Setting up fprintd for swaylock
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:
<syntaxhighlight lang="bash"> doas apk add fprintd </syntaxhighlight>
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:
<syntaxhighlight lang="bash"> 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 </syntaxhighlight>
Add your user to the input
group:
<syntaxhighlight lang="bash"> doas adduser $USER input </syntaxhighlight>
Enroll Fingerprints
If you previously enrolled fingerprints as root (or want to start fresh), delete existing enrollments:
<syntaxhighlight lang="bash">
- Delete fingerprints for current user
fprintd-delete $(whoami)
- If you accidentally enrolled as root, delete those too
doas fprintd-delete root </syntaxhighlight>
Enroll your fingerprint(s):
<syntaxhighlight lang="bash"> fprintd-enroll </syntaxhighlight>
Verify the enrollment works:
<syntaxhighlight lang="bash"> fprintd-verify </syntaxhighlight>
Configure PAM for swaylock
Create the PAM configuration for swaylock:
<syntaxhighlight lang="bash"> 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 </syntaxhighlight>
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
beforepam_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
ordoas
polkit-1
login
su