Hardware authentication for Linux using ordinary USB Flash Drives.
You can not select more than 25 topics Topics must start with a letter or number, can include dashes ('-') and can be up to 35 characters long.
 
 
 
 
 
aluzzardi 7a0214d293 Migrated core lib to UDisks. Completely removed HAL dependency. 13 years ago
doc Repository cleanup 13 years ago
src Migrated core lib to UDisks. Completely removed HAL dependency. 13 years ago
tools UDisks support 13 years ago
utils Repository cleanup 13 years ago
.gitignore Added .gitignore 13 years ago
COPYING Repository cleanup 13 years ago
ChangeLog Added deny_remote option 13 years ago
Makefile Migrated core lib to UDisks. Completely removed HAL dependency. 13 years ago
README.md Fix markdown escaping 13 years ago

README.md

pam_usb provides hardware authentication for Linux using ordinary USB Flash Drives.

It works with any application supporting PAM, such as su, any login manager (GDM, KDM), etc. The pam_usb package contains:

  • A PAM Module
    • Password-less authentication. Use your USB stick for authentication, don't type passwords anymore.
    • Device auto probing.You don't need to mount the device, or even to configure the device location (sda1, sdb1, etc). pam_usb.so will automatically locate the device using HAL and access its data by itself.
    • Two-factor authentication. Achieve greater security by requiring both the USB stick and the password to authenticate the user.
    • Non-intrusive. pam_usb doesn't require any modifications of the USB storage device to work (no additional partitions required).
    • USB Serial number, model and vendor verification.
    • Support for One Time Pads authentication.
    • You can use the same device accross multiple machines.
    • Support for all kind of removable devices (SD, MMC, etc).
  • Several tools
    • pamusb-agent: trigger actions (such as locking the screen) upon device authentication and removal.
    • pamusb-conf: configuration helper.
    • pamusb-check: integrate pam_usb's authentication engine within your scripts or applications.