summaryrefslogtreecommitdiff
path: root/docs/ccid.txt
blob: c7fda6d07d9fee0a74dd465607ff9d99d8ac8fe4 (plain)
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
29
30
31
32
33
34
35
36
37
38
39
40
41
42
43
44
45
46
47
48
49
50
51
52
53
54
55
56
57
58
59
60
61
62
63
64
65
66
67
68
69
70
71
72
73
74
75
76
77
78
79
80
81
82
83
84
85
86
87
88
89
90
91
92
93
94
95
96
97
98
99
100
101
102
103
104
105
106
107
108
109
110
111
112
113
114
115
116
117
118
119
120
121
122
123
124
125
126
127
128
129
130
131
132
133
134
135
136
137
138
139
140
141
142
143
144
145
146
147
148
149
150
151
152
153
154
155
156
157
158
159
160
161
162
163
164
165
166
167
168
169
170
171
172
173
174
175
176
177
178
179
180
181
QEMU CCID Device Documentation.

Contents
1. USB CCID device
2. Building
3. Using ccid-card-emulated with hardware
4. Using ccid-card-emulated with certificates
5. Using ccid-card-passthru with client side hardware
6. Using ccid-card-passthru with client side certificates
7. Passthrough protocol scenario
8. libcacard

1. USB CCID device

The USB CCID device is a USB device implementing the CCID specification, which
lets one connect smart card readers that implement the same spec. For more
information see the specification:

 Universal Serial Bus
 Device Class: Smart Card
 CCID
 Specification for
 Integrated Circuit(s) Cards Interface Devices
 Revision 1.1
 April 22rd, 2005

Smartcards are used for authentication, single sign on, decryption in
public/private schemes and digital signatures. A smartcard reader on the client
cannot be used on a guest with simple usb passthrough since it will then not be
available on the client, possibly locking the computer when it is "removed". On
the other hand this device can let you use the smartcard on both the client and
the guest machine. It is also possible to have a completely virtual smart card
reader and smart card (i.e. not backed by a physical device) using this device.

2. Building

The cryptographic functions and access to the physical card is done via NSS.

Installing NSS:

In redhat/fedora:
    yum install nss-devel
In ubuntu/debian:
    apt-get install libnss3-dev
    (not tested on ubuntu)

Configuring and building:
    ./configure --enable-smartcard && make


3. Using ccid-card-emulated with hardware

Assuming you have a working smartcard on the host with the current
user, using NSS, qemu acts as another NSS client using ccid-card-emulated:

    qemu -usb -device usb-ccid -device ccid-card-emulated


4. Using ccid-card-emulated with certificates stored in files

You must create the CA and card certificates. This is a one time process.
We use NSS certificates:

    mkdir fake-smartcard
    cd fake-smartcard
    certutil -N -d sql:$PWD
    certutil -S -d sql:$PWD -s "CN=Fake Smart Card CA" -x -t TC,TC,TC -n fake-smartcard-ca
    certutil -S -d sql:$PWD -t ,, -s "CN=John Doe" -n id-cert -c fake-smartcard-ca
    certutil -S -d sql:$PWD -t ,, -s "CN=John Doe (signing)" --nsCertType smime -n signing-cert -c fake-smartcard-ca
    certutil -S -d sql:$PWD -t ,, -s "CN=John Doe (encryption)" --nsCertType sslClient -n encryption-cert -c fake-smartcard-ca

Note: you must have exactly three certificates.

