OPTIONS¶
−1
change the first configuration. This is the default and
is normally used for true OTP generation. In this configuration, the option
flag -oappend-cr is set by default.
−2
change the second configuration. This is for YubiKey II
only and is then normally used for static key generation. In this
configuration, the option flags -oappend-cr, -ostatic-ticket,
-ostrong-pw1, -ostrong-pw2 and -oman-update are set by
default.
-z
delete configuration in selected slot
−sfile
save configuration to file instead of key. (if file is -,
send to stdout)
−ifile
read configuration from file. (if file is -, read from
stdin) Configuration import is only valid for the ycfg format.
−fformat
format to be used with -s and -i. Valid
options are ycfg and legacy.
−a[xxx]
the AES secret key as a 32 (or 40 for OATH-HOTP/HMAC
CHAL-RESP) char hex value (not modhex) (none to prompt for key on stdin) If
−a is not used a random key will be generated.
−cxxx
A 12 char hex value (not modhex) to use as access code
for programming. NOTE: this does NOT SET the access code, that’s done
with -oaccess=.
−ooption
change configuration option. Possible option arguments
are:
fixed=fffffffffff
The modhex public identity of the YubiKey, 0-32
characters long (encoding up to 16 bytes). It’s possible to give the
identity in hex as well, just prepend the value with ’h:’. The
fixed part is emitted before the OTP when the button on the YubiKey is
pressed. It can be used as an identifier for the user, for example.
uid=uuuuuu
The uid part of the generated OTP, also called private
identity, in hex. Must be 12 characters long. The uid is 6 bytes of static
data that is included (encrypted) in every OTP, and is used to validate that
an OTP was in fact encrypted with the AES key shared between the YubiKey and
the validation service. It cannot be used to identify the YubiKey as it is
only readable to those that know the AES key.
access=fffffffffff
New hex access code to set. Must be 12 characters long.
If an access code is set, it will be required for subsequent reprogramming of
the YubiKey.
oath-imf=xxx
Set OATH Initial Moving Factor. This is the initial
counter value for the YubiKey. This should be a value between 0 and 1048560,
evenly dividable by 16.
ticket-flag
Set/clear ticket flag, see the section Ticket
flags
configuration-flag
Set/clear ticket flag, see the section Configuration
flags
-y
always commit without prompting
-d
dry-run, run without writing a YubiKey
-v
Be more verbose
-h
Help
-V
Version
YubiKey Neo only¶
-m mode
set device configuration for the YubiKey. It is parsed in
the form
mode:cr_timeout:autoeject_timeout where mode is:
0
OTP device only.
1
CCID device only.
2
OTP/CCID composite device.
3
U2F device only.
4
OTP/U2F composite device.
5
U2F/CCID composite device.
6
OTP/U2F/CCID composite device. Add 80 to set
MODE_FLAG_EJECT, for example: 81
cr_timeout is the timeout in seconds for the YubiKey to wait on
button press for challenge response (default is 15)
autoeject_timeout is the timeout in seconds before the card is
automatically ejected in mode 81
-n URI
Program NFC NDEF URI
-t text
Program NFC NDEF text
YubiKey 3.0 and above¶
-S0605...
set the scanmap to be used with the YubiKey NEO. It must
be 45 unique bytes as 90 characters. Leave argument empty to reset to the
YubiKey’s default. The scanmap must be sent in the order:
cbdefghijklnrtuvCBDEFGHIJKLNRTUV0123456789!\t\r
The default scanmap in the YubiKey is:
06050708090a0b0c0d0e0f111517181986858788898a8b8c8d8e8f9195979899271e1f202122232425269e2b28
An example for simplified us dvorak would be:
0c110b071c180d0a0619130f120e09378c918b879c988d8a8699938f928e89b7271e1f202122232425269e2b28
Or for a French azerty keyboard (digits are shifted):
06050708090a0b0c0d0e0f111517181986858788898a8b8c8d8e8f9195979899a79e9fa0a1a2a3a4a5a6382b28
And a Turkish example (has a dotless i instead of usual i):
06050708090a0b340d0e0f111517181986858788898a8b8c8d8e8f9195979899271e1f202122232425269e2b28
Note that you must remove any whitespace present in these examples
before using the values.
YubiKey 2.3 and above¶
-u
Update existing configuration, rather than overwriting.
Only possible if the slot is configured as updatable.
-x
Swap configuration slot 1 and 2 inside the YubiKey. Only
possible if both slots are configured as updatable.
TICKET FLAGS¶
tab-first
Send a tab character as the first character. This is
usually used to move to the next input field.
append-tab1
Send a tab character between the fixed part and the
one-time password part. This is useful if you have the fixed portion equal to
the user name and two input fields that you navigate between using tab.
append-tab2
Send a tab character as the last character.
append-delay1
add a half-second delay before sending the one-time
password part. This option is only valid for firmware 1.x and 2.x.
append-delay2
a half-second delay after sending the one-time password
part. This option is only valid for firmware 1.x and 2.x.
append-cr
a carriage return after sending the one-time password
part.
YubiKey 2.0 firmware and above¶
protect-cfg2
When written to configuration 1, block later updates to
configuration 2. When written to configuration 2, prevent configuration 1 from
having the lock bit set.
YubiKey 2.1 firmware and above¶
oath-hotp
Set OATH-HOTP mode rather than YubiKey mode. In this
mode, the token functions according to the OATH-HOTP standard.
