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Now instead of spawning a seperate thread we alternate between changing
the euid and ruid to both find the keyring and link it to the process
keyring. Note that we also ensure that the user keyring is linked into
the root keyring whenever possible.
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This user is used with policies to interface with the keryings and with
protectors to indicate which user's login passphrase should be used to
protectors of type pam_passphrase.
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'fscrypt setup' is supposed to calibrate the Argon2 password hashing
difficulty to 1s by default, but actually it was setting it to only 1s /
num_cpus because the hashing is done with all CPUs and it is timed using
the CLOCK_PROCESS_CPUTIME_ID clock, which measures the time spent by all
threads in the process. Fix this by dividing the elapsed time by
HashingCosts.Parallelism, which is used as the number of threads.
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Now the testing functions will skip the integration tests if a testing
filesystem is not specified.
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In addition to using callbacks, unlocked Protectors can now directly
unlock a policy. The error codes are updated to make more sense.
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This commit changes all the internal import paths from `fscrypt/foo` to
`github.com/google/fscrypt/foo` so that it can be built once we release
externaly. The documentation in README.md is updated accordingly.
Also, the README has a note noting that we do not make any guarantees
about project stability before 1.0 (when it ships with Ubuntu).
Change-Id: I6ba86e442c74057c8a06ba32a42e17f94833e280
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This commit changes the error handling for the actions package to use
the error handling library github.com/pkg/errors. This means replacing
"errors" with "github.com/pkg/errors", reworking some of the error
values, and wrapping some errors with additional context.
This commit also changes the Protector/Policy API, moving most of the
package functionality into Protector or Policy methods. These types are
now "locked" when they are queried from the filesystem, and Unlock()
must be used to get their corresponding keys. Note that only certain
operations will require unlocking the keys. Certain unnecessary
functions and methods are also removed.
This CL also fixes two bugs reported by Tyler Hicks in CreateConfigFile.
CPU time is used instead of wall time, and kiB is used instead of kB.
Change-Id: I88f45659e9fe4938d148843e3289e7b6d5b698d8
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This commit makes the callbacks for getting keys easier to understand.
Functions which need keys now take a KeyFunc callback. This callback
contains a ProtectorInfo parameter (basically a read-only version of
metadata.ProtectorData) and a boolean which indicates if the call is
being retried. The documentation is also updated to say which functions
will retry the KeyFunc.
For selecting a protector, there is now an OptionFunc callback which
takes a slice of ProtectorOptions. A ProtectorOption is a ProtectorInfo
along with additional information about a linked filesystem (if
applicable).
This commit also adds in methods for getting the protector options for a
specific filesystem or policy. It also adds a function for getting the
policy descriptor for a specific path.
Change-Id: I41e0d94ffd44e7166b0c5cf1b5d18437960bdf90
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This commit adds in the Policy structure. This structure represents an
unlocked policy key and its associated data. Policies can add or remove
Protectors, apply encryption policies to filesystem directories, and
provision a key into the kernel keyring.
Change-Id: I089710223221e0ea60188d523703469e5d67ad0e
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This commit adds in the Protector struct to the actions package. This
struct represents an unlocked Protector. They can be created from a
context or they can be unlocked using some provided data. In either
case, the data is provided via a callback mechanism.
Change-Id: I066e965b8e8e0feeba61d9c0e4472dd08965cafb
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This commit adds in the actions package. This package will be the
highest-level interface to the fscrypt packages. The public functions
in this package will be called directly from cmd/fscrypt.
The actions added in this commit pertain to creating and reading the
fscrypt global config file "fscrypt.conf". The challenging part about
creating this file is finding the correct hashing parameters for the
desired time target.
The getHashingCosts() function finds the desired costs by doubling the
costs and running the passphrase hash until the target is exceeded.
Then, a cost estimate is obtained using a linear interpolation between
the last two costs (and their time results).
Change-Id: I4a0eaf4856ec4ff49eb4360da3267f7caa9d07b2
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