d6ef283c3f
These should make it easier to re-implement the key derivation that was enabled with the "HKDF" feature flag. |
||
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contrib | ||
Documentation | ||
gocryptfs-xray | ||
internal | ||
tests | ||
.gitignore | ||
.travis.yml | ||
benchmark-reverse.bash | ||
benchmark.bash | ||
build-without-openssl.bash | ||
build.bash | ||
checkdir.go | ||
cli_args_test.go | ||
cli_args.go | ||
daemonize.go | ||
golint.bash | ||
init_dir.go | ||
LICENSE | ||
main.go | ||
masterkey.go | ||
mount.go | ||
package.bash | ||
race.go | ||
README.md | ||
sendusr1.go | ||
test-without-openssl.bash | ||
test.bash | ||
TODO.md |
An encrypted overlay filesystem written in Go. Official website: https://nuetzlich.net/gocryptfs (Markdown source)
gocryptfs is built on top the excellent go-fuse FUSE library and its LoopbackFileSystem API.
This project was inspired by EncFS and strives to fix its security issues while providing good performance (benchmarks).
For details on the security of gocryptfs see the Security design document.
All tags from v0.4 onward are signed by the gocryptfs signing key. Please check Signed Releases for details.
Current Status
gocryptfs has reached version 1.0 on July 17, 2016. It has gone through hours and hours of stress (fsstress, extractloop.bash) and correctness testing (xfstests). It is now considered ready for general consumption.
The old principle still applies: Important data should have a backup. Also, keep a copy of your master key (printed on mount) in a safe place. This allows you to access the data even if the gocryptfs.conf config file is damaged or you lose the password.
The security of gocryptfs has been audited in March 3, 2017. The audit is available here (defuse.ca).
Platforms
Linux is gocryptfs' native platform.
Experimental Mac OS X support is available, check out ticket #15 for details.
For Windows, an independent C++ reimplementation has been started: cppcryptfs
Testing
gocryptfs comes with is own test suite that is constantly expanded as features are
added. Run it using ./test.bash
. It takes about 1 minute and requires FUSE
as it mounts several test filesystems.
The stress_tests
directory contains stress tests that run indefinitely.
In addition, I have ported xfstests
to FUSE, the result is the
fuse-xfstests project. gocryptfs
passes the "generic" tests with one exception, results: XFSTESTS.md
A lot of work has gone into this. The testing has found bugs in gocryptfs as well as in the go-fuse library.
Compile
$ go get -d github.com/rfjakob/gocryptfs
$ cd $(go env GOPATH)/src/github.com/rfjakob/gocryptfs
$ ./build.bash
build.bash needs the OpenSSL headers installed (Debian: apt install libssl-dev
,
Fedora: dnf install openssl-devel
). Alternatively, you can compile
without OpenSSL using
$ ./build-without-openssl.bash
Use
$ mkdir cipher plain
$ ./gocryptfs -init cipher
$ ./gocryptfs cipher plain
See the Quickstart page for more info.
The MANPAGE.md describes all available command-line options.
Graphical Interface
The SiriKali project supports gocryptfs and runs on Linux and OSX.
cppcryptfs on Windows provides its own GUI.
Stable CLI ABI
If you want to call gocryptfs from your app or script, see CLI_ABI.md for the official stable ABI. This ABI is regression-tested by the test suite.
Storage Overhead
- Empty files take 0 bytes on disk
- 18 byte file header for non-empty files (2 bytes version, 16 bytes random file id)
- 32 bytes of storage overhead per 4kB block (16 byte nonce, 16 bytes auth tag)
file-format.md contains a more detailed description.
Performance
Since version 0.7.2, gocryptfs is as fast as EncFS in the default mode, and significantly faster than EncFS' "paranoia" mode that provides a security level comparable to gocryptfs.
gocryptfs uses OpenSSL through a thin wrapper called stupidgcm
.
This provides a 4x speedup compared to Go's builtin AES-GCM
implementation - see openssl-gcm.md
for details. The use of openssl can disabled on the command-line.
Run ./benchmark.bash
to run gocryptfs' canonical set of
benchmarks that include streaming write, extracting a linux kernel
tarball, recursively listing and finally deleting it. The output will
look like this:
$ ./benchmark.bash
linux-3.0.tar.gz 100%[==========================>] 92,20M 2,96MB/s in 35s
2016-05-04 19:29:20 URL:https://www.kernel.org/pub/linux/kernel/v3.0/linux-3.0.tar.gz
WRITE: 131072000 bytes (131 MB) copied, 1,43137 s, 91,6 MB/s
UNTAR: 23.25
LS: 1.75
RM: 4.42
Changelog
v1.4 (not yet released)
- Increase open file limit to 4096 (#82).
- Implement path decryption via ctlsock (#84). Previously, decryption was only implemented for reverse mode. Now both normal and reverse mode support both decryption and encryption of paths via ctlsock.
