openssh-sk-winhello
howdy
openssh-sk-winhello | howdy | |
---|---|---|
7 | 78 | |
181 | 5,409 | |
- | - | |
0.0 | 6.8 | |
over 1 year ago | 24 days ago | |
C | Python | |
GNU Lesser General Public License v3.0 only | MIT License |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
Activity is a relative number indicating how actively a project is being developed. Recent commits have higher weight than older ones.
For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.
openssh-sk-winhello
-
Use TouchID to Authenticate Sudo on macOS
For Windows, it seems it's possible[0, see footnote], however there are problems like general incompatibilities [1], and official support status is " We have this in our backlog. At this point it's not prioritized.".
0: https://github.com/tavrez/openssh-sk-winhello
0.footnote: "Windows Hello also supports other types of authenticators like internal TPM device(if they support generating ECDSA or Ed25519 keys, they can be used instead of FIDO/U2F security keys)."
1: https://github.com/tavrez/openssh-sk-winhello/issues
2: https://github.com/PowerShell/Win32-OpenSSH/issues/1804#issu...
-
Hardening SSH
Awesome article! Also found this tool (tavrez/OpenSsh-sk-winhello) for windows that lets you do this without admin access
-
[QUESTION] Is there a best way to manage multiple SSH on multiple Yubikeys?
Which is also how they are generated when retrieving them on a new computer via ssh-keygen -K since I used the application=ssh:yubikey_5 flag when first generating them. So something like ssh-keygen -t ed25519-sk -O resident -O application=ssh:yubikey_5c, but because I am on Windows I also had the -w winhello.dll flag (In case anyone stumbles on this question)
-
Using Yubikey FIDO with ssh-agent on macOS?
This is what i used but YMMV https://github.com/tavrez/openssh-sk-winhello/releases/tag/v2.0.0
-
Tell HN: GitHub no longer supporting unauthenticated `git://`
> Because AFAIK, (Fido) yubikey support is still missing.
Correct, hopefully Microsoft will provide an updated SSH client soon. It only requires recompiling OpenSSH with the correct flags.
Alternatively, use these build instruction for openssh with FIDO for windows:
https://gist.github.com/martelletto/6a7cf806c6433ac9ce71d66a...
> Using either the PKCS#11 support or the gpg applet requires some extra piece of software
For those wanting to do that, here are some ways:
Using a premade dll:
https://github-wiki-see.page/m/mooltipass/minible/wiki/Setti...
Or with a middleware:
https://github.com/mgbowen/windows-fido-bridge
Using the Hello API:
https://github.com/tavrez/openssh-sk-winhello
Given how many people came with their own ways, I believe there's enough demand for Microsoft to fix that.
- Unable to generate ssh sk keys on Windows 10
-
How often should I rotate my SSH keys?
My knowledge of WebAuthn is limited but their invocation of the relevant API seems like it should work for fingerprints also.
[1] https://github.com/tavrez/openssh-sk-winhello
howdy
- Linux Facial Recognition:
- Budibase, a GUI for building apps on top of SQL, REST, Google Sheets, and open-source alternative to Airtable and Retool, now ships with a 👥 Multiplayer Collaboration, 🤖 Autocomplete Bindings, 🔄 and Synchronous Automations.
- Lenovo Thinkpad e14 Gen 4 AMD?
- The things that I wish GNOME had integrated by default
-
Love the stability
you can even use facial recognition with IR webcam
-
I have a LG gram 16 2 in 1. Does anyone know how well this machine takes to Linux?
Source
-
Is linux-surface kernel necessary when installing fedora 37 on WSLG2?
I just bought a go 2 (not laptop go) this weekend and installed fedora 37 on it. Almost everything worked without the surface kernel except the camera requires v4l2loopback kernel drivers to create a gstreamer device for apps that don’t support libcamera. There were only old versions available in copr but no surface kernel headers available so I couldn’t build the kernel modules. I switched to ubuntu 22.10 and got similar hardware support but more available packages. I’m still trying to figure out how to get the IR sensors to work so I can use howdy for login/sudo. https://github.com/boltgolt/howdy
-
Facial Recognition
First, you'll need to install Howdy.
-
when will PopOS support face id logins?
I've tried using Howdy, but that doesn't seem to work. It's probably because of this issue
-
Webcam very poor quality
Just like with digicams, it is not just about the sensor, but also the image processing itself. Should we omit the IR sensor to replace it with a better firmware-based noise-reduction system? But what about "Howdy" / "Hello" users, if we go this route?
What are some alternatives?
libfido2 - Provides library functionality for FIDO2, including communication with a device over USB or NFC.
fingerprint-gui - Use fingerprint readers with a Linux desktop environment
windows-fido-bridge - An OpenSSH SK middleware that allows you to use a FIDO/U2F security key (e.g. a YubiKey) to SSH into a remote server from WSL or Cygwin.
slimbookface - Slimbook Face is an application that allows you to graphically manage multiple faces with boltgolt/howdy and enable PAM authentication throughout the system, or disable it at login, since login fails in some distributions or desktop environments (like KDE).
wsl2-ssh-pageant - bridge between windows pageant and wsl2
arch-linux-surface - Arch Linux kernel patcher for Surface devices
secretive - Store SSH keys in the Secure Enclave
linux-enable-ir-emitter - Provides support for infrared cameras that are not directly enabled out-of-the box.
sekey - Use Touch ID / Secure Enclave for SSH Authentication!
rtw89 - Driver for Realtek 8852AE, an 802.11ax device
Win32-OpenSSH - Win32 port of OpenSSH
gnome-shell-extension-system76-power - System76 Power Management Extension