653 lines
23 KiB
Markdown
653 lines
23 KiB
Markdown
% GOCRYPTFS(1)
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% github.com/rfjakob
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% Aug 2017
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NAME
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====
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gocryptfs - create or mount an encrypted filesystem
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SYNOPSIS
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========
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#### Initialize new encrypted filesystem
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`gocryptfs -init [OPTIONS] CIPHERDIR`
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#### Mount
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`gocryptfs [OPTIONS] CIPHERDIR MOUNTPOINT [-o COMMA-SEPARATED-OPTIONS]`
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#### Unmount
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`fusermount -u MOUNTPOINT`
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#### Change password
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`gocryptfs -passwd [OPTIONS] CIPHERDIR`
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#### Check consistency
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`gocryptfs -fsck [OPTIONS] CIPHERDIR`
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#### Show filesystem information
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`gocryptfs -info [OPTIONS] CIPHERDIR`
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DESCRIPTION
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===========
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gocryptfs is an encrypted overlay filesystem written in Go.
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Encrypted files are stored in CIPHERDIR, and a plain-text
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view can be presented by mounting the filesystem at MOUNTPOINT.
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gocryptfs was inspired by encfs(1) and strives to fix its
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security issues while providing good performance.
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ACTION FLAGS
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============
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Unless one of the following *action flags* is passed, the default
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action is to mount a filesystem (see SYNOPSIS).
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#### -fsck
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Check CIPHERDIR for consistency. If corruption is found, the
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exit code is 26.
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#### -h, -help
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Print a short help text that shows the more-often used options.
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#### -hh
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Long help text, shows all available options.
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#### -info
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Pretty-print the contents of the config file in CIPHERDIR for
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human consumption, stripping out sensitive data.
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Example:
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$ gocryptfs -info my_cipherdir
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Creator: gocryptfs v2.0-beta2
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FeatureFlags: GCMIV128 HKDF DirIV EMENames LongNames Raw64
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EncryptedKey: 64B
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ScryptObject: Salt=32B N=65536 R=8 P=1 KeyLen=32
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#### -init
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Initialize encrypted directory.
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#### -passwd
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Change the password. Will ask for the old password, check if it is
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correct, and ask for a new one.
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This can be used together with `-masterkey` if
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you forgot the password but know the master key. Note that without the
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old password, gocryptfs cannot tell if the master key is correct and will
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overwrite the old one without mercy. It will, however, create a backup copy
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of the old config file as `gocryptfs.conf.bak`. Delete it after
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you have verified that you can access your files with the
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new password.
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#### -speed
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Run crypto speed test. Benchmark Go's built-in GCM against OpenSSL
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(if available). The library that will be selected on "-openssl=auto"
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(the default) is marked as such.
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#### -version
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Print version and exit. The output contains three fields separated by ";".
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Example: "gocryptfs v1.1.1-5-g75b776c; go-fuse 6b801d3; 2016-11-01 go1.7.3".
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Field 1 is the gocryptfs version, field 2 is the version of the go-fuse
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library, field 3 is the compile date and the Go version that was
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used.
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INIT OPTIONS
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============
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Available options for `-init` are listed below. Usually, you don't need any.
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Defaults are fine.
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#### -aessiv
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Use the AES-SIV encryption mode. This is slower than GCM but is
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secure with deterministic nonces as used in "-reverse" mode.
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#### -devrandom
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Use `/dev/random` for generating the master key instead of the default Go
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implementation. This is especially useful on embedded systems with Go versions
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prior to 1.9, which fall back to weak random data when the getrandom syscall
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is blocking. Using this option can block indefinitely when the kernel cannot
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harvest enough entropy.
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#### -hkdf
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Use HKDF to derive separate keys for content and name encryption from
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the master key. Default true.
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#### -nosyslog
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Diagnostic messages are normally redirected to syslog once gocryptfs
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daemonizes. This option disables the redirection and messages will
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continue be printed to stdout and stderr.
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#### -plaintextnames
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Do not encrypt file names and symlink targets.
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#### -raw64
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Use unpadded base64 encoding for file names. This gets rid of the
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trailing "\\=\\=". A filesystem created with this option can only be
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mounted using gocryptfs v1.2 and higher. Default true.
