bna is a command line interface to the python-bna library. It can store and manage multiple authenticators, as well as create new ones.
Remember: Using an authenticator on the same device as the one you log in with is less secure than keeping the devices separate. Use this at your own risk.
Configuration is stored in ~/.config/bna/bna.conf
. You can pass a
different config path with bna --config=~/.bna.conf
for example.
$ bna new
If you do not already have an authenticator, it will be set as default.
You can pass --set-default
otherwise.
$ bna
01234567
$ bna EU-1234-1234-1234
76543210
$ bna show-restore-code
Z45Q9CVXRR
$ bna restore EU-1234-1234-1234 ABCDE98765
Restored EU-1234-1234-1234
To display the OTPAuth URL (used for setup QR Codes):
$ bna show-url
otpauth://totp/Blizzard:EU123412341234:?secret=ASFAS75ASDF75889G9AD7S69AS7697AS&issuer=Blizzard&digits=8
Now paste this to your OTP app, or convert to QRCode and scan, or manually enter the secret.
This is compatible with standard TOTP clients and password managers such as:
To encode to a QRCode on your local system install \'qrencode\'
For a PNG file saved to disk :
$ bna show-url | qrencode -o ~/BNA-qrcode.png
# Scan QRCode
$ rm ~/BNA-qrcode.png
Or to attempt ot display QRCode in terminal as text output :
$ bna --otpauth-url | qrencode -t ANSI
import bna
try:
# region is EU or US
# note that EU authenticators are valid in the US, and vice versa
serial, secret = bna.request_new_serial("US")
except bna.HTTPError as e:
print("Could not connect:", e)
# Get and print a token using PyOTP
from pyotp import TOTP
totp = TOTP(secret, digits=8)
print(totp.now())