YubiKey 2.2 firmware and above¶
chal-resp
Set challenge-response mode.
CONFIGURATION FLAGS¶
send-ref Send a reference string of all 16 modhex characters before the
fixed part. This can not be combined with the -ostrong-pw2 flag.
pacing-10ms
Add a 10ms delay between key presses.
pacing-20ms
Add a 20ms delay between key presses.
static-ticket
Output a fixed string rather than a one-time password. The
password is still based on the AES key and should be hard to guess and
impossible to remember.
YubiKey 1.x firmware only ticket-first
Send the one-time password rather than the fixed part first.
allow-hidtrig
Allow trigger through HID/keyboard by pressing caps-, num or
scroll-lock twice. Not recommended for security reasons.
YubiKey 2.0 firmware and above¶
short-ticket
Limit the length of the static string to max 16 digits.
This flag only makes sense with the -ostatic-ticket option. When
-oshort-ticket is used without -ostatic-ticket it will program
the YubiKey in "scan-code mode", in this mode the key sends the
contents of fixed, uid and key as raw keyboard scancodes. For example, by
using the fixed string h:8b080f0f122c9a12150f079e in this mode it will
send Hello World! on a qwerty keyboard. This mode sends raw scan codes,
so output will differ between keyboard layouts.
strong-pw1
Upper-case the two first letters of the output string.
This is for compatibility with legacy systems that enforce both uppercase and
lowercase characters in a password and does not add any security.
strong-pw2
Replace the first eight characters of the modhex alphabet
with the numbers 0 to 7. Like -ostrong-pw1, this is intended to support
legacy systems.
man-update
Enable user-initiated update of the static password. Only
makes sense with the -ostatic-ticket option. This is only valid for
firmware 2.x.
YubiKey 2.1 firmware and above¶
oath-hotp8
When set, generate an 8-digit HOTP rather than a 6-digit
one.
oath-fixed-modhex1
When set, the first byte of the fixed part is sent as
modhex.
oath-fixed-modhex2
When set, the first two bytes of the fixed part is sent
as modhex.
oath-fixed-modhex
When set, the fixed part is sent as modhex.
oath-id=m:OOTTUUUUUUUU
Configure OATH token id with a provided value. See
description of this option under the 2.2 section for details, but note that a
YubiKey 2.1 key can’t report its serial number and thus a token
identifier value must be specified.
YubiKey 2.2 firmware and above¶
chal-yubico
Yubico OTP challenge-response mode.
chal-hmac
Generate HMAC-SHA1 challenge responses.
hmac-lt64
Calculate HMAC on less than 64 bytes input. Whatever is
in the last byte of the challenge is used as end of input marker (backtracking
from end of payload).
chal-btn-trig
The YubiKey will wait for the user to press the key
(within 15 seconds) before answering the challenge.
serial-btn-visible
The YubiKey will emit its serial number if the button is
pressed during power-up. This option is only valid for the 2.x firmware
line.
serial-usb-visible
The YubiKey will indicate its serial number in the USB
iSerial field. This option is not available in the 3.0 and 3.1
firmwares.
serial-api-visible
The YubiKey will allow its serial number to be read using
an API call.
oath-id[=m:OOTTUUUUUUUU]
Configure OATH token id with a provided value, or if used
without a value use the standard YubiKey token identifier.
The standard OATH token id for a Yubico YubiKey is (modhex) OO=ub,
TT=he, (decimal) UUUUUUUU=serial number.
The reason for the decimal serial number is to make it easy for
humans to correlate the serial number on the back of the YubiKey to an entry
in a list of associated tokens for example. Other encodings can be
accomplished using the appropriate oath-fixed-modhex options.
Note that the YubiKey must be programmed to allow reading its
serial number, otherwise automatic token id creation is not possible.
See section "5.3.4 - OATH-HOTP Token Identifier" of the
YubiKey manual ⟨ URL: http://yubico.com/files/YubiKey_manual-2.0.pdf
⟩ for further details.
YubiKey 2.3 firmware and above¶
use-numeric-keypad
Send scancodes for numeric keypad keypresses when sending
digits - helps with some keyboard layouts. This option is only valid for the
2.x firmware line.
fast-trig
Faster triggering when only configuration 1 is available.
This option is always in effect on firmware versions 3.0 and above.
allow-update
Allow updating (or swapping) of certain parameters in a
configuration at a later time.
dormant
Hides/unhides a configuration stored in a YubiKey.
YubiKey 2.4/3.1 firmware and above¶
led-inv
Inverts the behaviour of the led on the YubiKey.
OATH-HOTP Mode¶
When using OATH-HOTP mode, a HMAC key of 160 bits (20 bytes, 40 chars of hex)
can be supplied with −a.
Challenge-response Mode¶
In CHAL-RESP mode, the token will NOT generate any keypresses when the
button is pressed (although it is perfectly possible to have one slot with a
keypress-generating configuration, and the other in challenge-response mode).
Instead, a program capable of sending USB HID feature reports to the token
must be used to send it a challenge, and read the response.
Modhex¶
Modhex is a way of writing hex digits where the “digits” are
chosen for being in the same place on most keyboard layouts. To convert from
hex to modhex, you can use:
tr "[0123456789abcdef]" "[cbdefghijklnrtuv]"
To convert the other way, use:
tr "[cbdefghijklnrtuv]" "[0123456789abcdef]"