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title | description | published | date | tags | editor | dateCreated |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Encrypt the directory that contains virtual disk images | true | 2022-01-31T12:30:06.985Z | markdown | 2022-01-31T12:30:06.985Z |
Encrypt virtual disk images
Integration of filesystem-level encryption in Phyllome OS is a work-in-progress {.is-warning}
Context
At the moment, Phyllome OS does not provide any kind of encryption by default at the host level. Filesystem-level encryption is just one layer of protection. For any virtual disks that contains personnal data, users are strongly advised to use full disk encryption as provided by their guest operating system.
This guide will show you how to compile 1 and configure fscrypt
to encrypt virtual disk images. It will also show you how to configure PAM to work alongside fscrypt
fscrypt
provides filesystem-level encryption and its library is part of the Linux kernel. It is widely used by Android-based devices, but only compatible with a handful of filesystems {.is-info}
fscrypt
does not support in-place encryption. Only previously empty directories can be encrypted. If you wish to encrypt a directory which already contains files, move these files outside of the directory, encrypt it, and put the files back in {.is-warning}
Installation
Building from source
- Install dependencies to compile
fscrypt
:
sudo dnf install -y git golang pam-devel m4 authselect
- Fetch the source code:
go get -d github.com/google/fscrypt/...
- Move to the install folder:
cd ~/go/pkg/mod/github.com/google/fscrypt\@v0.3.1/
If a new version is released, for instance
v0.3.2
, update the above path accordingly {.is-info}
- Run
make install
, which will installfscrypt
to/usr/local/bin
,pam_fscrypt.so
to/usr/local/lib/security
, andpam_fscrypt/config
to/usr/local/share/pam-configs
.*
sudo make install
fatal: not a git repository (or any of the parent directories): .git
install -d /usr/local/bin
install bin/fscrypt /usr/local/bin
install -d /usr/local/lib/security
install bin/pam_fscrypt.so /usr/local/lib/security
m4 --define=PAM_INSTALL_PATH=/usr/local/lib/security/pam_fscrypt.so < pam_fscrypt/config > bin/config
install -d /usr/local/share/pam-configs
install bin/config /usr/local/share/pam-configs/fscrypt
install -Dm644 cmd/fscrypt/fscrypt_bash_completion /usr/local/share/bash-completion/completions/fscrypt
The error message seems innocuous {.is-info}
- Move
pam_fscrypt.so
to/usr/lib64/security/
, where it belongs:
sudo mv /usr/local/lib/security/pam_fscrypt.so /usr/lib64/security/pam_fscrypt.so
Setup
- Identify the
root
partition (/
) using the command line utilitylsblk
:
lsblk
[groot@phyllome ~]$ lsblk
NAME MAJ:MIN RM SIZE RO TYPE MOUNTPOINTS
zram0 251:0 0 7.8G 0 disk [SWAP]
nvme0n1 252:0 0 50G 0 disk
├─nvme0n1p1 252:1 0 128M 0 part /boot/efi
├─nvme0n1p2 252:2 0 384M 0 part /boot
└─nvme0n1p3 252:3 0 49.5G 0 part /
In this case, it is nvme0n1p3
but valid value may be sda3
or vda3
or system-root
for LVM-based systems
- Activate
tune2fs
by providing the absolute path to the root partition:
sudo tune2fs -O encrypt /dev/nvme0n1p3
tune2fs 1.45.6 (20-Mar-2020)
- Verify proper activation:
sudo zgrep -h ENCRYPTION /boot/config-$(uname -r) | sort | uniq
CONFIG_BLK_INLINE_ENCRYPTION=y
CONFIG_BLK_INLINE_ENCRYPTION_FALLBACK=y
CONFIG_FS_ENCRYPTION_ALGS=y
CONFIG_FS_ENCRYPTION_INLINE_CRYPT=y
CONFIG_FS_ENCRYPTION=y
- setup
fscrypt
:
sudo fscrypt setup
Defaulting to policy_version 2 because kernel supports it.
Customizing passphrase hashing difficulty for this system...
Created global config file at "/etc/fscrypt.conf".
Metadata directories created at "/.fscrypt".
- Verify:
fscrypt status
filesystems supporting encryption: 1
filesystems with fscrypt metadata: 1
MOUNTPOINT DEVICE FILESYSTEM ENCRYPTION FSCRYPT
/ /dev/nvme0n1p3 ext4 supported Yes
/boot /dev/nvme0n1p2 ext4 not enabled No
PAM configuration
- Select the minimal profile with
authselect
sudo authselect select minimal --force
- Activate the
ecryptfs
feature
sudo authselect enable-feature with-ecryptfs
- Create a new profile based on the minimal profile and call it phyllome:
sudo authselect create-profile phyllome --base-on=minimal
New profile was created at /etc/authselect/custom/phyllome
- Select the newly create profile:
sudo authselect select custom/phyllome --force
Backup stored at /var/lib/authselect/backups/2021-07-15-20-08-13.4Czqor
Profile "custom/phyllome" was selected.
