Warning
This crate hasn't been audited; it's using ring
crate, which is a well-known audited library, so in principle, at
least the primitives should offer a similar level of security.
This is still under development. Please do not use it with sensitive data for now; please wait for a
stable release.
It's mostly ideal for experimental and learning projects.
An encrypted file system written in Rust that is mounted with FUSE on Linux. It can be used to create encrypted directories.
You can then safely back up the encrypted directory to an untrusted server without worrying about the data being exposed. You can also store it in a cloud storage service like Google Drive, Dropbox, etc., and have it synced across multiple devices.
You can use it as CLI or as a library to build your custom FUSE implementation or other apps that work with encrypted data.
There is a GUI too.
Create a simple,
performant,
modular
and ergonomic
yet very secure
encrypted filesystem
to protect your privacy
, which is also open source
and is correctly and safely using well-known audited
crates as cryptographic primitives.
The Hitchhiker’s Guide to Building an Encrypted Filesystem in Rust
There will be a series of articles about the evolution of this project, trying to keep it like a tutorial. This is the first one.
Crate of the week in This Week in Rust
It was crate of the week in Aug 2024.
- The Hitchhiker’s Guide to Building an Encrypted Filesystem in Rust
- Basics of cryptography and FUSE for building a filesystem in Rust
Some of these are still being worked on and marked with [WIP]
.
Security
using well-known auditedAEAD
cryptography primitives;[WIP]
Data integrity
, data is written withWAL
to ensure integrity even on crash or power loss;[WIP]
Hide all info for enhancedprivacy
, allmetadata
,content
,file name
,file size
,*time
fields,files count
, and directory structure is encrypted;Safely
managecredentials
in memory withmlock(2)
,mprotect
,zeroize
, andexpiry
to mitigate cold boot attacks;Memory safety
,performance
, andoptimized
forconcurrency
with Rust;- Simplicity;
- Encryption key generated from password;
- Password saved in OS's
keyring
; Change password
without re-encrypting all data;[WIP]
Generateunique nonce
inoffline mode
;Fast seek
on both reads and writes;Writes in parallel
;- Exposed with
FUSE
; - Fully
concurrent
for all operations; [WIP]
Handlelong file names
;[WIP]
Abstraction layer forRust File
andfs
API to use it as lib toswitch to using encrypted files
by justchanging the use statements
;[WIP]
Abstraction layer toaccess the storage
with implementations for desktop, Wasm, Android, and iOS and the ability to write your own implementation.
Some of these are still being worked on and marked with [WIP]
.
- It keeps all
encrypted
data andmaster encryption key
in a dedicated directory with files structured oninodes
(with metadata info), files for binary content, and directories with files/directories entries. All data, metadata, and filenames are encrypted. It generates unique inodes for new files in a multi-instance run and offline mode. - The password is collected from CLI and saved in the OS's
keyring
while the app runs. This is because, for security concerns, we clear the password from memory on inactivity, and we derive it again from the password just when needed. - Master encryption key is also encrypted with another key derived from the password. This gives the ability to change
the
password without re-encrypting all data, we just
re-encrypt
themaster key
. - Files are
encrypted
inchunks
of256KB
, so when making a change, we just re-encrypt that chunks. Fast seek
on read and write, so if you're watching a movie, you can seek any position, and that would be instant. This is because we can seek a particular chunk.- The encryption key is
zeroize
in the mem when disposing and idle. Also, it'smlock
ed while used to prevent being moved to swap. It's alsomprotect
ed while not in use. [WIP]
Ensure file integrity by saving each change to WAL, so for crashes or power loss, we apply the pending changes at the next start. This makes the write operations atomic.- Multiple writes in parallel to the same file, ideal for torrent-like applications.
For detailed description of the various sequence flows please look into Flows.
- it's fully async built upon tokio and fuse3
- ring for encryption and argon2 for key derivation function (generating key from password used to encrypt the master encryption key)
- rand_chacha for random generators
- shush-rs keeps pass and encryption keys safe in memory and zero them when not used. It keeps encryption keys in memory only while being used, and when not active, it will release and zeroing them in memory. It locks the memory page as well, preventing it from being written to swap.
- blake3 for hashing
- password saved in OS keyring using keyring
- tracing for logs
- Alternatives
- EncFS and alternatives
- CryFS
- gocryptfs
- fscrypt
- VeraCrypt
- Cryptomator
- TrueCrypt
- DroidFS, F-Droid
- LUKS, dm-crypt
- AES Crypt
- Windows BitLocker
- File Lock PEA
- ZenCrypt
- Hat.sh
Asked ChatGPT if there are other solutions out there which offer all the key functionalities we do, seems like there are none :)
You can see the key features that separate us.
