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182 lines
7.5 KiB
Plaintext
182 lines
7.5 KiB
Plaintext
QEMU CCID Device Documentation.
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Contents
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1. USB CCID device
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2. Building
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3. Using ccid-card-emulated with hardware
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4. Using ccid-card-emulated with certificates
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5. Using ccid-card-passthru with client side hardware
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6. Using ccid-card-passthru with client side certificates
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7. Passthrough protocol scenario
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8. libcacard
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1. USB CCID device
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The USB CCID device is a USB device implementing the CCID specification, which
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lets one connect smart card readers that implement the same spec. For more
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information see the specification:
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Universal Serial Bus
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Device Class: Smart Card
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CCID
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Specification for
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Integrated Circuit(s) Cards Interface Devices
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Revision 1.1
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April 22rd, 2005
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Smartcards are used for authentication, single sign on, decryption in
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public/private schemes and digital signatures. A smartcard reader on the client
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cannot be used on a guest with simple usb passthrough since it will then not be
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available on the client, possibly locking the computer when it is "removed". On
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the other hand this device can let you use the smartcard on both the client and
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the guest machine. It is also possible to have a completely virtual smart card
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reader and smart card (i.e. not backed by a physical device) using this device.
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2. Building
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The cryptographic functions and access to the physical card is done via NSS.
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Installing NSS:
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In redhat/fedora:
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yum install nss-devel
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In ubuntu/debian:
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apt-get install libnss3-dev
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(not tested on ubuntu)
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Configuring and building:
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./configure --enable-smartcard && make
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3. Using ccid-card-emulated with hardware
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Assuming you have a working smartcard on the host with the current
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user, using NSS, qemu acts as another NSS client using ccid-card-emulated:
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qemu -usb -device usb-ccid -device ccid-card-emulated
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4. Using ccid-card-emulated with certificates stored in files
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You must create the CA and card certificates. This is a one time process.
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We use NSS certificates:
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mkdir fake-smartcard
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cd fake-smartcard
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certutil -N -d sql:$PWD
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certutil -S -d sql:$PWD -s "CN=Fake Smart Card CA" -x -t TC,TC,TC -n fake-smartcard-ca
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certutil -S -d sql:$PWD -t ,, -s "CN=John Doe" -n id-cert -c fake-smartcard-ca
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certutil -S -d sql:$PWD -t ,, -s "CN=John Doe (signing)" --nsCertType smime -n signing-cert -c fake-smartcard-ca
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certutil -S -d sql:$PWD -t ,, -s "CN=John Doe (encryption)" --nsCertType sslClient -n encryption-cert -c fake-smartcard-ca
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Note: you must have exactly three certificates.
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You can use the emulated card type with the certificates backend:
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qemu -usb -device usb-ccid -device ccid-card-emulated,backend=certificates,db=sql:$PWD,cert1=id-cert,cert2=signing-cert,cert3=encryption-cert
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To use the certificates in the guest, export the CA certificate:
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certutil -L -r -d sql:$PWD -o fake-smartcard-ca.cer -n fake-smartcard-ca
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and import it in the guest:
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certutil -A -d /etc/pki/nssdb -i fake-smartcard-ca.cer -t TC,TC,TC -n fake-smartcard-ca
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In a Linux guest you can then use the CoolKey PKCS #11 module to access
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the card:
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certutil -d /etc/pki/nssdb -L -h all
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It will prompt you for the PIN (which is the password you assigned to the
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certificate database early on), and then show you all three certificates
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together with the manually imported CA cert:
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Certificate Nickname Trust Attributes
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fake-smartcard-ca CT,C,C
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John Doe:CAC ID Certificate u,u,u
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John Doe:CAC Email Signature Certificate u,u,u
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John Doe:CAC Email Encryption Certificate u,u,u
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If this does not happen, CoolKey is not installed or not registered with
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NSS. Registration can be done from Firefox or the command line:
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modutil -dbdir /etc/pki/nssdb -add "CAC Module" -libfile /usr/lib64/pkcs11/libcoolkeypk11.so
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modutil -dbdir /etc/pki/nssdb -list
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5. Using ccid-card-passthru with client side hardware
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on the host specify the ccid-card-passthru device with a suitable chardev:
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qemu -chardev socket,server,host=0.0.0.0,port=2001,id=ccid,nowait -usb -device usb-ccid -device ccid-card-passthru,chardev=ccid
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on the client run vscclient, built when you built QEMU:
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vscclient <qemu-host> 2001
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6. Using ccid-card-passthru with client side certificates
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This case is not particularly useful, but you can use it to debug
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your setup if #4 works but #5 does not.
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Follow instructions as per #4, except run QEMU and vscclient as follows:
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Run qemu as per #5, and run vscclient from the "fake-smartcard"
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directory as follows:
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qemu -chardev socket,server,host=0.0.0.0,port=2001,id=ccid,nowait -usb -device usb-ccid -device ccid-card-passthru,chardev=ccid
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vscclient -e "db=\"sql:$PWD\" use_hw=no soft=(,Test,CAC,,id-cert,signing-cert,encryption-cert)" <qemu-host> 2001
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7. Passthrough protocol scenario
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This is a typical interchange of messages when using the passthru card device.
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usb-ccid is a usb device. It defaults to an unattached usb device on startup.
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usb-ccid expects a chardev and expects the protocol defined in
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cac_card/vscard_common.h to be passed over that.
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The usb-ccid device can be in one of three modes:
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* detached
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* attached with no card
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* attached with card
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A typical interchange is: (the arrow shows who started each exchange, it can be client
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originated or guest originated)
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client event | vscclient | passthru | usb-ccid | guest event
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----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
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| VSC_Init | | |
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| VSC_ReaderAdd | | attach |
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| | | | sees new usb device.
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card inserted -> | | | |
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| VSC_ATR | insert | insert | see new card
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| VSC_APDU | VSC_APDU | | <- guest sends APDU
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client<->physical | | | |
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card APDU exchange| | | |
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client response ->| VSC_APDU | VSC_APDU | | receive APDU response
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...
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[APDU<->APDU repeats several times]
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...
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card removed -> | | | |
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| VSC_CardRemove | remove | remove | card removed
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...
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[(card insert, apdu's, card remove) repeat]
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...
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kill/quit | | | |
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vscclient | | | |
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| VSC_ReaderRemove | | detach |
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| | | | usb device removed.
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8. libcacard
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Both ccid-card-emulated and vscclient use libcacard as the card emulator.
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libcacard implements a completely virtual CAC (DoD standard for smart
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cards) compliant card and uses NSS to retrieve certificates and do
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any encryption. The backend can then be a real reader and card, or
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certificates stored in files.
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For documentation of the library see docs/libcacard.txt.
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