| .. _canokey: |
| |
| CanoKey QEMU |
| ------------ |
| |
| CanoKey [1]_ is an open-source secure key with supports of |
| |
| * U2F / FIDO2 with Ed25519 and HMAC-secret |
| * OpenPGP Card V3.4 with RSA4096, Ed25519 and more [2]_ |
| * PIV (NIST SP 800-73-4) |
| * HOTP / TOTP |
| * NDEF |
| |
| All these platform-independent features are in canokey-core [3]_. |
| |
| For different platforms, CanoKey has different implementations, |
| including both hardware implementations and virtual cards: |
| |
| * CanoKey STM32 [4]_ |
| * CanoKey Pigeon [5]_ |
| * (virt-card) CanoKey USB/IP |
| * (virt-card) CanoKey FunctionFS |
| |
| In QEMU, yet another CanoKey virt-card is implemented. |
| CanoKey QEMU exposes itself as a USB device to the guest OS. |
| |
| With the same software configuration as a hardware key, |
| the guest OS can use all the functionalities of a secure key as if |
| there was actually an hardware key plugged in. |
| |
| CanoKey QEMU provides much convenience for debugging: |
| |
| * libcanokey-qemu supports debugging output thus developers can |
| inspect what happens inside a secure key |
| * CanoKey QEMU supports trace event thus event |
| * QEMU USB stack supports pcap thus USB packet between the guest |
| and key can be captured and analysed |
| |
| Then for developers: |
| |
| * For developers on software with secure key support (e.g. FIDO2, OpenPGP), |
| they can see what happens inside the secure key |
| * For secure key developers, USB packets between guest OS and CanoKey |
| can be easily captured and analysed |
| |
| Also since this is a virtual card, it can be easily used in CI for testing |
| on code coping with secure key. |
| |
| Building |
| ======== |
| |
| libcanokey-qemu is required to use CanoKey QEMU. |
| |
| .. code-block:: shell |
| |
| git clone https://github.com/canokeys/canokey-qemu |
| mkdir canokey-qemu/build |
| pushd canokey-qemu/build |
| |
| If you want to install libcanokey-qemu in a different place, |
| add ``-DCMAKE_INSTALL_PREFIX=/path/to/your/place`` to cmake below. |
| |
| .. code-block:: shell |
| |
| cmake .. |
| make |
| make install # may need sudo |
| popd |
| |
| Then configuring and building: |
| |
| .. code-block:: shell |
| |
| # depending on your env, lib/pkgconfig can be lib64/pkgconfig |
| export PKG_CONFIG_PATH=/path/to/your/place/lib/pkgconfig:$PKG_CONFIG_PATH |
| ./configure --enable-canokey && make |
| |
| Using CanoKey QEMU |
| ================== |
| |
| CanoKey QEMU stores all its data on a file of the host specified by the argument |
| when invoking qemu. |
| |
| .. parsed-literal:: |
| |
| |qemu_system| -usb -device canokey,file=$HOME/.canokey-file |
| |
| Note: you should keep this file carefully as it may contain your private key! |
| |
| The first time when the file is used, it is created and initialized by CanoKey, |
| afterwards CanoKey QEMU would just read this file. |
| |
| After the guest OS boots, you can check that there is a USB device. |
| |
| For example, If the guest OS is an Linux machine. You may invoke lsusb |
| and find CanoKey QEMU there: |
| |
| .. code-block:: shell |
| |
| $ lsusb |
| Bus 001 Device 002: ID 20a0:42d4 Clay Logic CanoKey QEMU |
| |
| You may setup the key as guided in [6]_. The console for the key is at [7]_. |
| |
| Debugging |
| ========= |
| |
| CanoKey QEMU consists of two parts, ``libcanokey-qemu.so`` and ``canokey.c``, |
| the latter of which resides in QEMU. The former provides core functionality |
| of a secure key while the latter provides platform-dependent functions: |
| USB packet handling. |
| |
| If you want to trace what happens inside the secure key, when compiling |
| libcanokey-qemu, you should add ``-DQEMU_DEBUG_OUTPUT=ON`` in cmake command |
| line: |
| |
| .. code-block:: shell |
| |
| cmake .. -DQEMU_DEBUG_OUTPUT=ON |
| |
| If you want to trace events happened in canokey.c, use |
| |
| .. parsed-literal:: |
| |
| |qemu_system| --trace "canokey_*" \\ |
| -usb -device canokey,file=$HOME/.canokey-file |
| |
| If you want to capture USB packets between the guest and the host, you can: |
| |
| .. parsed-literal:: |
| |
| |qemu_system| -usb -device canokey,file=$HOME/.canokey-file,pcap=key.pcap |
| |
| Limitations |
| =========== |
| |
| Currently libcanokey-qemu.so has dozens of global variables as it was originally |
| designed for embedded systems. Thus one qemu instance can not have |
| multiple CanoKey QEMU running, namely you can not |
| |
| .. parsed-literal:: |
| |
| |qemu_system| -usb -device canokey,file=$HOME/.canokey-file \\ |
| -device canokey,file=$HOME/.canokey-file2 |
| |
| Also, there is no lock on canokey-file, thus two CanoKey QEMU instance |
| can not read one canokey-file at the same time. |
| |
| References |
| ========== |
| |
| .. [1] `<https://canokeys.org>`_ |
| .. [2] `<https://docs.canokeys.org/userguide/openpgp/#supported-algorithm>`_ |
| .. [3] `<https://github.com/canokeys/canokey-core>`_ |
| .. [4] `<https://github.com/canokeys/canokey-stm32>`_ |
| .. [5] `<https://github.com/canokeys/canokey-pigeon>`_ |
| .. [6] `<https://docs.canokeys.org/>`_ |
| .. [7] `<https://console.canokeys.org/>`_ |