Table of Contents
Guacamole supports TOTP as a second authentication factor, layered on top of any other authentication extension, including those available from the main project website, providing base requirements for key storage and enrollment are met. The TOTP authentication extension allows users to be additionally verified against a user-specific and secret key generated during enrollment of their authentication device.
Important
This chapter involves modifying the contents of GUACAMOLE_HOME
-
the Guacamole configuration directory. If you are unsure where
GUACAMOLE_HOME
is located on your system, please consult Chapter 5, Configuring Guacamole before proceeding.
The enrollment process used by Guacamole's TOTP support needs to be able to store an automatically-generated key within the user's account, and will be operating with the privileges of that user when it does so. With this in mind, there are requirements which must be satisfied for TOTP to work as expected:
Another extension must be installed which supports storage of arbitrary data from other extensions. Currently the only extensions provided with Guacamole which support this kind of storage are the database authentication extensions.
Within whichever extension provides the storage described above, users requiring TOTP must be granted permission to update their own accounts (to update their passwords, etc.). This privilege is managed within the administrative web interface with a checkbox labeled "change own password". If a user lacks this permission, the TOTP extension will not be able to generate and store the user's TOTP key during enrollment, and TOTP will be disabled for that user.
It is thus recommended that authentication against a database be fully configured prior to setting up TOTP. Instructions walking through the setup of database authentication for Guacamole are provided in Chapter 6, Database authentication.
Guacamole provides support for TOTP as a second authentication factor. To make use of the TOTP authentication extension, some other authentication mechanism will need be configured, as well. When a user attempts to log into Guacamole, other installed authentication methods will be queried first:
Only after authentication has succeeded with one of those methods will Guacamole prompt the user to further verify their identity with an authentication code:
If both the initial authentication attempt and verification using TOTP succeed, the user will be allowed in. If either mechanism fails, access to Guacamole is denied.
If the user does not yet have a TOTP key associated with their account (they have not yet completed enrollment), they will be required to enroll an authentication device after passing the first authentication factor. A QR code containing an automatically-generated key will be presented to the user to be scanned by their authentication app or device:
If the authentication device does not support scanning QR codes for enrollment, the details within the QR code can be revealed by clicking the "Show" link next to the "Details" header. These values can then be entered manually:
Enrollment is completed once the user enters a valid authentication code generated by their device using the provided key.
The TOTP authentication extension is available separately from the main
guacamole.war
. The link for this and all other
officially-supported and compatible extensions for a particular version of Guacamole are
provided on the release notes for that version. You can find the release notes for
current versions of Guacamole here: http://guacamole.apache.org/releases/.
The TOTP authentication extension is packaged as a .tar.gz
file
containing only the extension itself,
guacamole-auth-totp-1.1.0.jar
, which must ultimately be placed in
GUACAMOLE_HOME/extensions
.
Guacamole extensions are self-contained .jar
files which are
located within the GUACAMOLE_HOME/extensions
directory. To install
the TOTP authentication extension, you must:
Create the
GUACAMOLE_HOME/extensions
directory, if it does not already exist.Copy
guacamole-auth-totp-1.1.0.jar
withinGUACAMOLE_HOME/extensions
.Configure Guacamole to use TOTP authentication, as described below.
Important
You will need to restart Guacamole by restarting your servlet container in order to complete the installation. Doing this will disconnect all active users, so be sure that it is safe to do so prior to attempting installation. If you do not configure the TOTP authentication properly, Guacamole will not start up again until the configuration is fixed.
With the exception of the storage and permission requirements described above, the TOTP extension should work out-of-the-box without any additional configuration. Defaults have been chosen for all configuration parameters such that the TOTP extension will be compatible with Google Authenticator and similar, popular TOTP implementations.
If your intended authentication application or device has different requirements,
or you wish to override the defaults, additional properties may be specified within
guacamole.properties
:
- totp-issuer
The human-readable name of the entity issuing user accounts. If not specified, "Apache Guacamole" will be used by default.
- totp-digits
The number of digits which should be included in each generated TOTP code. Legal values are 6, 7, or 8. By default, 6-digit codes are generated.
- totp-period
The duration that each generated code should remain valid, in seconds. By default, each code remains valid for 30 seconds.
- totp-mode
The hash algorithm that should be used to generate TOTP codes. Legal values are "sha1", "sha256", and "sha512". By default, "sha1" is used.
Guacamole will only reread guacamole.properties
and load
newly-installed extensions during startup, so your servlet container will need to be
restarted before TOTP authentication will take effect. Restart your servlet
container and give the new authentication a try.
Important
You only need to restart your servlet container. You do not need to restart guacd.
guacd is completely independent of the web application
and does not deal with guacamole.properties
or the
authentication system in any way. Since you are already restarting the
servlet container, restarting guacd as well technically
won't hurt anything, but doing so is completely pointless.
If Guacamole does not come back online after restarting your servlet container, check the logs. Problems in the configuration of the TOTP extension may prevent Guacamole from starting up, and any such errors will be recorded in the logs of your servlet container.