jammy (1) oathtool.1.gz

Provided by: oathtool_2.6.7-3ubuntu0.1_amd64 bug

NAME

       oathtool - Open AuTHentication (OATH) one-time password tool

SYNOPSIS

       oathtool [OPTIONS]... [KEY [OTP]]...

DESCRIPTION

       oathtool 2.6.7

       Generate  and  validate  OATH  one-time  passwords.   KEY and OTP is the string '-' to read from standard
       input, '@FILE' to read from indicated filename, or a hex encoded value  (not  recommended  on  multi-user
       systems).

       -h, --help
              Print help and exit

       -V, --version
              Print version and exit

       --hotp use event-based HOTP mode  (default=on)

       --totp[=MODE]
              use time-variant TOTP mode (values "SHA1", "SHA256", or "SHA512")  (default=`SHA1')

       -b, --base32
              use base32 encoding of KEY instead of hex (default=off)

       -c, --counter=COUNTER
              HOTP counter value

       -s, --time-step-size=DURATION TOTP time-step duration
              (default=`30s')

       -S, --start-time=TIME
              when to start counting time steps for TOTP (default=`1970-01-01 00:00:00 UTC')

       -N, --now=TIME
              use this time as current time for TOTP (default=`now')

       -d, --digits=DIGITS
              number of digits in one-time password

       -w, --window=WIDTH
              number of additional OTPs to generate or validate against

       -v, --verbose
              explain what is being done  (default=off)

EXAMPLES

       To generate a time-based (TOTP) one-time password from a key protected by GnuPG:

         $ gpg --decrypt --quiet ~/.my-totp-secret.asc | oathtool --totp -

       How  to  create  the encrypted file is outside of scope of this manual, see gpg(1), however the following
       two commands may help you to encrypt the secret symmetrically (using a password)  or  asymmetrically  (if
       you  have  created  a  private key), respectively.  You will need to provide the secret from the terminal
       after invoking the commands.

         $ gpg --symmetric > ~/.my-totp-secret.asc
         $ gpg --encrypt --default-recipient-self > ~/.my-totp-secret.asc

       For easier reading, the rest of this man page provides the KEY and OTP on the command line.  Keep in mind
       that  this  usage is not recommended since on most multi-user systems, command-line parameters of running
       processes can be seen by other users.

       To generate the first event-based (HOTP) one-time password for an all-zero key:

          $ echo 00 | oathtool -
          328482
          $

       Sometime you want to generate more than a single OTP.  To generate  10  additional  event-based  one-time
       passwords, with the secret key used in the examples of RFC 4226, use the -w (--window) parameter:

          $ oathtool -w 10 3132333435363738393031323334353637383930
          755224
          287082
          359152
          969429
          338314
          254676
          287922
          162583
          399871
          520489
          403154
          $

       In  the last output, the counter for the first OTP was 0, the second OTP had a counter of 1, and so on up
       to 10.

       In order to use keys encoded in Base32 instead of hex, you may provide the -b (--base32) parameter:

          $ oathtool --base32 -w 3 GEZDGNBVGY3TQOJQGEZDGNBVGY3TQOJQ
          755224
          287082
          359152
          969429
          $

       The tool ignore whitespace in base32 data and re-add padding if  necessary,  thus  you  may  supply  keys
       formatted like the one below.

          $ oathtool --base32 --totp "gr6d 5br7 25s6 vnck v4vl hlao re"
          977872
          $

       To generate a particular OTP, use the -c (--counter) parameter to give the exact position directly:

          $ oathtool -c 5 3132333435363738393031323334353637383930
          254676
          $

       To validate a HOTP one-time password supply the OTP last on the command line:

          $ oathtool -w 10 3132333435363738393031323334353637383930 969429
          3
          $

       The  output indicates the counter that was used.  It works by starting with counter 0 and increment until
       it founds a match (or not), within the supplied window of 10 OTPs.