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#### -reverse
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Reverse mode shows a read-only encrypted view of a plaintext
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directory. Implies "-aessiv".
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#### -scryptn int
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scrypt cost parameter expressed as scryptn=log2(N). Possible values are
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10 to 28, representing N=2^10 to N=2^28.
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Setting this to a lower
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value speeds up mounting and reduces its memory needs, but makes
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the password susceptible to brute-force attacks. The default is 16.
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MOUNT OPTIONS
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=============
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Available options for mounting are listed below. Usually, you don't need any.
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Defaults are fine.
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#### -allow_other
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By default, the Linux kernel prevents any other user (even root) to
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access a mounted FUSE filesystem. Settings this option allows access for
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other users, subject to file permission checking. Only works if
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user_allow_other is set in /etc/fuse.conf. This option is equivalent to
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"allow_other" plus "default_permissions" described in fuse(8).
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#### -badname string
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When gocryptfs encounters a "bad" file name (cannot be decrypted or decrypts
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to garbage), a warning is logged and the file is hidden from the
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plaintext view.
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With the `-badname` option, you can select "bad" file names that should
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still be shown in the plaintext view instead of hiding them. Bad files
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will get ` GOCRYPTFS_BAD_NAME` appended to their name.
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Glob pattern. Can be passed multiple times for multiple patterns.
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Examples:
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Dropbox sync conflicts:
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-badname '*conflicted copy*'
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Syncthing sync conflicts:
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-badname '*.sync-conflict*'
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Show all invalid filenames:
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-badname '*'
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#### -ctlsock string
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Create a control socket at the specified location. The socket can be
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used to decrypt and encrypt paths inside the filesystem. When using
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this option, make sure that the directory you place the socket in is
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not world-accessible. For example, `/run/user/UID/my.socket` would
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be suitable.
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#### -dev, -nodev
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Enable (`-dev`) or disable (`-nodev`) device files in a gocryptfs mount
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(default: `-nodev`). If both are specified, `-nodev` takes precedence.
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You need root permissions to use `-dev`.
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#### -e PATH, -exclude PATH
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Only for reverse mode: exclude relative plaintext path from the encrypted
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view, matching only from root of mounted filesystem. Can be passed multiple
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times. Example:
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gocryptfs -reverse -exclude Music -exclude Movies /home/user /mnt/user.encrypted
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See also `-exclude-wildcard`, `-exclude-from` and the [EXCLUDING FILES](#excluding-files) section.
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#### -ew PATH, -exclude-wildcard PATH
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Only for reverse mode: exclude paths from the encrypted view, matching anywhere.
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Wildcards supported. Can be passed multiple times. Example:
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gocryptfs -reverse -exclude-wildcard '*~' /home/user /mnt/user.encrypted
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See also `-exclude`, `-exclude-from` and the [EXCLUDING FILES](#excluding-files) section.
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#### -exclude-from FILE
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Only for reverse mode: reads exclusion patters (using `-exclude-wildcard` syntax)
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from a file. Can be passed multiple times. Example:
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gocryptfs -reverse -exclude-from ~/crypt-exclusions /home/user /mnt/user.encrypted
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See also `-exclude`, `-exclude-wildcard` and the [EXCLUDING FILES](#excluding-files) section.
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#### -exec, -noexec
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Enable (`-exec`) or disable (`-noexec`) executables in a gocryptfs mount
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(default: `-exec`). If both are specified, `-noexec` takes precedence.
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#### -fg, -f
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Stay in the foreground instead of forking away.
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For compatibility, "-f" is also accepted, but "-fg" is preferred.
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Unless `-notifypid` is also passed, the logs go to stdout and stderr
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instead of syslog.
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#### -force_owner string
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If given a string of the form "uid:gid" (where both "uid" and "gid" are
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substituted with positive integers), presents all files as owned by the given
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uid and gid, regardless of their actual ownership. Implies "allow_other".
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This is rarely desired behavior: One should *usually* run gocryptfs as the
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account which owns the backing-store files, which should *usually* be one and
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the same with the account intended to access the decrypted content. An example
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of a case where this may be useful is a situation where content is stored on a
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filesystem that doesn't properly support UNIX ownership and permissions.
