your ~/.xscreensaver:
alternativeAuth: True
- Now edit /etc/pam.d/xscreensaver to include the following line (If you're on Ubuntu Breezy and you already changed /etc/pam.d/common-auth you should not need to do this.):
auth sufficient pam_bioapi.so {5550454b-2054-464d-2f45-535320425350} /etc/bioapi1.10/pam/
- Start the new xscreensaver
$ xscreensaver
There should be a splash screen with version 4.23.
- Now try:
$ xscreensaver-command -lock
If you have questions or problems with this procedure, ask: t43fingerprint (at) badcode.de .
Package for Debian sid
If you're running Debian sid (the unstable branch) you can also try the patched .deb-package (built from current Debian sources fetched with apt-get source
) from this page, which also has Debian-specific instructions on how to setup the fingerprint reader. Use it on your own risk.
Troubleshooting and Hints
- After installing the driver, don't forget to reboot!
- This might not be necessary. it worked here without having to reboot.
- To see if the fingerprint device is know on the USB bus do:
# lsusb
- as root and you should see a line like:
Bus 003 Device 004: ID 0483:2016 SGS Thomson Microelectronics
- The bus and device number can be different. This should work without the driver installed. If the device does not show up, you have a hardware problem/quirk, Rebooting or removing/inserting USB kernel modules might fix this.
- For some installation, after installing the driver as in section Installing the driver and making´sure the device is recognized, try to test it by going to NonGUI_Sample directory and run
# ./Sample
, one get segmentation fault. In this case, try getting the Beta1 instead of Beta2 of the driver and installing it - There was some confusion about the /etc/bioapi1.10/pam{5550454b-2054-464d-2f45-535320425350} path, this has been fixed in the howto, if you have problems, check the section again, the path needs to have the '-' in them
- When something goes wrong look at the tail of /var/log/auth.log. (on Fedora it is /var/log/secure) Specifically if you see an entry saying something like
pam_bioapi[10480]: Unable to load BioAPI BSP with UUID of {5550454b-2054-464d-2f45-535320425350}, BioAPI error #194d.
Check whether your /proc/bus/usb directory permissions are set up as in the section Installing the driver.
- To get the xscreensaver compiled you might need a bunch of header files (depending on which xscreensaver features you want), in my case I need the following:
- python-gtk2-dev
- libgstreamer0.8-dev
- xlibs-dev
- Sometimes $HOME/.xscreensaver got overwritten, try changing it to read-only.
- If after suspending to RAM and resume, lsusb no longer have "SGS Thomson Microelectronics" entry, try adding a line
# /etc/init.d/hotplug restart
to your /etc/acpi/resume.sh file
- If after resume lsusb shows the device but xscreensaver does not ask for fingerprint for login, you might want to check the permission of the usb bus in the appropriate /proc/bus/usb/ entry. If necessesary you might need to add a line to /etc/acpi/resume.sh as in section Installing the driver to set the permission right.
If it still doesn't work, ask me for help (and make sure all usefull stuff makes it back into this wiki :) to get a starting point as to where your problem is please include the output of:
$ lsusb
# ldconfig -p | grep bioapi
# updatedb && locate bioapi
t43fingerprint (at) badcode.de
(15.12.2005: small Gentoo-update! {darcline (at) gmx.net} with a now fully operational Thinkpad X41 running Gentoo and E17) Thank you badcode!
(20.12.2005: small Suse-update! {marten.gustafson (at) gmail.com} now with a fully operational Thinkpad T43 running Suse 10) Thanks!