Setting up fprintd for swaylock: Difference between revisions

From Alpine Linux
No edit summary
No edit summary
Line 9: Line 9:
Install the fprintd package:
Install the fprintd package:


<syntaxhighlight lang="bash">
doas apk add fprintd
doas apk add fprintd
</syntaxhighlight>


== Configure PolicyKit Permissions ==
== Configure PolicyKit Permissions ==
Line 17: Line 15:
Upon installation, standard users are not authorized to enroll fingerprints. Create a PolicyKit rule to allow members of the <code>input</code> group to manage fingerprints:
Upon installation, standard users are not authorized to enroll fingerprints. Create a PolicyKit rule to allow members of the <code>input</code> group to manage fingerprints:


<syntaxhighlight lang="bash">
doas tee /etc/polkit-1/rules.d/50-fingerprint.rules << 'EOF'
doas tee /etc/polkit-1/rules.d/50-fingerprint.rules << 'EOF'
polkit.addRule(function (action, subject) {
polkit.addRule(function (action, subject) {
    if (action.id.indexOf("net.reactivated.fprint.") == 0) {
    if (action.id.indexOf("net.reactivated.fprint.") == 0) {
        if (subject.isInGroup("input")) {
        if (subject.isInGroup("input")) {
            return polkit.Result.YES;
            return polkit.Result.YES;
        }
        }
    }
    }
});
});
EOF
EOF
</syntaxhighlight>


Add your user to the <code>input</code> group:
Add your user to the <code>input</code> group:


<syntaxhighlight lang="bash">
doas adduser $USER input
doas adduser $USER input
</syntaxhighlight>


{{Note|You must log out and back in (or reboot) for the group membership to take effect.}}
'''Note:''' You must log out and back in (or reboot) for the group membership to take effect.


== Enroll Fingerprints ==
== Enroll Fingerprints ==
Line 41: Line 35:
If you previously enrolled fingerprints as root (or want to start fresh), delete existing enrollments:
If you previously enrolled fingerprints as root (or want to start fresh), delete existing enrollments:


<syntaxhighlight lang="bash">
# Delete fingerprints for current user
# Delete fingerprints for current user
fprintd-delete $(whoami)
fprintd-delete $(whoami)
 
# If you accidentally enrolled as root, delete those too
# If you accidentally enrolled as root, delete those too
doas fprintd-delete root
doas fprintd-delete root
</syntaxhighlight>


Enroll your fingerprint(s):
Enroll your fingerprint(s):


<syntaxhighlight lang="bash">
fprintd-enroll
fprintd-enroll
</syntaxhighlight>


Verify the enrollment works:
Verify the enrollment works:


<syntaxhighlight lang="bash">
fprintd-verify
fprintd-verify
</syntaxhighlight>


== Configure PAM for swaylock ==
== Configure PAM for swaylock ==
Line 65: Line 53:
Create the PAM configuration for swaylock:
Create the PAM configuration for swaylock:


<syntaxhighlight lang="bash">
doas tee /etc/pam.d/swaylock << 'EOF'
doas tee /etc/pam.d/swaylock << 'EOF'
# Try password authentication first
# Try password authentication first
auth sufficient pam_unix.so nullok
auth sufficient pam_unix.so nullok
# If no password provided, try fingerprint
# If no password provided, try fingerprint
auth sufficient pam_fprintd.so ignore-empty-password
auth sufficient pam_fprintd.so ignore-empty-password
auth required pam_deny.so
auth required pam_deny.so
 
# KWallet integration (optional)
# KWallet integration (optional)
-auth    optional        pam_kwallet.so
-auth    optional        pam_kwallet.so
-auth    optional        pam_kwallet5.so
-auth    optional        pam_kwallet5.so
-session optional        pam_kwallet.so auto_start
-session optional        pam_kwallet.so auto_start
-session optional        pam_kwallet5.so auto_start
-session optional        pam_kwallet5.so auto_start
EOF
EOF
</syntaxhighlight>


== Usage ==
== Usage ==

Revision as of 13:41, 1 September 2025

Fingerprint Authentication with swaylock

This guide shows how to configure fingerprint authentication for swaylock on Alpine Linux, allowing you to unlock using either:

  • <enter password><hit enter>
  • <hit enter><touch fingerprint sensor>

Installation

Install the fprintd package:

doas apk add fprintd

Configure PolicyKit Permissions

Upon installation, standard users are not authorized to enroll fingerprints. Create a PolicyKit rule to allow members of the input group to manage fingerprints:

doas tee /etc/polkit-1/rules.d/50-fingerprint.rules << 'EOF'
polkit.addRule(function (action, subject) {
    if (action.id.indexOf("net.reactivated.fprint.") == 0) {
        if (subject.isInGroup("input")) {
            return polkit.Result.YES;
        }
    }
});
EOF

Add your user to the input group:

doas adduser $USER input

Note: You must log out and back in (or reboot) for the group membership to take effect.

Enroll Fingerprints

If you previously enrolled fingerprints as root (or want to start fresh), delete existing enrollments:

# Delete fingerprints for current user
fprintd-delete $(whoami)

# If you accidentally enrolled as root, delete those too
doas fprintd-delete root

Enroll your fingerprint(s):

fprintd-enroll

Verify the enrollment works:

fprintd-verify

Configure PAM for swaylock

Create the PAM configuration for swaylock:

doas tee /etc/pam.d/swaylock << 'EOF'
# Try password authentication first
auth sufficient pam_unix.so nullok
# If no password provided, try fingerprint
auth sufficient pam_fprintd.so ignore-empty-password
auth required pam_deny.so

# KWallet integration (optional)
-auth    optional        pam_kwallet.so
-auth    optional        pam_kwallet5.so
-session optional        pam_kwallet.so auto_start
-session optional        pam_kwallet5.so auto_start
EOF

Usage

Once configured, swaylock will accept both authentication methods:

  • Password authentication: Type your password and press Enter
  • Fingerprint authentication: Press Enter without typing anything, then touch the fingerprint sensor

Troubleshooting

  • Permission denied during enrollment: Ensure you're in the input group and have logged out/in after adding the group
  • Fingerprint recognized but doesn't unlock: Check that fingerprints are enrolled for the correct user (not root)
  • No fallback to password: Verify the PAM configuration has pam_unix.so before pam_fprintd.so

Extending to Other Services

You can apply similar fingerprint authentication to other services by adding the same PAM configuration pattern to files in /etc/pam.d/ such as:

  • sudo or doas
  • polkit-1
  • login
  • su