| Age | Commit message (Collapse) | Author |
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Introduce filesystem.ErrEncryptionNotEnabled and
filesystem.ErrEncryptionNotSupported which include the Mount as context,
and translate the corresponding metadata/ errors into them. Then make
these errors show much better suggestions.
Also replace lots of other filesystem/ errors with either custom types
or with unnamed one-off errors that include more context. Fix backwards
wrapping in lots of cases.
Finally, don't include the mountpoint in places where it's not useful,
like OS-level errors that already include the path.
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ErrBadOwners:
Rename to ErrDirectoryNotOwned for clarity, move it from
cmd/fscrypt/ to metadata/ where it better belongs, and improve
the message.
ErrEncrypted:
Rename to ErrAlreadyEncrypted for clarity, and include the path.
ErrNotEncrypted:
Include the path.
ErrBadEncryptionOptions:
Include the path and bad options.
ErrEncryptionNotSupported:
ErrEncryptionNotEnabled:
Don't wrap with "get encryption policy %s", in preparation for
wrapping these with filesystem-level context instead.
Also avoid mixing together the error handling for the "get policy" and
"set policy" ioctls. Make it very clear how we're handling the errors
from each ioctl.
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ErrAccessUserKeyring:
Include the user, and fix the backwards wrapping.
ErrSessionUserKeyring:
Include the user.
ErrKeyAdd:
ErrKeyRemove:
ErrKeySearch:
ErrLinkUserKeyring:
Replace these with one-off unnamed errors because they are
never checked for, and this makes it easier for the callers to
provide better messages, e.g. fixing the backwards wrapping.
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ErrKeyLock:
Rename to ErrMlockUlimit for clarity.
ErrGetrandomFail:
ErrKeyAlloc:
ErrKeyFree:
ErrNegativeLength:
Replace these with one-off unnamed errors because these were all
returned in only one place and were never checked for. Also
these were all either wrapped backwards or discarded an
underlying error, so fix that too.
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ErrMissingPolicyMetadata:
Include the mount, directory path, and metadata path. Also move
the explanation into actions/ since it doesn't refer to any CLI
command.
ErrPolicyMetadataMismatch:
Include a lot more information. Also start checking for
consistency of the policy key descriptors, not just the
encryption options. Add a test for this.
ErrDifferentFilesystem:
Include the mountpoints.
ErrOnlyProtector:
Clarify the message and include the protector descriptor.
ErrAlreadyProtected:
ErrNotProtected:
Include the policy and protector descriptors.
ErrAccessDeniedPossiblyV2:
Make it slightly clearer what failed. Also move the explanation
into actions/ since it doesn't refer to any CLI command.
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ErrProtectorName:
Rename to ErrLoginProtectorName for clarity, and include the
name and user.
ErrMissingProtectorName:
Include the correct protector source.
ErrDuplicateName:
Rename to ErrProtectorNameExists for clarity, and remove a level
of wrapping by including the name directly.
ErrDuplicateUID:
Rename to ErrLoginProtectorExists for clarity, and remove a
level of wrapping by including the user directly.
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ErrBadConfig:
Fix backwards wrapping, include the bad config, and make it
clear that this is an internal error.
ErrBadConfigFile:
Fix backwards wrapping, include the config file location, and
adjust the suggestion slightly.
ErrConfigFileExists:
Include the config file location.
ErrNoConfigFile:
Include the config file location, and adjust the suggestion
slightly.
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Allow the input text to contain "code blocks" denoted by lines beginning
with ">", e.g.:
Foo bar baz:
> echo foo
> echo bar
Instead of squashing these lines together, preserve the line breaks
between them and add indentation, e.g.:
Foo bar baz:
echo foo
echo bar
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Try to detect incomplete locking of v1-encrypted directory
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'fscrypt lock' on a v1-encrypted directory doesn't warn about in-use
files, as the kernel doesn't provide a way to easily detect it.
Instead, implement a heuristic where we check whether a subdirectory can
be created. If yes, then the directory must not be fully locked.
Make both 'fscrypt lock' and 'fscrypt status' use this heuristic.
Resolves https://github.com/google/fscrypt/issues/215
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KEYCTL_INVALIDATE has complicated semantics: it doesn't remove the key
from the keyring right away but rather marks it as being invalidated,
and then removes it asynchronously. This nondeterministically breaks
the heuristic I'm implementing to detect v1-encrypted directories being
incompletely locked.
Instead, switch to KEYCTL_UNLINK, which has simpler semantics.