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#### -forcedecode
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Force decode of encrypted files even if the integrity check fails, instead of
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failing with an IO error. Warning messages are still printed to syslog if corrupted
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files are encountered.
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It can be useful to recover files from disks with bad sectors or other corrupted
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media. It shall not be used if the origin of corruption is unknown, specially
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if you want to run executable files.
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For corrupted media, note that you probably want to use dd_rescue(1)
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instead, which will recover all but the corrupted 4kB block.
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This option makes no sense in reverse mode. It requires gocryptfs to be compiled with openssl
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support and implies -openssl true. Because of this, it is not compatible with -aessiv,
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that uses built-in Go crypto.
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Setting this option forces the filesystem to read-only and noexec.
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#### -fsname string
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Override the filesystem name (first column in df -T). Can also be
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passed as "-o fsname=" and is equivalent to libfuse's option of the
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same name. By default, CIPHERDIR is used.
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#### -fusedebug
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Enable fuse library debug output.
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#### -i duration, -idle duration
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Only for forward mode: automatically unmount the filesystem if it has been idle
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for the specified duration. Durations can be specified like "500s" or "2h45m".
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0 (the default) means stay mounted indefinitely.
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When a process has open files or its working directory in the mount,
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this will keep it not idle indefinitely.
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#### -kernel_cache
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Enable the kernel_cache option of the FUSE filesystem, see fuse(8) for details.
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#### -ko
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Pass additional mount options to the kernel (comma-separated list).
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FUSE filesystems are mounted with "nodev,nosuid" by default. If gocryptfs
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runs as root, you can enable device files by passing the opposite mount option,
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"dev", and if you want to enable suid-binaries, pass "suid".
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"ro" (equivalent to passing the "-ro" option) and "noexec" may also be
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interesting. For a complete list see the section
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`FILESYSTEM-INDEPENDENT MOUNT OPTIONS` in mount(8). On MacOS, "local",
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"noapplexattr", "noappledouble" may be interesting.
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Note that unlike "-o", "-ko" is a regular option and must be passed BEFORE
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the directories. Example:
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gocryptfs -ko noexec /tmp/foo /tmp/bar
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#### -longnames
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Store names longer than 176 bytes in extra files (default true)
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This flag is useful when recovering old gocryptfs filesystems using
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"-masterkey". It is ignored (stays at the default) otherwise.
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#### -nodev
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See `-dev, -nodev`.
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#### -noexec
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See `-exec, -noexec`.
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#### -nofail
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Having the `nofail` option in `/etc/fstab` instructs `systemd` to continue
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booting normally even if the mount fails (see `man systemd.fstab`).
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The option is ignored by `gocryptfs` itself and has no effect outside `/etc/fstab`.
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#### -nonempty
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Allow mounting over non-empty directories. FUSE by default disallows
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this to prevent accidental shadowing of files.
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#### -noprealloc
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Disable preallocation before writing. By default, gocryptfs
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preallocates the space the next write will take using fallocate(2)
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in mode FALLOC_FL_KEEP_SIZE. The preallocation makes sure it cannot
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run out of space in the middle of the write, which would cause the
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last 4kB block to be corrupt and unreadable.
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On ext4, preallocation is fast and does not cause a
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noticeable performance hit. Unfortunately, on Btrfs, preallocation
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is very slow, especially on rotational HDDs. The "-noprealloc"
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option gives users the choice to trade robustness against
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out-of-space errors for a massive speedup.
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For benchmarks and more details of the issue see
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https://github.com/rfjakob/gocryptfs/issues/63 .
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#### -nosuid
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See `-suid, -nosuid`.
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#### -notifypid int
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Send USR1 to the specified process after successful mount. This is
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used internally for daemonization.
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#### -one-file-system
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Don't cross filesystem boundaries (like rsync's `--one-file-system`).
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Mountpoints will appear as empty directories.
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Only applicable to reverse mode.
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Limitation: Mounted single files (yes this is possible) are NOT hidden.
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#### -rw, -ro
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Mount the filesystem read-write (`-rw`, default) or read-only (`-ro`).
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If both are specified, `-ro` takes precedence.
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#### -reverse
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See the `-reverse` section in INIT FLAGS. You need to specifiy the
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`-reverse` option both at `-init` and at mount.
