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Authentication

Creating your account

You can create your account on our community portal running on https://accounts.centos.org.

To register/create an account, just click on "Register" on the portal and follow the process. More information and user documentation is available on consolidated online documentation for the portal

Modifying your account

Once logged into the portal (still on https://accounts.centos.org) you can modify/edit your profile and see your group membership.

Some settings you can modify directly:

  • First/Last Name
  • Locale
  • Timezone
  • email address (attention that it needs to be a valid email address)
  • other personal details
  • your password
  • adding/removing OTP tokens (see below for 2FA)
  • ssh and gpg public keys

Enabling 2FA on your account (optional)

It's adviced (but not mandatory) to implement 2 Factor Authentication on your account (for some critical accounts, that's though required).

You can add one (or more, adviced) OTP tokens on your profile. Known to work solutions so far :

  • Yubikey (4 and above, that supports OTP) : through rpm pkg yubioath-desktop
  • FreeOTP (available on Google Play Store)
  • OTPClient (available as rpm pkg and flatpak/flathub)
  • others (list is non exhaustive)

More informations about 2FA is available on specific portal documentation

SIG group membership

There is no current form that you can use to be added in a SIG group but you have to reach out to a SIG chair (having delegated rights to add/remove people in the SIG group you want to join) and he can then add you, after having confirmed that you can be onboarded in the SIG

To know people who can "sponsors" you in a SIG/group, you can , once authenticated, search for a group on the portal and then see people listed under the "Sponsors" area (for example, consider the Automotive SIG

Retrieving your TLS certificate

To be able to request a signed TLS certificate, you need first to install the cli tool that will use kerberos auth first to request a locally generated (automatic) CSR to be sent to IPA for signing operation and you'll then get your certificate back.

Supported Linux distributions: CentOS 8/8-s , Fedora 32,33,34

sudo dnf install -y epel-release # only if you are on CentOS 8 / 8-stream not needed for Fedora
sudo dnf install -y centos-packager

Your user certificate bundle comes in the form of 1 file:

~/.centos.cert : PEM file with your X509 Client Certificate and Key

To generate your certificate you can use the 'centos-cert' tool included in the centos-packager package:

 centos-cert 

You need to call the script like this : /usr/bin/centos-cert -arguments
 -u : username ([REQUIRED] : your existing ACO/FAS username)
 -v : just validates the existing TLS certificate ([OPTIONAL])
 -r : REALM to use for kerberos ([OPTIONAL] : defaults to FEDORAPROJECT.ORG)
 -f : fasjson url ([OPTIONAL]: defaults to https://fasjson.fedoraproject.org)
 -h : display this help

If you've signed up with the account name tuser, you can generate your new certificate like this:

    [tuser@myworkstation]$ centos-cert -u tuser 

Note

Attention that centos-cert -u tuser will request a new certificate, so that will automatically revoke any other certificate you had in the past. If you need to use cbs/koji on multiple machines, just copy the files mentioned above on the other machine.

Warning

Important note WRT OTP: If you have enabled Two Factor auth, you absolutely need to get a valid kerberos ticket through other step before using centos-cert. See details on the Fedora Accounts Documentation for this