mirror of
https://github.com/Llewellynvdm/Tomb.git
synced 2024-11-26 14:56:33 +00:00
127a8ed7ee
also removed pre-open and post-close as they don't really make sense since all hooks are contained inside the Tomb. The post-close may be implemented using a temp file, if a use case turns up for it.
516 lines
19 KiB
Groff
516 lines
19 KiB
Groff
.TH tomb 1 "April 16, 2017" "tomb"
|
|
|
|
.SH NAME
|
|
Tomb \- the Crypto Undertaker
|
|
|
|
.SH SYNOPSIS
|
|
.B
|
|
.IP "tomb [options] command [arguments]"
|
|
|
|
.SH DESCRIPTION
|
|
|
|
Tomb is an application to manage the creation and access of encrypted
|
|
storage files: it can be operated from commandline and it can
|
|
integrate with a user's graphical desktop.
|
|
|
|
Tomb generates encrypted storage files to be opened and closed using
|
|
their associated keys, which are also protected with a password chosen
|
|
by the user. To create, open and close tombs a user will need super
|
|
user rights to execute the tomb commandline utility.
|
|
|
|
A tomb is like a locked folder that can be safely transported and
|
|
hidden in a filesystem; it encourages users to keep their keys
|
|
separate from tombs, for instance keeping a tomb file on your computer
|
|
harddisk and its key file on a USB stick.
|
|
|
|
|
|
.SH COMMANDS
|
|
|
|
.B
|
|
.IP "dig"
|
|
Generates a file that can be used as a tomb and will occupy as much
|
|
space as its desired initial size, the unlocked \fI.tomb\fR file can
|
|
then be locked using a \fIkey\fR. It takes a mandatory \fI-s\fR option
|
|
which is the size in megabytes (MiB). Tombs are digged using random
|
|
data gathered from a non-blocking source (/dev/urandom).
|
|
|
|
.B
|
|
.IP "forge"
|
|
Creates a new \fIkey\fR and prompts the user for a \fIpassword\fR to
|
|
protect its usage using symmetric encryption. This operation uses
|
|
random data from a blocking source (/dev/random) and it may take long
|
|
when run on a server with low entropy; to switch using a non-blocking
|
|
source the \fI--use-urandom\fR flag can be used. The \fI-g\fR option
|
|
switches on the use of a GPG key instead of a password (asymmetric
|
|
encryption), then the \fI-r\fR option indicates the recipient key;
|
|
more recipient GPG ids can be indicated (comma separated). The default
|
|
cipher to protect the key is AES256, a custom one can be specified
|
|
using the \fI-o\fR option, for a list of supported ciphers use
|
|
\fI-v\fR. For additional protection against dictionary attacks on
|
|
keys, the \fI--kdf\fR option can be used when forging a key, making
|
|
sure that the \fItomb-kdb-pbkdf2\fR binaries in \fIextras/kdf\fR were
|
|
compiled and installed on the system.
|
|
|
|
.B
|
|
.IP "lock"
|
|
Initializes and locks an empty tomb (made with \fIdig\fR) using a key
|
|
(made with \fIforge\fR), making it ready for usage. After this
|
|
operation, the tomb can only be opened in possession of the key and
|
|
knowing its password. As in any other command requiring a key, the
|
|
option \fI-k\fR should be used to specify a key file; in case of
|
|
encryption to GPG recipients the \fI-g\fR flag should be used followed
|
|
by \fI-r\fR and the recipient's secret GPG key id. The \fI-o\fR
|
|
option can be used to specify the cipher specification: default is
|
|
"aes-xts-plain64:sha256", old versions of Tomb used
|
|
"aes-cbc-essiv:sha256". If you are looking for something exotic, also
|
|
try "serpent-xts-plain64". More options may be found in cryptsetup(8)
|
|
and Linux documentation. This operation requires root privileges to
|
|
loopback mount, format the tomb (using LUKS and Ext4), then set the
|
|
key in its first LUKS slot.
|
|
|
|
.B
|
|
.IP "open"
|
|
Opens an existing \fItomb file\fR (first argument) using a key
|
|
(\fI-k\fR) which can also be an \fIjpeg image\fR (see
|
|
\fIbury\fR/\fIexhume\fR). If a second argument is given it will
|
|
indicate the \fImountpoint\fR where the tomb should be made
|
|
accessible, else the tomb is mounted in a directory inside /media (if
|
|
not available it uses /run/media/$USER). The option \fI-o\fR can be
|
|
used to pass mount(8) options (default: rw,noatime,nodev). The
|
|
\fI-g\fR option is needed when using GPG encryption to recipients.
|
|
|
|
.B
|
|
.IP "list"
|
|
List all the tombs found open, including information about the time
|
|
they were opened and the hooks that they mounted. If the first
|
|
argument is present, then shows only the tomb named that way or
|
|
returns an error if it's not found. If the option
|
|
\fI--get-mountpoint\fR is used then print a simple list of currently
|
|
open tomb mountpoint paths.
|
|
|
|
.B
|
|
.IP "index"
|
|
Creates or updates the search indexes of all tombs currently open:
|
|
enables use of the \fIsearch\fR command using simple word patterns on
|
|
file names. Indexes are created using mlocate's updatedb(8) and
|
|
swish-e(1) if they are found on the system. Indexes allow to search
|
|
very fast for filenames and contents inside a tomb, they are stored
|
|
inside it and are not accessible if the Tomb is closed. To avoid
|
|
indexing a specific tomb simply touch a \fI.noindex\fR file in it.
|
|
|
|
.B
|
|
.IP "search"
|
|
Takes any string as argument and searches for them through all tombs
|
|
currently open and previously indexed using the \fIindex\fR command.