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#### -serialize_reads
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The kernel usually submits multiple concurrent reads to service
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userspace requests and kernel readahead. gocryptfs serves them
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concurrently and in arbitrary order. On backing storage that performs
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poorly for concurrent or out-of-order reads (like Amazon Cloud Drive),
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this behavior can cause very slow read speeds.
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The `-serialize_reads`
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option does two things: (1) reads will be submitted one-by-one (no
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concurrency) and (2) gocryptfs tries to order the reads by file
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offset order.
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The ordering requires gocryptfs to wait a certain time before
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submitting a read. The serialization introduces extra locking.
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These factors will limit throughput to below 70MB/s.
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For more details visit https://github.com/rfjakob/gocryptfs/issues/92 .
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#### -sharedstorage
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Enable work-arounds so gocryptfs works better when the backing
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storage directory is concurrently accessed by multiple gocryptfs
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instances.
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At the moment, it does two things:
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1. Disable stat() caching so changes to the backing storage show up
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immediately.
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2. Disable hard link tracking, as the inode numbers on the backing
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storage are not stable when files are deleted and re-created behind
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our back. This would otherwise produce strange "file does not exist"
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and other errors.
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When "-sharedstorage" is active, performance is reduced and hard
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links cannot be created.
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Even with this flag set, you may hit occasional problems. Running
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gocryptfs on shared storage does not receive as much testing as the
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usual (exclusive) use-case. Please test your workload in advance
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and report any problems you may hit.
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More info: https://github.com/rfjakob/gocryptfs/issues/156
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#### -suid, -nosuid
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Enable (`-suid`) or disable (`-nosuid`) suid and sgid executables in a gocryptfs
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mount (default: `-nosuid`). If both are specified, `-nosuid` takes precedence.
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You need root permissions to use `-suid`.
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#### -zerokey
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Use all-zero dummy master key. This options is only intended for
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automated testing as it does not provide any security.
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COMMON OPTIONS
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==============
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Options that apply to more than one action are listed below.
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Each options lists where it is applicable. Again, usually you
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don't need any.
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#### -config string
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Use specified config file instead of `CIPHERDIR/gocryptfs.conf`.
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Applies to: all actions that use a config file: mount, `-fsck`, `-passwd`, `-info`, `-init`.
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#### -cpuprofile string
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Write cpu profile to specified file.
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Applies to: all actions.
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#### -d, -debug
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Enable debug output.
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Applies to: all actions.
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#### -extpass CMD [-extpass ARG1 ...]
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Use an external program (like ssh-askpass) for the password prompt.
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The program should return the password on stdout, a trailing newline is
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stripped by gocryptfs. If you just want to read from a password file, see `-passfile`.
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When `-extpass` is specified once, the string argument will be split on spaces.
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For example, `-extpass "md5sum my password.txt"` will be executed as
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`"md5sum" "my" "password.txt"`, which is NOT what you want.
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Specify `-extpass` twice or more to use the string arguments as-is.
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For example, you DO want to call `md5sum` like this:
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`-extpass "md5sum" -extpass "my password.txt"`.
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If you want to prevent splitting on spaces but don't want to pass arguments
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to your program, use `"--"`, which is accepted by most programs:
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`-extpass "my program" -extpass "--"`
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Applies to: all actions that ask for a password.
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#### -fido2 DEVICE_PATH
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Use a FIDO2 token to initialize and unlock the filesystem.
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Use "fido2-token -L" to obtain the FIDO2 token device path.
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Applies to: all actions that ask for a password.
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#### -masterkey string
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Use a explicit master key specified on the command line or, if the special
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value "stdin" is used, read the masterkey from stdin, instead of reading
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the config file and asking for the decryption password.
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Note that the command line, and with it the master key, is visible to
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anybody on the machine who can execute "ps -auxwww". Use "-masterkey=stdin"
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to avoid that risk.
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The masterkey option is meant as a recovery option for emergencies, such as
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if you have forgotten the password or lost the config file.
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Even if a config file exists, it will not be used. All non-standard
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settings have to be passed on the command line: `-aessiv` when you
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mount a filesystem that was created using reverse mode, or
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`-plaintextnames` for a filesystem that was created with that option.
