PyBankID is a client for providing BankID services as a Relying Party, i.e., providing authentication and signing functionality to end users. This package provides a simplifying interface for initiating authentication and signing orders and then collecting the results from the BankID servers.
The only supported BankID API version supported by PyBankID from version 1.0.0 is v6.0, which means that the Secure Start solution is the only supported way of providing BankID services. PyBankID versions prior to 1.0.0 will not work after 1st of May 2024.
If you intend to use PyBankID in your project, you are advised to read the BankID Integration Guide before doing anything else. There, one can find information about how the BankID methods are defined and how to use them.
PyBankID can be installed through pip:
pip install pybankid
PyBankID provides both a synchronous and an asynchronous client for communication with BankID services. The example below will use the synchronous client, but the asynchronous client is used in an identical fashion, only using the await
keyword before each function call.
from bankid import BankIDClient
client = BankIDClient(certificates=(
'path/to/certificate.pem',
'path/to/key.pem',
))
Connection to the production server is the default in the client. If a test server is desired, send in the test_server=True
keyword in the init of the client.
All authentication and signing calls require the end user's IP address to be included. An authentication order is initiated as such:
client.authenticate(end_user_ip='194.168.2.25')
{
'orderRef': 'ee3421ea-2096-4000-8130-82648efe0927',
'autoStartToken': 'e8df5c3c-c67b-4a01-bfe5-fefeab760beb',
'qrStartToken': '01f94e28-857f-4d8a-bf8e-6c5a24466658',
'qrStartSecret': 'b4214886-3b5b-46ab-bc08-6862fddc0e06'
}
and a sign order is initiated in a similar fashion:
client.sign(
end_user_ip='194.168.2.25',
user_visible_data="The information to sign."
)
{
'orderRef': 'ee3421ea-2096-4000-8130-82648efe0927',
'autoStartToken': 'e8df5c3c-c67b-4a01-bfe5-fefeab760beb',
'qrStartToken': '01f94e28-857f-4d8a-bf8e-6c5a24466658',
'qrStartSecret': 'b4214886-3b5b-46ab-bc08-6862fddc0e06'
}
If you want to ascertain that only one individual can authenticate or sign, you can specify this using the requirement
keyword:
client.sign(
end_user_ip='194.168.2.25',
user_visible_data="The information to sign."
requirement={"personalNumber": "YYYYMMDDXXXX"}
)
{
'orderRef': 'ee3421ea-2096-4000-8130-82648efe0927',
'autoStartToken': 'e8df5c3c-c67b-4a01-bfe5-fefeab760beb',
'qrStartToken': '01f94e28-857f-4d8a-bf8e-6c5a24466658',
'qrStartSecret': 'b4214886-3b5b-46ab-bc08-6862fddc0e06'
}
If someone other than the one you specified tries to authenticate or sign, the BankID app will state that the request is not intended for the user.
The status of an order can then be studied by polling with the collect
method using the received orderRef
:
client.collect(order_ref="a9b791c3-459f-492b-bf61-23027876140b")
{
'hintCode': 'outstandingTransaction',
'orderRef': 'a9b791c3-459f-492b-bf61-23027876140b',
'status': 'pending'
}
client.collect(order_ref="a9b791c3-459f-492b-bf61-23027876140b")
{
'hintCode': 'userSign',
'orderRef': 'a9b791c3-459f-492b-bf61-23027876140b',
'status': 'pending'
}
client.collect(order_ref="a9b791c3-459f-492b-bf61-23027876140b")
{
'completionData': {
'cert': {
'notAfter': '1581289199000',
'notBefore': '1518130800000'
},
'device': {
'ipAddress': '0.0.0.0'
},
'ocspResponse': 'MIIHegoBAKCCB[...]',
'signature': 'PD94bWwgdmVyc2lv[...]',
'user': {
'givenName': 'Namn',
'name': 'Namn Namnsson',
'personalNumber': 'YYYYMMDDXXXX',
'surname': 'Namnsson'
}
},
'orderRef': 'a9b791c3-459f-492b-bf61-23027876140b',
'status': 'complete'
}
Please note that the collect
method should be used sparingly: in the BankID Integration Guide it is specified that "collect should be called every two seconds and must not be called more frequent than once per second".
PyBankID also implements the phone/auth
and phone/sign
methods, for performing authentication and signing with
users that are contacted through phone. For documentation on this, see PyBankID's Read the Docs page.
The asynchronous client is used in the same way as the synchronous client, with the difference that all request are performed asynchronously.
The synchronous guide above can be used as a reference for the asynchronous client as well, by simply adding the await
keyword:
from bankid import BankIDAsyncClient
client = BankIDAsyncClient(certificates=(
'path/to/certificate.pem',
'path/to/key.pem',
))
await client.authenticate(end_user_ip='194.168.2.25')
{
'orderRef': 'ee3421ea-2096-4000-8130-82648efe0927',
'autoStartToken': 'e8df5c3c-c67b-4a01-bfe5-fefeab760beb',
'qrStartToken': '01f94e28-857f-4d8a-bf8e-6c5a24466658',
'qrStartSecret': 'b4214886-3b5b-46ab-bc08-6862fddc0e06'
}
PyBankID can generate QR codes for you, and there is an example application in the examples folder of the repo, where a Flask application called qrdemo
shows one way to do authentication with animated QR codes.
The QR code content generation is done with the generate_qr_code_content
method on the BankID Client instances, or directly
through the identically named method in bankid.qr
module.
If you want to use BankID in a production environment, then you will have to purchase this service from one of the selling banks. They will then provide you with a certificate that can be used to authenticate your company/application with the BankID servers.
This certificate has to be processed somewhat to be able to use with PyBankID, and how to do this depends on what the selling bank provides you with.
The certificate to use when developing against the BankID test servers can be obtained through PyBankID:
import os
import bankid
dir_to_save_cert_and_key_in = os.path.expanduser('~')
cert_and_key = bankid.create_bankid_test_server_cert_and_key(
dir_to_save_cert_and_key_in)
print(cert_and_key)
['/home/hbldh/certificate.pem', '/home/hbldh/key.pem']
client = bankid.BankIDClient(
certificates=cert_and_key, test_server=True)