Note that Android uses KEYCTL_UNLINK too.
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Add tests for command-line interface
Add tests that directly test the fscrypt command-line tool.
See cli-tests/README.md for information about the test framework.
The following test scripts are included:
* t_change_passphrase
* t_encrypt_custom
* t_encrypt_login
* t_encrypt_raw_key
* t_encrypt
* t_lock
* t_not_enabled
* t_not_supported
* t_passphrase_hashing
* t_setup
* t_status
* t_unlock
* t_v1_policy_fs_keyring
* t_v1_policy
Unfortunately, we can't actually make Travis CI run these tests yet because they need kernel v5.4 or later, and Travis CI doesn't support an Ubuntu version that has that yet. But for now, they can be run manually using make cli-test.
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Test using v1 encryption policies (deprecated) with
use_fs_keyring_for_v1_policies = true.
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Test using v1 encryption policies (deprecated).
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Test unlocking a directory.
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Test getting global, filesystem, and unencrypted directory status when
the filesystem is or isn't set up for fscrypt.
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Test 'fscrypt setup'.
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Test that the passphrase hashing seems to take long enough.
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Test that fscrypt fails when the filesystem doesn't support encryption.
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Test that fscrypt fails when the filesystem doesn't have the encrypt
feature enabled. Then test enabling it.
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Test locking a directory.
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Test encrypting a directory using a raw_key protector.
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Test encrypting a directory using a login (pam_passphrase) protector.
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Test encrypting a directory using a custom_passphrase protector.
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Add general tests for 'fscrypt encrypt'. For protector-specific tests,
see t_encrypt_custom, t_encrypt_login, and t_encrypt_raw_key.
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Test changing the passphrase of a custom_passphrase protector.
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Enforce that all the cli-test scripts pass 'shellcheck'.
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Add a framework for writing automated tests of the fscrypt command-line
tool. See cli-tests/README.md for details.
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Allow setting FSCRYPT_CONSISTENT_OUTPUT=1 in the environment to cause
policies and protectors to sorted by last modification time. The CLI
tests need this to make the output of 'fscrypt' ordered in a consistent
way with regard to the operations performed.
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Allow overriding the mountpoint where login protectors are stored by
setting the FSCRYPT_ROOT_MNT environmental variable. The CLI tests need
this to avoid touching the real "/".
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Allow overriding the location of fscrypt.conf by setting the
FSCRYPT_CONF environmental variable. The CLI tests need this to avoid
touching the real /etc/fscrypt.conf.
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There's no longer a need to override the Ubuntu version that the
Travis CI builds install e2fsprogs from, since we now use
"dist: bionic", and e2fsprogs in Bionic supports encryption.
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Since v0.2.6, fscrypt only builds for 64-bit systems. E.g. trying to
build on Raspbian fails with the following error:
$ go get github.com/google/fscrypt/cmd/fscrypt
# github.com/google/fscrypt/keyring
go/src/github.com/google/fscrypt/keyring/fs_keyring.go:231:6: constant 3225445912 overflows int
go/src/github.com/google/fscrypt/keyring/fs_keyring.go:235:7: constant 3225445913 overflows int
Fix it by making the 'ioc' variable have type uintptr.
[EB - removed the later cast to uintptr that became unnecessary, and
added explanation to commit message.]
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Update the /proc/self/mountinfo parsing code to allow selecting a Mount
with Subtree != "/", i.e. a Mount not of the full filesystem. This is
needed to allow fscrypt to work in containers, where the root of the
filesystem may not be mounted.
See findMainMount() for details about the algorithm used.
Resolves https://github.com/google/fscrypt/issues/211
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Signed-off-by: Joe Richey <joerichey@google.com>
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Passing -trimpath makes the build entirely reproducible.
Signed-off-by: Joe Richey <joerichey@google.com>
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There's no need to include the build time, author, and copyright info
in the output of "fscrypt --version". This information is:
- Overly complex (the current string is hard to parse)
- Inaccurate (there are other authors than just me)
- Unnecessary (the Apache 2 license is for Source Code)
- Makes reproducible builds impossible
The default version string is just fine.
Signed-off-by: Joe Richey <joerichey@google.com>
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Automatically enable policy_version 2 when kernel support is detected
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- Mention that a v5.4+ kernel is recommended.
- Mention that policy_version defaults to 1 when unset.
- Emphasize that v2 policies are the recommended solution to the key
visibility problems, and add some more information.
