passport-desktop

passport-desktop

Windows Hello for client Applications in Node.js on Windows Platforms. This is a replacement for the node-ms-passport module.

This module's implementation was heavily inspired by the desktop module of bitwarden.

Installation

npm install passport-desktop

Pre-built binaries are available for windows 32/64 bit platforms. On other platforms, the module is obviously not available, importing it will not throw an error. Instead, all methods will throw an error when called, except for Passport.available() which will return false.

Usage

Check if Windows Hello is available

import { Passport } from 'passport-desktop';

if (!Passport.available()) {
throw new Error('Windows Hello is not available');
}

Check if an Passport account with a given id exists

import { Passport } from 'passport-desktop';

await Passport.accountWithIdExists('my-account-id'); // false, probably

Create a new Passport account and sign a challenge

import {
Passport,
PublicKeyEncoding,
KeyCreationOption,
} from 'passport-desktop';
import { randomBytes, createPublicKey, createVerify } from 'node:crypto';

const passport = new Passport('my-account-id');
if (!passport.accountExists) {
await passport.createAccount(KeyCreationOption.FailIfExists);
}

const challenge = randomBytes(32);
const signature = await passport.sign(challenge);

// Verify the signature with the public key
const keyBuffer = await passport.getPublicKey(
PublicKeyEncoding.Pkcs1RsaPublicKey
);
const key = createPublicKey({
key: keyBuffer,
format: 'der',
type: 'pkcs1',
});

// Create a verifier and verify the challenge
const verify = createVerify('SHA256');
verify.write(challenge);
verify.end();

verify.verify(key, signature); // true

// Delete the account
await passport.deleteAccount();

Verify a challenge signed by a client

A challenge signed by a client can be verified by using the public key of the client. The node-crypto module may be used to verify the signature. The public key can be obtained by the client by calling Passport.getPublicKey() and passing the PublicKeyEncoding.Pkcs1RsaPublicKey encoding option to that method.

import { randomBytes, createPublicKey, createVerify } from 'node:crypto';

const challenge = randomBytes(32);

// Send the challenge to the client and obtain the signature

const keyBuffer: Buffer = ...; // Obtain the public key from the client
const signature: Buffer = ...; // Obtain the signature from the client

const key = createPublicKey({
key: keyBuffer,
format: 'der',
type: 'pkcs1'
});

const verify = createVerify('SHA256');
verify.write(challenge);
verify.end();

verify.verify(key, signature);

Generated using TypeDoc