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Examples:
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-masterkey=6f717d8b-6b5f8e8a-fd0aa206-778ec093-62c5669b-abd229cd-241e00cd-b4d6713d
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-masterkey=stdin
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Applies to: all actions that ask for a password.
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#### -memprofile string
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Write memory profile to the specified file. This is useful when debugging
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memory usage of gocryptfs.
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Applies to: all actions.
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#### -o COMMA-SEPARATED-OPTIONS
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For compatibility with mount(1), options are also accepted as
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"-o COMMA-SEPARATED-OPTIONS" at the end of the command line.
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For example, "-o q,zerokey" is equivalent to passing "-q -zerokey".
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Note that you can only use options that are understood by gocryptfs
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with "-o". If you want to pass special flags to the kernel, you should
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use "-ko" (*k*ernel *o*ption). This is different in libfuse-based
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filesystems, that automatically pass any "-o" options they do not
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understand along to the kernel.
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Example:
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gocryptfs /tmp/foo /tmp/bar -o q,zerokey
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Applies to: all actions.
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#### -openssl bool/"auto"
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Use OpenSSL instead of built-in Go crypto (default "auto"). Using
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built-in crypto is 4x slower unless your CPU has AES instructions and
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you are using Go 1.6+. In mode "auto", gocrypts chooses the faster
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option.
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Applies to: all actions.
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|
|
|
#### -passfile FILE [-passfile FILE2 ...]
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|
Read password from the specified plain text file. The file should contain exactly
|
|
one line (do not use binary files!).
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|
A warning will be printed if there is more than one line, and only
|
|
the first line will be used. A single
|
|
trailing newline is allowed and does not cause a warning.
|
|
|
|
Pass this option multiple times to read the first line from multiple
|
|
files. They are concatenated for the effective password.
|
|
|
|
Example:
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|
|
|
echo hello > hello.txt
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|
echo word > world.txt
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|
gocryptfs -passfile hello.txt -passfile world.txt
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|
|
|
The effective password will be "helloworld".
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|
|
|
Applies to: all actions that ask for a password.
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|
|
|
#### -q, -quiet
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|
Quiet - silence informational messages.
|
|
|
|
Applies to: all actions.
|
|
|
|
#### -trace string
|
|
Write execution trace to file. View the trace using "go tool trace FILE".
|
|
|
|
Applies to: all actions.
|
|
|
|
#### -wpanic
|
|
When encountering a warning, panic and exit immediately. This is
|
|
useful in regression testing.
|
|
|
|
Applies to: all actions.
|
|
|
|
#### \-\-
|
|
Stop option parsing. Helpful when CIPHERDIR may start with a
|
|
dash "-".
|
|
|
|
Applies to: all actions.
|
|
|
|
EXCLUDING FILES
|
|
===============
|
|
|
|
In reverse mode, it is possible to exclude files from the encrypted view, using
|
|
the `-exclude`, `-exclude-wildcard` and `-exclude-from` options.
|
|
|
|
`-exclude` matches complete paths, so `-exclude file.txt` only excludes a file
|
|
named `file.txt` in the root of the mounted filesystem; files named `file.txt`
|
|
in subdirectories are still visible. (This option is kept for compatibility
|
|
with the behavior up to version 1.6.x)
|
|
|
|
`-exclude-wildcard` matches files anywhere, so `-exclude-wildcard file.txt`
|
|
excludes files named `file.txt` in any directory. If you want to match complete
|
|
paths, you can prefix the filename with a `/`: `-exclude-wildcard /file.txt`
|
|
excludes only `file.txt` in the root of the mounted filesystem.
|
|
|
|
If there are many exclusions, you can use `-exclude-from` to read exclusion
|
|
patterns from a file. The syntax is that of `-exclude-wildcard`, so use a
|
|
leading `/` to match complete paths.
|
|
|
|
The rules for exclusion are that of [gitignore](https://git-scm.com/docs/gitignore#_pattern_format).
|
|
In short:
|
|
|
|
1. A blank line matches no files, so it can serve as a separator
|
|
for readability.
|
|
2. A line starting with `#` serves as a comment. Put a backslash (`\`)
|
|
in front of the first hash for patterns that begin with a hash.
