Difference between revisions of "How to enable integrated fingerprint reader with fprint"

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(Ubuntu 12.04)
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Log in to the desktop.  Open a terminal.  In the terminal run <tt>pam_fprint_enroll</tt> and swipe your right index finger five times.  Now you should be able to authenticate by swiping your right index finger.
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Log in to the desktop.  Open a terminal.  In the terminal run  
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<pre>
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lsusb
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</pre>
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and look for the "Upek Biometric ... Fingerprint Sensor" device.  Note its three-digit bus and device numbers.
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In the terminal do:
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<pre>
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sudo chmod 666 /dev/bus/usb/<bus>/<dev>
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with the bus and dev numbers you noted above.  Now run
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<pre>
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pam_fprint_enroll
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</pre>
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and swipe your right index finger five times.
  
 
== Ubuntu 11.04 ==
 
== Ubuntu 11.04 ==

Revision as of 22:44, 15 May 2012

Ubuntu 12.04

apt-get install libpam-fprint
dpkg-reconfigure -plow libpam-runtime # Enable fingerprint reader

The needed lines in common-auth should now be present.

$ grep fprint /etc/pam.d/common-auth
auth	[success=2 default=ignore]	pam_fprintd.so 

Log in to the desktop. Open a terminal. In the terminal run

lsusb

and look for the "Upek Biometric ... Fingerprint Sensor" device. Note its three-digit bus and device numbers. In the terminal do:

sudo chmod 666 /dev/bus/usb/<bus>/<dev>

with the bus and dev numbers you noted above. Now run

pam_fprint_enroll

and swipe your right index finger five times.

Ubuntu 11.04

The UPEK integrated fingerprint reader on the ThinkPad X220 is supported in Ubuntu 11.04 (natty).

Install the necessary packages if they aren't already present.

aptitude install libpam-fprintd

The needed lines in common-auth should now be present.

$ grep fprint /etc/pam.d/common-auth
auth	[success=2 default=ignore]	pam_fprintd.so 

Log in to the desktop. Open a terminal. In the terminal run fprintd-enroll and swipe your right index finger five times. Now you should be able to authenticate by swiping your right index finger.

If you have an encrypted home directory then logging in from GDM by fingerprint does not work: the home directory cannot be decrypted. The solution is to log in from GDM with a password. (You encrypted your home directory so that even if someone has physical access to your computer, and it's turned off, then she can't read your files without taking it to the NSA. But if she's a bit clever and handy she can fool the fingerprint reader using a fingerprint lifted from the computer case.)

The problem is that GDM follows the default authentication procedure which starts with an attempt to read a fingerprint. Only once this fails or times out is a password requested. That is not convenient. To eliminate fingerprint authentication from the display manager login, edit /etc/pam.d/gdm or /etc/pam.d/lightdm so that it includes /etc/pam.d/common-auth-nofinger rather than /etc/pam.d/common-auth; copy /etc/pam.d/common-auth to /etc/pam.d/common-auth-nofinger and remove the line auth [success=3 default=ignore] pam_fprintd.so from the latter.