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Since on new kernels v1 encryption policies are deprecated in favor of
v2, update the examples to show v2. This mostly just consists of
updating the output, as the commands are essentially the same with one
notable difference in 'fscrypt lock'.
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If trying to unlock a v2-encrypted directory fails because the kernel
lacks support for v2 policies, show a better error message. This can
happen if someone downgrades their kernel or tries to access encrypted
directories on removable storage from a computer with an older kernel.
Detecting this case is difficult since all we have to go with is EACCES
when opening the directory. Implement a heuristic where if get EACCES,
we actually have read access to the directory, and the kernel doesn't
support v2 policies, we show the improved error message.
Before:
# fscrypt unlock dir
[ERROR] fscrypt unlock: open dir: permission denied
After:
# fscrypt unlock dir
[ERROR] fscrypt unlock: open dir: permission denied
This may be caused by the directory using a v2 encryption policy and
the current kernel not supporting it. If indeed the case, then this
directory can only be used on kernel v5.4 and later. You can create
directories accessible on older kernels by changing policy_version to
1 in /etc/fscrypt.conf.
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If trying to encrypt a directory using a v2 policy fails due to the
kernel lacking support for v2 policies, show a better error message.
One way this can happen is if someone runs 'fscrypt setup' with a new
kernel and then downgrades to an old kernel.
Before:
# echo -n hunter2 | fscrypt encrypt dir --source=custom_passphrase --name=foo --quiet
[ERROR] fscrypt encrypt: inappropriate ioctl for device: system error: could not add key to the keyring
After:
# echo -n hunter2 | fscrypt encrypt dir --source=custom_passphrase --name=foo --quiet
[ERROR] fscrypt encrypt: kernel is too old to support v2 encryption policies
v2 encryption policies are only supported by kernel version 5.4 and
later. Either use a newer kernel, or change policy_version to 1 in
/etc/fscrypt.conf.
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v2 encryption policies are now recommended, due to various security and
usability advantages over v1 policies. Many people have been running
into the usability problems with v1, so it's desirable to get people
onto v2 without having to manually opt-in.
Therefore, when 'fscrypt setup' creates /etc/fscrypt.conf, enable
policy_version 2 automatically if the kernel supports it.
I decided to go with this solution over the policy_version "auto" I
suggested originally because this way is simpler, it can still be
changed to "auto" later if desired, and "auto" might require changing
how we parse the config file (since currently the config file is mapped
directly to a protobuf where policy_version is an 'int' and is shared
with EncryptionOptions).
Resolves https://github.com/google/fscrypt/issues/182
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There's no real need to allow users to choose the key description prefix
(a.k.a. the "service"), since on ext4 and f2fs we can just use "ext4"
and "f2fs" for compatibility with all kernels both old and new, and on
other filesystems we can just use "fscrypt". So, let's do that.
Since this removes the point of the "--legacy" option to 'fscrypt setup'
and the "compatibility" field in /etc/fscrypt.conf, remove those too.
Specifically, we start ignoring the "compatibility" in existing config
files and not writing it to new ones. The corresponding protobuf field
number and name are reserved. We stop accepting the "--legacy" option
at all, although since it was default true and there was no real reason
for anyone to change it to false, probably no one will notice. If
anyone does, they should just stop specifying the option.
Note that this change only affects user keyrings and thus only affects
v1 encryption policies, which are deprecated in favor of v2 anyway.
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Improve the documentation for the installation-related Makefile
variables, and update the commands to remove the forward slash after
$(DESTDIR) in order to remove a duplicate forward slash and match the
recommended usage.
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DESTDIR has a well established purpose
https://www.gnu.org/prep/standards/html_node/DESTDIR.html
It is a suffix for all the files to be installed. And it is used by
package managers who installs the files into some $tmpdir before
creating a package.
Change the build commands to follow this convention.
Add BINDIR that does the same what previous did $DESTDIR.
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* Release version v0.2.6
Fixes #195
Also, update the encrypted API key.
My person access token had expired, this one should work now.
Signed-off-by: Joe Richey <joerichey@google.com>
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While it's important to generate a recovery passphrase in the linked
protector case to avoid data loss if the system is reinstalled, some
people really don't want it (even though it can be safely ignored as it
almost certainly has far more entropy than the login passphrase).
As a compromise, prompt for y/n before generating it, with default y.
Also, to allow disabling the recovery passphrase during noninteractive
use, add a --no-recovery command-line option.
Update https://github.com/google/fscrypt/issues/186
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Clean up policies and protectors on error
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