Two-factor authentication
New in version 4.8.0.
Since phpMyAdmin 4.8.0 you can configure two-factor authentication to be used when logging in. To use this, you first need to configure the phpMyAdmin configuration storage. Once this is done, every user can opt-in for the second authentication factor in the Settings.
When running phpMyAdmin from the Git source repository, the dependencies must be installed manually; the typical way of doing so is with the command:
composer require pragmarx/google2fa-qrcode
Or when using a hardware security key with FIDO U2F:
composer require samyoul/u2f-php-server
Authentication Application (2FA)
Using an application for authentication is a quite common approach based on HOTP and TOTP. It is based on transmitting a private key from phpMyAdmin to the authentication application and the application is then able to generate one time codes based on this key. The easiest way to enter the key in to the application from phpMyAdmin is through scanning a QR code.
There are dozens of applications available for mobile phones to implement these standards, the most widely used include:
- FreeOTP for iOS, Android and Pebble
- Authy for iOS, Android, Chrome, OS X
- Google Authenticator for iOS
- Google Authenticator for Android
- LastPass Authenticator for iOS, Android, OS X, Windows
Hardware Security Key (FIDO U2F)
Using hardware tokens is considered to be more secure than a software based solution. phpMyAdmin supports FIDO U2F tokens.
There are several manufacturers of these tokens, for example:
- youbico FIDO U2F Security Key
- HyperFIDO
- Trezor Hardware Wallet can act as an U2F token
- List of Two Factor Auth (2FA) Dongles
Simple two-factor authentication
This authentication is included for testing and demonstration purposes only as it really does not provide two-factor authentication, it just asks the user to confirm login by clicking on the button.
It should not be used in the production and is disabled unless $cfg['DBG']['simple2fa']
is set.