- Add more specific exit codes for the most common failure modes, documented in CLI_ABI.md
- Reverse mode: make sure hard-linked files always return the same ciphertext commit
v1.3, 2017-04-29
- Use HKDF to derive separate keys for GCM and EME
- New feature flag:
HKDF
(enabled by default) - This is a forwards-compatible change. gocryptfs v1.3 can mount filesystems created by earlier versions but not the other way round.
- New feature flag:
- Enable Raw64 filename encoding by default (gets rid of trailing
==
characters) - Drop Go 1.4 compatibility. You now need Go 1.5 (released 2015-08-19) or higher to build gocryptfs.
- Add
-serialize_reads
command-line option- This can greatly improve performance on storage that is very slow for concurrent out-of-order reads. Example: Amazon Cloud Drive (#92)
- Reject file-header-only files (#90 2.2, commit)
- Increase max password size to 2048 bytes (#93)
- Use stable 64-bit inode numbers in reverse mode
- This may cause problems for very old 32-bit applications that were compiled without Large File Support.
- Passing "--" now also blocks "-o" parsing
v1.2.1, 2017-02-26
- Add an integrated speed test,
gocryptfs -speed
- Limit password size to 1000 bytes and reject trailing garbage after the newline
- Make the test suite work on Mac OS X
- Handle additional corner cases in
-ctlsock
path sanitization - Use dedicated exit code 12 on "password incorrect"
v1.2, 2016-12-04
- Add a control socket interface. Allows to encrypt and decrypt filenames.
For details see backintime#644.
- New command-line option:
-ctlsock
- New command-line option:
- Under certain circumstances, concurrent truncate and read could return an I/O error. This is fixed by introducing a global open file table that stores the file IDs (commit).
- Coalesce 4kB ciphertext block writes up to the size requested through the write FUSE call (commit with benchmarks)
- Add
-noprealloc
command-line option- Greatly speeds up writes on Btrfs (#63) at the cost of reduced out-of-space robustness.
- This is a workaround for Btrfs' slow fallocate(2)
- Preserve owner for symlinks an device files (fixes bug #64)
- Include rendered man page
gocryptfs.1
in the release tarball
v1.1.1, 2016-10-30
- Fix a panic on setting file timestamps (go-fuse#131)
- Work around an issue in tmpfs that caused a panic in xfstests generic/075 (gocryptfs#56)
- Optimize NFS streaming writes (commit)
v1.1, 2016-10-19
- Add reverse mode (#19)
- AES-SIV (RFC5297) encryption to implement deterministic encryption
securely. Uses the excellent
jacobsa/crypto library.
The corresponding feature flag is called
AESSIV
. - New command-line options:
-reverse
,-aessiv
- Filesystems using reverse mode can only be mounted with gocryptfs v1.1 and later.
- The default, forward mode, stays fully compatible with older versions. Forward mode will keep using GCM because it is much faster.
- AES-SIV (RFC5297) encryption to implement deterministic encryption
securely. Uses the excellent
jacobsa/crypto library.
The corresponding feature flag is called
- Accept
-o foo,bar,baz
-style options that are passed at the end of the command-line, like mount(1) does. All other options must still precede the passed paths.- This allows mounting from /etc/fstab. See #45 for details.
- Mounting on login using pam_mount works as well. It is described in the wiki.
- To prevent confusion, the old
-o
option had to be renamed. It is now called-ko
. Arguments to-ko
are passed directly to the kernel. - New
-passfile
command-line option. Provides an easier way to read the password from a file. Internally, this is equivalent to-extpass "/bin/cat FILE"
. - Enable changing the password when you only know the master key (#28)
v1.0, 2016-07-17
- Deprecate very old filesystems, stage 3/3
- Filesystems created by v0.6 can no longer be mounted
- Drop command-line options
-gcmiv128
,-emenames
,-diriv
. These are now always enabled.
- Add fallocate(2) support
- New command-line option
-o
- Allows to pass mount options directly to the kernel
- Add support for device files and suid binaries
- Only works when running as root
- Must be explicitely enabled by passing "-o dev" or "-o suid" or "-o suid,dev"
- Experimental Mac OS X support. See ticket #15 for details.
v0.12, 2016-06-19
- Deprecate very old filesystems, stage 2/3
- Filesystems created by v0.6 and older can only be mounted read-only
- A message explaining the situation is printed as well
- New command line option:
-ro
- Mounts the filesystem read-only
- Accept password from stdin as well (ticket #30)
v0.11, 2016-06-10
- Deprecate very old filesystems, stage 1/3
- Filesystems created by v0.6 and older can still be mounted but a warning is printed
- See ticket #29 for details and join the discussion
- Add rsync stress test "pingpong-rsync.bash"
- Fix chown and utimens failures that caused rsync to complain
- Build release binaries with Go 1.6.2
- Big speedup for CPUs with AES-NI, see ticket #23
v0.10, 2016-05-30
- Replace
spacemonkeygo/openssl
withstupidgcm
- gocryptfs now has its own thin wrapper to OpenSSL's GCM implementation
called
stupidgcm
. - This should fix the compile issues
people are seeing with
spacemonkeygo/openssl
. It also gets us a 20% performance boost for streaming writes.