|
|
3. Trailing spaces are ignored unless they are quoted with backslash (`\`).
|
|
4. An optional prefix `!` negates the pattern; any matching file
|
|
excluded by a previous pattern will become included again. It is not
|
|
possible to re-include a file if a parent directory of that file is
|
|
excluded. Put a backslash (`\`) in front of the first `!` for
|
|
patterns that begin with a literal `!`, for example, `\!important!.txt`.
|
|
5. If the pattern ends with a slash, it is removed for the purpose of the
|
|
following description, but it would only find a match with a directory.
|
|
In other words, `foo/` will match a directory foo and paths underneath it,
|
|
but will not match a regular file or a symbolic link foo.
|
|
6. If the pattern does not contain a slash `/`, it is treated as a shell glob
|
|
pattern and checked for a match against the pathname relative to the
|
|
root of the mounted filesystem.
|
|
7. Otherwise, the pattern is treated as a shell glob suitable for
|
|
consumption by fnmatch(3) with the FNM_PATHNAME flag: wildcards in the
|
|
pattern will not match a `/` in the pathname. For example,
|
|
`Documentation/*.html` matches `Documentation/git.html` but not
|
|
`Documentation/ppc/ppc.html` or `tools/perf/Documentation/perf.html`.
|
|
8. A leading slash matches the beginning of the pathname. For example,
|
|
`/*.c` matches `cat-file.c` but not `mozilla-sha1/sha1.c`.
|
|
9. Two consecutive asterisks (`**`) in patterns matched against full
|
|
pathname may have special meaning:
|
|
i. A leading `**` followed by a slash means match in all directories.
|
|
For example, `**/foo` matches file or directory `foo` anywhere,
|
|
the same as pattern `foo`. `**/foo/bar` matches file or directory
|
|
`bar` anywhere that is directly under directory `foo`.
|
|
ii. A trailing `/**` matches everything inside. For example, `abc/**`
|
|
matches all files inside directory `abc`, with infinite depth.
|
|
iii. A slash followed by two consecutive asterisks then a slash matches
|
|
zero or more directories. For example, `a/**/b` matches `a/b`,
|
|
`a/x/b`, `a/x/y/b` and so on.
|
|
iv. Other consecutive asterisks are considered invalid.
|
|
|
|
|
|
EXAMPLES
|
|
========
|
|
|
|
### Init
|
|
|
|
Create an encrypted filesystem in directory "mydir.crypt", mount it on "mydir":
|
|
|
|
mkdir mydir.crypt mydir
|
|
gocryptfs -init mydir.crypt
|
|
gocryptfs mydir.crypt mydir
|
|
|
|
### Mount
|
|
|
|
Mount an encrypted view of joe's home directory using reverse mode:
|
|
|
|
mkdir /home/joe.crypt
|
|
gocryptfs -init -reverse /home/joe
|
|
gocryptfs -reverse /home/joe /home/joe.crypt
|
|
|
|
### fstab
|
|
|
|
Adding this line to `/etc/fstab` will mount `/tmp/cipher` to `/tmp/plain` on boot, using the
|
|
password in `/tmp/passfile`. Use `sudo mount -av` to test the line without having
|
|
to reboot. Adjust the gocryptfs path acc. to the output of the command `which gocryptfs`.
|
|
Do use the `nofail` option to prevent an unbootable system if the gocryptfs mount fails (see
|
|
the `-nofail` option for details).
|
|
|
|
/tmp/cipher /tmp/plain fuse./usr/local/bin/gocryptfs nofail,allow_other,passfile=/tmp/password 0 0
|
|
|
|
EXIT CODES
|
|
==========
|
|
|
|
0: success
|
|
6: CIPHERDIR is not an empty directory (on "-init")
|
|
10: MOUNTPOINT is not an empty directory
|
|
12: password incorrect
|
|
22: password is empty (on "-init")
|
|
23: could not read gocryptfs.conf
|
|
24: could not write gocryptfs.conf (on "-init" or "-password")
|
|
26: fsck found errors
|
|
other: please check the error message
|
|
|
|
See also: https://github.com/rfjakob/gocryptfs/blob/master/internal/exitcodes/exitcodes.go
|
|
|
|
SEE ALSO
|
|
========
|
|
mount(2) fuse(8) fallocate(2) encfs(1)
|