Get the image
docker pull xorio42/rencfs
Start a container to set up mount in it
docker run -it --device /dev/fuse --cap-add SYS_ADMIN --security-opt apparmor:unconfined xorio42/rencfs:latest /bin/sh
In the container, create mount and data directories
mkdir fsmnt && mkdir fsdata
Start rencfs
rencfs mount --mount-point fsmnt --data-dir fsdata
Enter a password for encryption.
Get the container ID
docker ps
In another terminal, attach to the running container with the above ID
docker exec -it <ID> /bin/sh
From here, you can play with it by creating files in fsmnt
directory
cd fsmnt
mkdir 1
ls
echo "test" > 1/test
cat 1/test
For the library, you can follow the documentation.
To use the encrypted file system, you need to have FUSE installed on your system. You can install it by running the following command (or based on your distribution).
Arch
sudo pacman -Syu && sudo pacman -S fuse3
Ubuntu
sudo apt-get update && sudo apt-get -y install fuse3
You can install the encrypted file system binary using the following command
yay -Syu && yay -S rencfs
You can install the encrypted file system binary using the following command
cargo install rencfs
A basic example of how to use the encrypted file system is shown below
rencfs mount --mount-point MOUNT_POINT --data-dir DATA_DIR
MOUNT_POINT
act as a client, and mount FUSE at the given pathDATA_DIR
where to store the encrypted data with the sync provider. But it needs to be on the same filesystem as the data-dir
It will prompt you to enter a password to encrypt/decrypt the data.
The master encryption key is stored in a file and encrypted with a key derived from the password. This offers the possibility to change the password without needing to re-encrypt the whole data. This is done by decrypting the master key with the old password and re-encrypting it with the new password.
To change the password, you can run the following command
rencfs passwd --data-dir DATA_DIR
DATA_DIR
where the encrypted data is stored
It will prompt you to enter the old password and then the new password.
You can specify the encryption algorithm by adding this argument to the command line
--cipher CIPHER ...
Where CIPHER
is the encryption algorithm. You can check the available ciphers with rencfs --help
.
The default value is ChaCha20Poly1305
.
You can specify the log level by adding the --log-level
argument to the command line. Possible
values: TRACE
, DEBUG
, INFO
(default), WARN
, ERROR
.
rencfs --log-level LEVEL ...
You can see more here
If you want to give it a quick try and not setup anything locally you can
You can compile it, run it, and give it a quick try in the browser. After you start it from above
sudo apt-get update && sudo apt-get install fuse3
curl --proto '=https' --tlsv1.2 -sSf https://sh.rustup.rs | sh
mkdir mnt && mkdir data
cargo run --release -- mount -m mnt -d data
Open another terminal
cd mnt
mkdir a && cd a
echo "test" > test.txt
cat test.txt
For now, the FUSE
(fuse3
crate) only works on Linux
, so to start the project, you will need to be on Linux.
Instead, you can Develop inside a Container, which will start a local Linux container, the IDE will connect to it,
and you can build and start the app there and also use the terminal to test it.
On Windows, you can start it in WSL.
git clone [email protected]:radumarias/rencfs.git && cd rencfs
To build from source, you need to have Rust installed, you can see more details on how to install it here.
curl --proto '=https' --tlsv1.2 -sSf https://sh.rustup.rs | sh
Accordingly, it is customary for Rust developers to include this directory in their PATH
environment variable.
During installation rustup
will attempt to configure the PATH
. Because of differences between platforms, command
shells,
and bugs in rustup
, the modifications to PATH
may not take effect until the console is restarted, or the user is
logged out, or it may not succeed at all.
If, after installation, running rustc --version
in the console fails, this is the most likely reason.
In that case please add it to the PATH
manually.
The project is set up to use the nightly
toolchain in rust-toolchain. tool
; on the first build, you will see it fetch the nightly.
Make sure to add this to your $PATH
too
export PATH="$PATH::$HOME/.cargo/bin"
cargo install cargo-aur
cargo install cargo-generate-rpm
Also, these dependencies are required (or based on your distribution):
sudo pacman -Syu && sudo pacman -S fuse3 base-devel act
sudo apt-get update && sudo apt-get install fuse3 build-essential act
sudo dnf update && sudo dnf install fuse3 && dnf install @development-tools act
cargo build
cargo build --release
cargo run --release -- mount --mount-point MOUNT_POINT --data-dir DATA_DIR
If you don't want to be prompted for a password, you can set this env var and run it like this:
RENCFS_PASSWORD=PASS cargo run --release -- mount --mount-point MOUNT_POINT --data-dir DATA_DIR
For dev mode it is recommended to run with DEBUG
log level:
cargo run --release -- --log-level DEBUG mount --mount-point MOUNT_POINT --data-dir DATA_DIR
This is using cargo-generate-rpm
cargo install cargo-generate-rpm
cargo build --release
cargo generate-rpm
The generated RPM will be located here: target/generate-rpm
.
cd target/generate-rpm/
sudo dnf localinstall rencfs-xxx.x86_64.rpm
See here how to configure for RustRover and for VsCode.
