Google Authenticator implementation in Python

Tadeck picture Tadeck · Dec 16, 2011 · Viewed 47.4k times · Source

I am trying to use one-time passwords that can be generated using Google Authenticator application.

What Google Authenticator does

Basically, Google Authenticator implements two types of passwords:

  • HOTP - HMAC-based One-Time Password, which means the password is changed with each call, in compliance to RFC4226, and
  • TOTP - Time-based One-Time Password, which changes for every 30-seconds period (as far as I know).

Google Authenticator is also available as Open Source here: code.google.com/p/google-authenticator

Current code

I was looking for existing solutions to generate HOTP and TOTP passwords, but did not find much. The code I have is the following snippet responsible for generating HOTP:

import hmac, base64, struct, hashlib, time

def get_token(secret, digest_mode=hashlib.sha1, intervals_no=None):
    if intervals_no == None:
        intervals_no = int(time.time()) // 30
    key = base64.b32decode(secret)
    msg = struct.pack(">Q", intervals_no)
    h = hmac.new(key, msg, digest_mode).digest()
    o = ord(h[19]) & 15
    h = (struct.unpack(">I", h[o:o+4])[0] & 0x7fffffff) % 1000000
    return h

The problem I am facing is that the password I generate using the above code is not the same as generated using Google Authenticator app for Android. Even though I tried multiple intervals_no values (exactly first 10000, beginning with intervals_no = 0), with secret being equal to key provided within the GA app.

Questions I have

My questions are:

  1. What am I doing wrong?
  2. How can I generate HOTP and/or TOTP in Python?
  3. Are there any existing Python libraries for this?

To sum up: please give me any clues that will help me implement Google Authenticator authentication within my Python code.

Answer

Tadeck picture Tadeck · Dec 18, 2011

I wanted to set a bounty on my question, but I have succeeded in creating solution. My problem seemed to be connected with incorrect value of secret key (it must be correct parameter for base64.b32decode() function).

Below I post full working solution with explanation on how to use it.

Code

The following code is enough. I have also uploaded it to GitHub as separate module called onetimepass (available here: https://github.com/tadeck/onetimepass).

import hmac, base64, struct, hashlib, time

def get_hotp_token(secret, intervals_no):
    key = base64.b32decode(secret, True)
    msg = struct.pack(">Q", intervals_no)
    h = hmac.new(key, msg, hashlib.sha1).digest()
    o = ord(h[19]) & 15
    h = (struct.unpack(">I", h[o:o+4])[0] & 0x7fffffff) % 1000000
    return h

def get_totp_token(secret):
    return get_hotp_token(secret, intervals_no=int(time.time())//30)

It has two functions:

  • get_hotp_token() generates one-time token (that should invalidate after single use),
  • get_totp_token() generates token based on time (changed in 30-second intervals),

Parameters

When it comes to parameters:

  • secret is a secret value known to server (the above script) and client (Google Authenticator, by providing it as password within application),
  • intervals_no is the number incremeneted after each generation of the token (this should be probably resolved on the server by checking some finite number of integers after last successful one checked in the past)

How to use it

  1. Generate secret (it must be correct parameter for base64.b32decode()) - preferably 16-char (no = signs), as it surely worked for both script and Google Authenticator.
  2. Use get_hotp_token() if you want one-time passwords invalidated after each use. In Google Authenticator this type of passwords i mentioned as based on the counter. For checking it on the server you will need to check several values of intervals_no (as you have no quarantee that user did not generate the pass between the requests for some reason), but not less than the last working intervals_no value (thus you should probably store it somewhere).
  3. Use get_totp_token(), if you want a token working in 30-second intervals. You have to make sure both systems have correct time set (meaning that they both generate the same Unix timestamp in any given moment in time).
  4. Make sure to protect yourself from brute-force attack. If time-based password is used, then trying 1000000 values in less than 30 seconds gives 100% chance of guessing the password. In case of HMAC-based passowrds (HOTPs) it seems to be even worse.

Example

When using the following code for one-time HMAC-based password:

secret = 'MZXW633PN5XW6MZX'
for i in xrange(1, 10):
    print i, get_hotp_token(secret, intervals_no=i)

you will get the following result:

1 448400
2 656122
3 457125
4 35022
5 401553
6 581333
7 16329
8 529359
9 171710

which is corresponding to the tokens generated by the Google Authenticator app (except if shorter than 6 signs, app adds zeros to the beginning to reach a length of 6 chars).