- gocryptfs now has its own thin wrapper to OpenSSL's GCM implementation
called
- Automatically choose between OpenSSL and Go crypto issue #23
- Go 1.6 added an optimized GCM implementation in amd64 assembly that uses AES-NI. This is faster than OpenSSL and is used if available. In all other cases OpenSSL is much faster and is used instead.
-openssl=auto
is the new default- Passing
-openssl=true/false
overrides the autodetection.
- Warn but continue anyway if fallocate(2) is not supported by the
underlying filesystem, see issue #22
- Enables to use gocryptfs on ZFS and ext3, albeit with reduced out-of-space safety.
- Fix statfs, by @lxp
- Fix a fsstress failure in the go-fuse library.
v0.9, 2016-04-10
- Long file name support
- gocryptfs now supports file names up to 255 characters.
- This is a forwards-compatible change. gocryptfs v0.9 can mount filesystems created by earlier versions but not the other way round.
- Refactor gocryptfs into multiple "internal" packages
- New command-line options:
-longnames
: Enable long file name support (default true)-nosyslog
: Print messages to stdout and stderr instead of syslog (default false)-wpanic
: Make warning messages fatal (used for testing)-d
: Alias for-debug
-q
: Alias for-quiet
v0.8, 2016-01-23
- Redirect output to syslog when running in the background
- New command-line option:
-memprofile
: Write a memory allocation debugging profile the specified file
v0.7.2, 2016-01-19
- Fix performance issue in small file creation
- This brings performance on-par with EncFS paranoia mode, with streaming writes significantly faster
- The actual fix is in the go-fuse library. There are no code changes in gocryptfs.
v0.7.1, 2016-01-09
- Make the
build.bash
script compatible with Go 1.3 - Disable fallocate on OSX (system call not availabe)
- Introduce pre-built binaries for Fedora 23 and Debian 8
v0.7, 2015-12-20
- Extend GCM IV size to 128 bit from Go's default of 96 bit
- This pushes back the birthday bound to make IV collisions virtually impossible
- This is a forwards-compatible change. gocryptfs v0.7 can mount filesystems created by earlier versions but not the other way round.
- New command-line option:
-gcmiv128
: Use 128-bit GCM IVs (default true)
v0.6, 2015-12-08
- Wide-block filename encryption using EME + DirIV
- EME (ECB-Mix-ECB) provides even better security than CBC as it fixes the prefix leak. The used Go EME implementation is https://github.com/rfjakob/eme which is, as far as I know, the first implementation of EME in Go.
- This is a forwards-compatible change. gocryptfs v0.6 can mount filesystems created by earlier versions but not the other way round.
- New command-line option:
-emenames
: Enable EME filename encryption (default true)
v0.5.1, 2015-12-06
- Fix a rename regression caused by DirIV and add test case
- Use fallocate to guard against out-of-space errors
v0.5, 2015-12-04
- Stronger filename encryption: DirIV
- Each directory gets a random 128 bit file name IV on creation,
stored in
gocryptfs.diriv
- This makes it impossible to identify identically-named files across directories
- A single-entry IV cache brings the performance cost of DirIV close to zero for common operations (see performance.txt)
- This is a forwards-compatible change. gocryptfs v0.5 can mount filesystems created by earlier versions but not the other way round.
- Each directory gets a random 128 bit file name IV on creation,
stored in
- New command-line option:
-diriv
: Use the new per-directory IV file name encryption (default true)-scryptn
: allows to set the scrypt cost parameter N. This option can be used for faster mounting at the cost of lower brute-force resistance. It was mainly added to speed up the automated tests.
v0.4, 2015-11-15
- New command-line options:
-plaintextnames
: disables filename encryption, added on user request-extpass
: calls an external program for prompting for the password-config
: allows to specify a custom gocryptfs.conf path
- Add
FeatureFlags
gocryptfs.conf paramter- This is a config format change, hence the on-disk format is incremented
- Used for ext4-style filesystem feature flags. This should help avoid future
format changes. The first user is
-plaintextnames
.
- On-disk format 2
v0.3, 2015-11-01
- Add a random 128 bit file header to authenticate file->block ownership
- This is an on-disk-format change
- On-disk format 1
v0.2, 2015-10-11
- Replace bash daemonization wrapper with native Go implementation
- Better user feedback on mount failures
v0.1, 2015-10-07
- First release
- On-disk format 0