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smart card reader supported by GnuPG
I use 0.332, a mod of the SCM332 V2 which is comparatively light and small. Previously, I was simply using the SCM332 V2 directly with an OTG adapter.
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root access from Termux
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libusb-dev
available in the Termux root repo -
a bunch of additional packages
I didn’t keep track of which packages are needed in particular, so here’s a list of all the packages that I currently have installed:
apt
,autoconf
,automake
,bash
,binutils
,busybox
,ca-certificates
,clang
,command-not-found
,coreutils
,darkhttpd
,dash
,diffutils
,dirmngr
,dpkg
,emacs
,findutils
,gawk
,gdbm
,gettext
,git
,glib
,gnupg
,gnutls
,golang
,gpgv
,grep
,hunspell
,hunspell-en-us
,ldns
,less
,libandroid-glob
,libandroid-support
,libandroid-support-dev
,libassuan
,libassuan-dev
,libbz2
,libc++
,libcroco
,libcrypt
,libcrypt-dev
,libcurl
,libedit
,libffi
,libgcrypt
,libgcrypt-dev
,libgmp
,libgnutls
,libgnutls-dev
,libgpg-error
,libgpg-error-dev
,libidn
,libidn2
,libidn2-dev
,libksba
,libksba-dev
,libllvm
,libltdl
,liblzma
,libmpfr
,libnettle
,libnettle-dev
,libnghttp2
,libnpth
,libnpth-dev
,libsqlite
,libtalloc
,libtool
,libunistring
,libusb
,libusb-dev
,libutil
,libxml2
,lynx
,m4
,make
,man
,ncurses
,ncurses-ui-libs
,ndk-stl
,ndk-sysroot
,openssh
,openssl
,pcre
,pcre2
,perl
,pinentry
,proot
,python
,python-dev
,readline
,readline-dev
,resolv-conf
,screen
,sed
,termux-am
,termux-api
,termux-exec
,termux-tools
,texinfo
,tsu
,vim
,vim-runtime
$ cd
$ mkdir -p src
$ cd src
$ git clone git://git.gnupg.org/gnupg.git
$ cd gnupg
$ git checkout gnupg-2.2.12 # matches GnuPG in Termux
$ export C_INCLUDE_PATH="$PREFIX/include/:$PREFIX/include/libusb-1.0/:$PREFIX/include/libandroid-support"
$ ./autogen.sh
$ ./configure --enable-maintainer-mode --disable-doc --with-pinentry-pgm="$PREFIX/bin/pinentry-curses" --with-scdaemon-pgm="$PWD/scd/scdaemon" --host=aarch64-unknown-linux-android
$ make -j 4
Specifying the host to configure
is necessary because otherwise
Android is not detected:
$ ./build–aux/config.guess
aarch64-unknown-linux-gnu
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If connected, disconnect the card reader from your phone.
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Stop any running instances of the GnuPG Agent:
$ tsu $ gpgconf --kill all
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As root, start the agent after killing any running instances:
$ "$HOME/src/gnupg/agent/gpg-agent" --homedir "$HOME/.gnupg/" --daemon
Then give the ordinary user access to the socket created by the agent:
$ chown -R u0_a88.u0_a88 ~/.gnupg
And end your session as root:
$ exit
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From now on, you can continue with the GnuPG that comes with Termux. It is compatible with the GnuPG that was just installed.
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Connect reader to phone and insert card.
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Check the card’s status:
$ gpg --card-status […] gpg: WARNING: unsafe ownership on homedir '/data/data/com.termux/files/home/.gnupg' gpg: NOTE: THIS IS A DEVELOPMENT VERSION! gpg: It is only intended for test purposes and should NOT be gpg: used in a production environment or with production keys! Reader ...........: XXXX:XXXX:XXXXXXXXXXXXXX:X Application ID ...: XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX Version ..........: 2.1 Manufacturer .....: ZeitControl Serial number ....: XXXXXXXX […]
Note: It could be interesting trying to update the permissions of the USB device files so that the agent doesn’t need to be started as root user. However, so far I didn’t succeed, see also my post on serverfault.com.
Thanks for the link! Too bad OpenKeychain still doesn't support external pin pads. I'm certainly not going to enter my pin on my Android device.