/google2fa

A One Time Password Authentication package, compatible with Google Authenticator.

Primary LanguagePHPBSD 3-Clause "New" or "Revised" LicenseBSD-3-Clause

Google2FA

Latest Stable Version License Downloads Travis

Google Two-Factor Authentication for PHP Package

Google2FA is a PHP implementation of the Google Two-Factor Authentication Module, supporting the HMAC-Based One-time Password (HOTP) algorithm specified in RFC 4226 and the Time-based One-time Password (TOTP) algorithm specified in RFC 6238.

This package is agnostic, but also supports the Laravel Framework.

Requirements

  • PHP 5.4+

Compatibility

You don't need Laravel to use it, but it's compatible with

  • Laravel 4.1+
  • Laravel 5+

Installing

Use Composer to install it:

composer require pragmarx/google2fa

If you prefer inline QRCodes instead of a Google generated url, you'll need to install BaconQrCode:

composer require "bacon/bacon-qr-code":"~1.0"

Installing on Laravel

Add the Service Provider and Facade alias to your app/config/app.php (Laravel 4.x) or config/app.php (Laravel 5.x):

PragmaRX\Google2FA\Vendor\Laravel\ServiceProvider::class,

'Google2FA' => PragmaRX\Google2FA\Vendor\Laravel\Facade::class,

Using It

Instantiate it directly

use PragmaRX\Google2FA\Google2FA;

$google2fa = new Google2FA();

return $google2fa->generateSecretKey();

In Laravel you can use the IoC Container and the contract

$google2fa = app()->make('PragmaRX\Google2FA\Contracts\Google2FA');

return $google2fa->generateSecretKey();

Or Method Injection, in Laravel 5

use PragmaRX\Google2FA\Contracts\Google2FA;

class WelcomeController extends Controller 
{
    public function generateKey(Google2FA $google2fa)
    {
        return $google2fa->generateSecretKey();
    }
}

Or the Facade

return Google2FA::generateSecretKey();

How To Generate And Use Two Factor Authentication

Generate a secret key for your user and save it:

$user = User::find(1);

$user->google2fa_secret = Google2FA::generateSecretKey();

$user->save();

Show the QR code to your user:

$google2fa_url = Google2FA::getQRCodeGoogleUrl(
	'YourCompany',
	$user->email,
	$user->google2fa_secret
);

{{ HTML::image($google2fa_url) }}

And they should see and scan the QR code to their applications:

QRCode

And to verify, you just have to:

$secret = Input::get('secret');

$valid = Google2FA::verifyKey($user->google2fa_secret, $secret);

Server Time

It's really important that you keep your server time in sync with some NTP server, on Ubuntu you can add this to the crontab:

ntpdate ntp.ubuntu.com

Using a Bigger and Prefixing the Secret Key

Although the probability of collision of a 16 bytes (128 bits) random string is very low, you can harden it by:

Use a bigger key

$secretKey = $google2fa->generateSecretKey(32); // defaults to 16 bytes

Prefix it

$secretKey = $google2fa->generateSecretKey(16, $userId);

Generating Inline QRCodes

First you have to install the BaconQrCode package, as stated above, then you just have to generate the inline string using:

$inlineUrl = Google2FA::getQRCodeInline(
    $companyName,
    $companyEmail,
    $secretKey
);

And use it in your blade template this way:

<img src="{{ $inlineUrl }}">

Demos

Here's a demo app showing how to use Google2FA: google2fa-example.

You can scan the QR code on this page with a Google Authenticator app and view the code changing (almost) in real time.

Google Authenticator Apps:

To use the two factor authentication, your user will have to install a Google Authenticator compatible app, those are some of the currently available:

Tests

The package tests were written with phpspec.

Author

Antonio Carlos Ribeiro

License

Google2FA is licensed under the BSD 3-Clause License - see the LICENSE file for details

Contributing

Pull requests and issues are more than welcome.