You can use the .devcontainer
directory from the project to start a container with all the necessary tools to build
and run the app.
The minimum supported version is 1.75
.
The plan is to implement it also on macOS and Windows
- Systemd service is being worked on rencfs-daemon
- GUI is being worked on rencfs-desktop and rencfs-kotlin
- Mobile apps for Android and iOS are being worked on rencfs-kotlin
Aes256Gcm
is slightly faster than ChaCha20Poly1305
by a factor of 1.28 on average. This is because of the hardware acceleration of AES
on most CPUs via AES-NI. However, where hardware acceleration is not available, ChaCha20Poly1305
is faster. Also ChaChaPoly1305
is better at SIMD
.
- If you have hardware acceleration (e.g.
AES-NI
), thenAES-GCM
provides better performance. On my benchmarks, it was faster by a factor of 1.28 on average.
If you do not have hardware acceleration,AES-GCM
is either slower thanChaCha20-Poly1305
, or it leaks your encryption keys in cache timing. AES-GCM
can target multiple security levels (128-bit
,192-bit
,256-bit
), whereasChaCha20-Poly1305
is only defined at the256-bit
security level.- Nonce size:
AES-GCM
: Varies, but the standard is96 bits
(12 bytes
). If you supply a longer nonce, this gets hashed down to16 bytes
.ChaCha20-Poly1305
: The standardized version uses96-bit
nonce (12 bytes
), but the original used64-bit
nonce (8 bytes
).
- Wear-out of a single (key, nonce) pair:
AES-GCM
: Messages must be less than2^32 – 2
blocks (a.k.a.2^36 – 32 bytes
, a.k.a.2^39 – 256 bits
), that's roughly64GB
. This also makes the security analysis ofAES-GCM
with long nonces complicated since the hashed nonce doesn’t start with the lower4 bytes
set to00 00 00 02
.ChaCha20-Poly1305
:ChaCha
has an internal counter (32 bits
in the standardized IETF variant,64 bits
in the original design). Max message length is2^39 - 256 bits
, about256GB
- Neither algorithm is nonce misuse-resistant.
ChaChaPoly1305
is better atSIMD
Both are good options. AES-GCM
can be faster with hardware support, but pure-software implementations of
ChaCha20-Poly1305
are almost always fast and constant-time.
- Phantom reads: Reading older content from a file is not possible. Data is written with WAL and periodically flushed to file. This ensures data integrity and maintains change order. One problem that may occur is if we do a truncation, we change the content of the file, but the process is killed before we write the metadata with the new file size. In this case, the next time we mount the system, we will still see the old files. However, the content of the file could be bigger, and we read until the old size offset, so we would not pick up the new zeros bytes are written on truncating by increasing the size. If content is smaller, the read would stop and end-of-file of the actual content, so this would not be such a big issue
- What kind of metadata does it leak: close to none. The filename, actual file size and other file attrs (times,
permissions, other flags) are kept encrypted. What it could possibly leak is the following
- If a directory has children, we keep those children in a directory with name as inode number and encrypted names of children as files in it. So we could see how many children a directory has. However, we can't identify that actual directory name; We can just see its inode number (internal representation like an ID for each file), but we cannot see the actual filenames of the directory or children. Also, we cannot identify which file content corresponds to a directory child
- Each file content is saved in a separate file, so we can see the size of the encrypted content but not the actual filesize
- We can also see the last time the file was accessed
- It's always recommended to use encrypted disks for at least your sensitive data; this project is not a replacement for that
- To reduce the risk of the encryption key being exposed from memory, it's recommended to disable memory dumps on the OS level. Please see here how to do it on Linux
- Cold boot attacks: to reduce the risk of this, we keep the encryption key in memory just as long as we really need it to encrypt/decrypt data, and we are zeroing it after that. We also remove it from memory after a period of inactivity
- Please note that no security expert audited this project. It's built with security in mind and tries to follow all the best practices, but it's not guaranteed to be secure
- Also, please back up your data; the project is still in development, and there might be bugs that can lead to data loss
- Please note that this project doesn't try to reinvent the wheel or be better than already proven implementations
- This project doesn't want to be a replacement in any way for already proven file encryption solutions. If you really want to be close to bulletproof solutions, then maybe this is not the ideal one for you. But is trying to offer a simple use of an encryption solution that should be used, taking into consideration all the security concerns from above
- It started as a learning project of Rust programming language, and I feel like I keep building more on it
- It's a fairly simple and standard implementation that tries to respect all security standards and correctly use secure and robust primitives so that it can be extended from this. Indeed, it doesn't have the maturity yet to "fight" other well-known implementations. But it can be a project from which others can learn or build upon, or why not for some to actually use it, keeping in mind all the above
Feel free to fork it, change and use it however you want. If you build something interesting and feel like sharing pull requests are always appreciated.
Please see CONTRIBUTING.md.