       The tool supports time-variant one-time passwords, in so called TOTP mode.  Usage is similar, but  --totp
       needs to be provided:

          $ oathtool --totp 00
          943388
          $

       Don't  be  alarmed  if  you do not get the same output, this is because the output depends on the current
       time.  To generate a TOTP for a particular fixed time use the -N (--now) parameter:

          $ oathtool --totp --now "2008-04-23 17:42:17 UTC" 00
          974945
          $

       The format is a mostly free format human readable date string such as "Sun, 29 Feb 2004  16:21:42  -0800"
       or  "2004-02-29  16:21:42"  or  even "next Thursday".  It is the same used as the --date parameter of the
       date(1) tool.

       The default MAC algorithm to use with TOTP is HMAC-SHA1 and this is  what  is  usually  used.   The  tool
       supports two other MACs, namely the HMAC-SHA256 and HMAC-SHA512 as well.  To use either of these, qualify
       the --totp parameter with a value.  Use "SHA256" for  HMAC-SHA256  and  "SHA512"  for  HMAC-SHA512.   The
       following demonstrate generating one of the RFC 6238 test vectors.

          $      oathtool      --totp=SHA256      --digits=8      --now      "2009-02-13      23:31:30      UTC"
       3132333435363738393031323334353637383930313233343536373839303132
          91819424
          $

       You may generate several TOTPs by specifying the --window parameter, similar to how it  works  for  HOTP.
       The OTPs generated here will be for the initial time (normally current time) and then each following time
       step (e.g., 30 second window).

          $ oathtool --totp 00 -w5
          815120
          003818
          814756
          184042
          582326
          733842
          $

       You can validate a TOTP one-time password by supplying the secret and a window parameter (number of  time
       steps before or after current time):

          $ oathtool --totp -w 5 00 `oathtool --totp 00`
          0
          $

       Similar  when  generating TOTPs, you can use a -N (--now) parameter to specify the time to use instead of
       the current time:

         $ oathtool --totp --now="2005-03-18 01:58:29 UTC" -w 10000000  3132333435363738393031323334353637383930
       89005924
         4115227
         $

       The  previous  test  uses  values  from  the TOTP specification and will stress test the tool because the
       expected window is around 4 million time-steps.

       There are two system parameters for TOTP: the time-step size and the time start.

       By default the time-step size is 30 seconds, which means you get a new OTP every  30  seconds.   You  may
       modify this with the -s (--time-step-size) parameter:

          $ oathtool --totp --time-step-size=45s 00
          109841
          $

       The values are valid ISO-8601 durations, see: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ISO_8601#Durations

       The time start is normally 1970-01-01 00:00:00 UTC but you may change it using the -S (--start-time):

          $ oathtool --totp --start-time "1980-01-01 00:00:00 UTC" 00
          273884
          $

       To  get  more  information  about  what  the tool is using use the -v (--verbose) parameter.  Finally, to
       generate the last TOTP (for SHA-1) in the test vector table of RFC 6238 you  can  invoke  the  tool  like
       this:

          $ oathtool --totp -v -N "2033-05-18 03:33:20 UTC" -d8 3132333435363738393031323334353637383930
          Hex secret: 3132333435363738393031323334353637383930
          Base32 secret: GEZDGNBVGY3TQOJQGEZDGNBVGY3TQOJQ
          Digits: 8
          Window size: 0
          TOTP mode: SHA1
          Step size (seconds): 30
          Start time: 1970-01-01 00:00:00 UTC (0)
          Time now: 2033-05-18 03:33:20 UTC (2000000000)
          Counter: 0x3F940AA (66666666)

          69279037
          $

AUTHOR

       Written by Simon Josefsson.

REPORTING BUGS

       Report bugs to: oath-toolkit-help@nongnu.org oathtool home page: <https://www.nongnu.org/oath-toolkit/>
       General help using GNU software: <https://www.gnu.org/gethelp/>

       Copyright   ©   2009-2021   Simon   Josefsson.    License   GPLv3+:   GNU   GPL   version   3   or  later
       <https://gnu.org/licenses/gpl.html>.
       This is free software: you are free to change and redistribute it.  There is NO WARRANTY, to  the  extent
       permitted by law.