The following nsswitch maps are overwritten by the profile:
- aliases
- automount
- ethers
- group
- hosts
- initgroups
- netgroup
- networks
- passwd
- protocols
- publickey
- rpc
- services
- shadow
- Modify the content of the system-auth file:
sudo nano /etc/authselect/custom/phyllome/system-auth
auth required pam_env.so
auth required pam_faildelay.so delay=2000000
auth required pam_faillock.so preauth silent >
auth sufficient pam_unix.so {if not "without-nullok">
auth required pam_faillock.so authfail >
auth required pam_deny.so
auth optional pam_fscrypt.so
account required pam_access.so >
account required pam_faillock.so >
account required pam_unix.so
password requisite pam_pwquality.so
password sufficient pam_unix.so yescrypt shadow {if not >
password required pam_deny.so
password optional pam_fscrypt.so
session optional pam_keyinit.so revoke
session required pam_limits.so
session optional pam_fscrypt.so
-session optional pam_systemd.so
session optional pam_oddjob_mkhomedir.so >
session [success=1 default=ignore] pam_succeed_if.so service in crond q>
session required pam_unix.so
*According to fscrypt documentation, The Auth and Session functionality of
pam_fscrypt.so
are used to automatically unlock directories when logging in as a user, and lock them when logging out [and] [t]he Password functionality [...] is used to automatically rewrap a user's login protector when their unix passphrase changes." * {.is-info}
- Copy content of system-auth file into a the password-auth file.
Unsure which file is the canonic one {.is-info}
sudo cp system-auth password-auth
- Modify the postlogin file as well to match the following content
auth optional pam_fscrypt.so debug
password optional pam_fscrypt.so debug
session optional pam_umask.so silent
session [success=1 default=ignore] pam_succeed_if.so service !~ gdm* service !~ su* quiet
session [default=1] pam_lastlog.so nowtmp {if "with-silent-lastlog":silent>
session optional pam_lastlog.so silent noupdate showfailed
- Create the fscrypt file under the
/etc/pam.d/
directory and add the following line to it to allow PAM to be able to check the UNIX passhphrase
nano /etc/pam.d/fscrypt
auth required pam_unix.so
- Finally, apply changes to phyllome profile
authselect apply-changes
Changes were successfully applied.
Tame SELinux
*This is a work in progress. New policices will have to be designed for SELinux to work nicely with fscrypt. {.is-warning}
- Create a directory to store user-created SELinux policies and move there
sudo mkdir /opt/selinux && cd /opt/selinux/
- Allowing
systemd
to access 1000.count file
ausearch -c '(systemd)' --raw | audit2allow -M my-systemd
semodule -X 300 -i my-systemd.pp
Test
- Create a directory called
secret
in your home directory
mkdir ~/secret
- Encrypt the directory using your login passhprase
fscrypt encrypt ~/secret --source=pam_passphrase
IMPORTANT: Before continuing, ensure you have properly set up your system for
login protectors. See
https://github.com/google/fscrypt#setting-up-for-login-protectors
Enter login passphrase for test:
"/home/groot/secret" is now encrypted, unlocked, and ready for use.
- Add a file to this directory
touch ~/secret/recipe-for-pancakes-by-john-locke
- Reboot and make sure the file can be red after login
cat ~/secret/recipe-for-pancakes-by-john-locke
Pancakes
* Take sweet cream 3/4 + pint.
* Flower a quarter of a pound.
* Eggs 7 leave out of 4 of the whites.
* Beat the Eggs very well.
* Then put in the flower, beat it a quarter of an hower.
* Then put in six spoonfulls of the Cream, beat it a litle Take new sweet butter half a pound. * Melt it to oyle, & take off the skum, power in all the clear by degrees beating it all the time.
* Then put in the rest of your cream. beat it well.
* Half a grated nutmeg & litle orangeflower water. Frie it without butter.
This is the right way
Encrypt virtual disks
- Encrypt default directory containing virtual disks for the current user
fscrypt encrypt ~/.local/share/libvirt/images --source=pam_passphrase
fscrypt
does not support in-place encryption. Only previously empty directories can be encrypted. If you wish to encrypt a directory which already contains files, move these files outside of the directory, encrypt it, and put the files back in {.is-warning}
Post-installation cleaning (untested)
# dnf remove -y git golang m4
$ rm -rf ~/go
Resources
Troubleshooting
- You can use the following command to check for entries related to fscrypt in your log
journalctl -b | grep fscrypt
- If directories encrypted with
fscrypt
won't unlock, you could try to set SELinux in permissive mode and check error messages using thesetroubleshoot
software:
sudo nano /etc/selinux/config
SELINUX=permissive
Then reboot.
Paths
- Where authselect stores its default and vendor-specific configs:
/usr/share/authselect/
- Where PAM modules are stored:
/usr/lib64/security/
- Where authselect stores the current profile
/etc/authselect
- Documentation on developing PAM modules
/usr/share/doc/pam-devel
/usr/local/share/pam-configs/fscrypt
Created global config file at "/etc/fscrypt.conf". Metadata directories created at "/.fscrypt".
External Resources
The fscrypt
PAM module implements the Auth, Session, and Password
types.
- fscrypt official repo
- PAM and Fedora
- fscrypt for ext4 encryption on the Archwiki
- See here for an RPM package for altlinux
-
As of now,
fscrypt
does not ship as an RPM package ↩︎