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Message-ID: <CANT6BaPObcB3DUgU2ZEDnLmaUy9aVabwgo9B++Cyo4WqzGWoqA@mail.gmail.com> Date: Wed, 23 Jul 2014 00:23:35 -0700 From: Dustin Kirkland <kirkland@...ntu.com> To: Tyler Hicks <tyhicks@...onical.com> Cc: oss-security@...ts.openwall.com Subject: Re: ecryptfs-setup-private nitpick On Tue, Jul 22, 2014 at 3:35 PM, Tyler Hicks <tyhicks@...onical.com> wrote: > Hi Raphael! > > On 2014-07-22 14:00:03, Raphael Geissert wrote: >> Hi, >> >> Taking a look at ecryptfs-utils 103's ecryptfs-setup-private, there is a bit >> of code that writes the mount pass to a file in /dev/shm hoping to "keep it >> from leaking to the hard-drive": >> >> 8<-------->8 >> # This will be wrapped by pam_ecryptfs's chauthtok as soon as the >> user >> # chooses a password. Until that happens (hopefully soon), standard >> # file permissions (600) are all that's protecting it. Write it to >> # ramdisk, to keep it from leaking to the hard-drive. >> temp=`mktemp /dev/shm/.ecryptfs-XXXXXX` >> printf "%s" "$MOUNTPASS" > "$temp" >> mv -f -T "$temp" "/dev/shm/.ecryptfs-$USER" || error "Could not >> create passphrase file" >> 8<-------->8 >> >> Fastforward to 2014 and /dev/shm is, well, not a ramfs/ramdisk: >> >> /dev/shm -> /run/shm, which is a tmpfs at least on Debian. >> >> And as clearly stated by Documentation/filesystems/tmpfs.txt: >> "If you compare it to ramfs (which was the template to create tmpfs) >> you gain swapping and limit checking." >> >> >> So in the hope of avoiding a persistent storage the mount pass is written to >> a file in a tmpfs that can be swapped to... disk. > > I consider encrypted swap to be a prerequisite to enabling any > disk/file encryption solution. Ubuntu sets up encrypted swap when the > user selects to encrypt their home directory from the installer. > > Unfortunately, the ecryptfs-setup-private man page doesn't recommend > encrypting your swap but ecryptfs-utils ships a script called > ecryptfs-setup-swap that enables encrypted swap. +1, always encrypt your swap, if you have any respect or concern for the privacy of the data on your computer. We've tried to make it as easy as possible to encrypt your swap in Ubuntu and ecryptfs. The documentation could be updated to make this more clear. > Ignoring the encrypted swap argument, ecryptfs-setup-private shouldn't > be storing the plaintext mount passphrase in a manner that is swappable. > I think POSIX shared memory segments should provide the persistence and > pinnable memory (SHM_LOCKED) needed. > > Either Dustin (cc'ed) or I will make this improvement. Thanks for the > feedback! Indeed, thanks! > Tyler > >> >> The file is left on /dev/shm until pam_ecryptfs actually wraps it with the >> login pass. >> >> Cheers, >> -- >> Raphael Geissert - Debian Developer >> www.debian.org - get.debian.net
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