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I have a laptop (Dell) with a smart card reader. I'm trying to get it to do two-factor authentication with Linux. Here's the hardware:

$ opensc-tool -n
Using reader with a card: Broadcom 5880 [Broadcom USH] (0123456789ABCD) 00 00
Cryptoflex 32K e-gate v4

It seems to read the card fine, but following the opensc directions I can get a key, but it has a strange ID.

$ pkcs15-tool  -k
Using reader with a card: Broadcom 5880 [Broadcom USH] (0123456789ABCD) 00 00
Private RSA Key [Private Key]
        Object Flags   : [0x3], private, modifiable
        Usage          : [0x4], sign
        Access Flags   : [0x1D], sensitive, alwaysSensitive, neverExtract, local
        ModLength      : 2048
        Key ref        : 0 (0x0)
        Native         : yes
        Path           : 3f0050154b0130000012
        Auth ID        : 01
        ID             : 2d4dce07ca7a666723df7cff307abf7825a31be1
        GUID           : {2d4dce07-ca7a-6667-23df-7cff307abf78}

Then, trying to use it always produces an error.

12 $ pkcs15-tool -r 45
Using reader with a card: Broadcom 5880 [Broadcom USH] (0123456789ABCD) 00 00
Certificate with ID '45' not found.
13 $ pkcs15-tool -r 2d4dce07ca7a666723df7cff307abf7825a31be1
Using reader with a card: Broadcom 5880 [Broadcom USH] (0123456789ABCD) 00 00
Certificate with ID '2d4dce07ca7a666723df7cff307abf7825a31be1' not found.

I'm kind of stuck here. Anyone know how to get past this?

1 Answer 1

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You have a keypair, but not a certificate (-r will read a certificate) You can read the public key with

pkcs15-tool --read-public-key 2d4dce07ca7a666723df7cff307abf7825a31be1

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