You can use the emulated card type with the certificates backend:

    qemu -usb -device usb-ccid -device ccid-card-emulated,backend=certificates,db=sql:$PWD,cert1=id-cert,cert2=signing-cert,cert3=encryption-cert

To use the certificates in the guest, export the CA certificate:

    certutil -L -r -d sql:$PWD -o fake-smartcard-ca.cer -n fake-smartcard-ca

and import it in the guest:

    certutil -A -d /etc/pki/nssdb -i fake-smartcard-ca.cer -t TC,TC,TC -n fake-smartcard-ca

In a Linux guest you can then use the CoolKey PKCS #11 module to access
the card:

    certutil -d /etc/pki/nssdb -L -h all

It will prompt you for the PIN (which is the password you assigned to the
certificate database early on), and then show you all three certificates
together with the manually imported CA cert:

    Certificate Nickname                        Trust Attributes
    fake-smartcard-ca                           CT,C,C
    John Doe:CAC ID Certificate                 u,u,u
    John Doe:CAC Email Signature Certificate    u,u,u
    John Doe:CAC Email Encryption Certificate   u,u,u

If this does not happen, CoolKey is not installed or not registered with
NSS.  Registration can be done from Firefox or the command line:

    modutil -dbdir /etc/pki/nssdb -add "CAC Module" -libfile /usr/lib64/pkcs11/libcoolkeypk11.so
    modutil -dbdir /etc/pki/nssdb -list


5. Using ccid-card-passthru with client side hardware

on the host specify the ccid-card-passthru device with a suitable chardev:

    qemu -chardev socket,server,host=0.0.0.0,port=2001,id=ccid,nowait -usb -device usb-ccid -device ccid-card-passthru,chardev=ccid

on the client run vscclient, built when you built QEMU:

    vscclient <qemu-host> 2001


6. Using ccid-card-passthru with client side certificates

This case is not particularly useful, but you can use it to debug
your setup if #4 works but #5 does not.

Follow instructions as per #4, except run QEMU and vscclient as follows:
Run qemu as per #5, and run vscclient from the "fake-smartcard"
directory as follows:

    qemu -chardev socket,server,host=0.0.0.0,port=2001,id=ccid,nowait -usb -device usb-ccid -device ccid-card-passthru,chardev=ccid
    vscclient -e "db=\"sql:$PWD\" use_hw=no soft=(,Test,CAC,,id-cert,signing-cert,encryption-cert)" <qemu-host> 2001


7. Passthrough protocol scenario

This is a typical interchange of messages when using the passthru card device.
usb-ccid is a usb device. It defaults to an unattached usb device on startup.
usb-ccid expects a chardev and expects the protocol defined in
cac_card/vscard_common.h to be passed over that.
The usb-ccid device can be in one of three modes:
 * detached
 * attached with no card
 * attached with card

A typical interchange is: (the arrow shows who started each exchange, it can be client
originated or guest originated)

client event      |      vscclient           |    passthru    |     usb-ccid  |  guest event
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                  |      VSC_Init            |                |               |
                  |      VSC_ReaderAdd       |                |     attach    |
                  |                          |                |               |  sees new usb device.
card inserted ->  |                          |                |               |
                  |      VSC_ATR             |   insert       |     insert    |  see new card
                  |                          |                |               |
                  |      VSC_APDU            |   VSC_APDU     |               | <- guest sends APDU
client<->physical |                          |                |               |
card APDU exchange|                          |                |               |
client response ->|      VSC_APDU            |   VSC_APDU     |               |  receive APDU response
                                                    ...
                                    [APDU<->APDU repeats several times]
                                                    ...
card removed  ->  |                          |                |               |
                  |      VSC_CardRemove      |   remove       |    remove     |   card removed
                                                    ...
                                    [(card insert, apdu's, card remove) repeat]
                                                    ...
kill/quit         |                          |                |               |
  vscclient       |                          |                |               |
                  |      VSC_ReaderRemove    |                |    detach     |
                  |                          |                |               |   usb device removed.


8. libcacard

Both ccid-card-emulated and vscclient use libcacard as the card emulator.
libcacard implements a completely virtual CAC (DoD standard for smart
cards) compliant card and uses NSS to retrieve certificates and do
any encryption.  The backend can then be a real reader and card, or
certificates stored in files.

For documentation of the library see docs/libcacard.txt.