|
|
The search matches filenames if mlocate is installed and then also
|
|
file contents if swish++ is present on the system, results are listed
|
|
on the console.
|
|
|
|
.B
|
|
.IP "close"
|
|
Closes a currently open tomb. If more tombs are open, the first
|
|
argument should be used to specify the name of the tomb to be closed,
|
|
or \fIall\fR to close all currently open tombs. This command fails if
|
|
the tomb is in use by running processes (to force close, see
|
|
\fIslam\fR below).
|
|
|
|
.B
|
|
.IP "slam"
|
|
Closes a tomb like the command \fIclose\fR does, but it doesn't fail
|
|
even if the tomb is in use by other application processes: it looks
|
|
for and closes each of them (in order: TERM, HUP, KILL). This command may
|
|
provoke unsaved data loss, but assists users to face surprise
|
|
situations. It requires \fIlsof\fR else it falls back to \fIclose\fR.
|
|
|
|
|
|
.B
|
|
.IP "passwd"
|
|
Changes the password protecting a key file specified using
|
|
\fI-k\fR. With keys encrypted for GPG recipients use \fI-g\fR followed
|
|
by \fI-r\fR to indicate the new recipient key, or a comma separated
|
|
list.. The user will need to know the key's current password, or
|
|
possess at least one of the current recipients GPG secret keys,
|
|
because the key contents will be decoded and reencoded using the new
|
|
passwords or keys. If the key file is broken (missing headers) this
|
|
function also attempts its recovery.
|
|
|
|
.B
|
|
.IP "setkey"
|
|
Changes the key file that locks a tomb, substituting the old one with
|
|
a new one. Both the old and the new key files are needed for this
|
|
operation and their passwords or GPG recipient(s) secret keys must be
|
|
available. The new key must be specified using the \fI-k\fR option,
|
|
the first argument should be the old key and the second and last
|
|
argument the tomb file. Use the \fI-g\fR option to unlock the tomb
|
|
with a GPG key, the \fI-r\fR to indicate the recipient or a comma
|
|
separated list for more than one recipient.
|
|
|
|
.B
|
|
.IP "resize"
|
|
Increase the size of a tomb file to the amount specified by the
|
|
\fI-s\fR option, which is the new size in megabytes (MiB). Full access to the tomb using
|
|
a key (\fI-k\fR) and its password is required. Tombs can only grow and
|
|
can never be made smaller. This command makes use of the cryptsetup(8)
|
|
resize feature and the resize2fs command: its much more practical than
|
|
creating a new tomb and moving everything into it.
|
|
|
|
.B
|
|
.IP "engrave"
|
|
This command transforms a tomb key into an image that can be printed
|
|
on paper and physically stored as backup, i.e. hidden in a book. It
|
|
Renders a QRCode of the tomb key, still protected by its password: a
|
|
PNG image (extension \fI.qr.png\fR) will be created in the current
|
|
directory and can be later printed (fits an A4 or Letter format). To
|
|
recover an engraved key one can use any QRCode reader on a smartphone:
|
|
save it into a file and then use that file as a key (\fI-k\fR).
|
|
|
|
.B
|
|
.IP "bury"
|
|
Hides a tomb key (\fI-k\fR) inside a \fIjpeg image\fR (first argument)
|
|
using \fIsteganography\fR: the image will change in a way that cannot
|
|
be noticed by human eye and hardly detected by data analysis. This
|
|
option is useful to backup tomb keys in unsuspected places; it depends
|
|
from the availability of \fIsteghide\fR. Use the \fI-g\fR flag and
|
|
\fI-r\fR option followed by recipient id to use GPG asymmetric
|
|
encryption.
|
|
|
|
.B
|
|
.IP "exhume"
|
|
This command recovers from jpeg images the keys that were previously
|
|
hidden into them using \fIbury\fR. Exhume requires a key filename
|
|
(\fI-k\fR) and a \fIjpeg image\fR file (first argument) known to be
|
|
containing a key. If the right key password is given, the key will be
|
|
exhumed. If the password is not known, it is very hard to verify if a
|
|
key is buried in any image or not.
|
|
|
|
.SH OPTIONS
|
|
.B
|
|
.B
|
|
.IP "-k \fI<keyfile>\fR"
|
|
For all operations requiring a key, this option specifies the location
|
|
of the key file to use. Arguments can also be \fIjpeg image\fR files
|
|
where keys have been hidden using the \fIbury\fR command, or text
|
|
files retrieved from \fIengraved\fR QR codes. If the \fIkeyfile\fR
|
|
argument is "-" (dash), Tomb will read the key from stdin (blocking).
|
|
.B
|
|
.IP "-n"
|
|
Skip processing of post-hooks and bind-hooks if found inside the tomb.
|
|
See the \fIHOOKS\fR section in this manual for more information.
|
|
.B
|
|
.IP "-o"
|
|
Manually specify mount options to be used when opening a tomb instead
|
|
of the default \fIrw,noatime,nodev\fR, i.e. to mount a tomb read-only
|
|
(ro) to prevent any modification of its data. Can also be used to
|
|
change the symmetric encryption algorithm for keys during \fIforge\fR
|
|
operations (default \fIAES256\fR) or the LUKS encryption method during
|
|
\fIlock\fR operations (default \fIaes-xts-plain64:sha256\fR).
|
|
.B
|
|
.IP "-f"
|
|
Force flag, currently used to override swap checks, might be
|
|
overriding more wimpy behaviours in future, but make sure you know
|
|
what you are doing if you force an operation.
|
|
.B
|
|
.IP "-s \fI<MBytes>\fR"
|
|
When digging or resizing a tomb, this option must be used to specify
|
|
the \fIsize\fR of the new file to be created. Units are megabytes (MiB).
|
|
.B
|
|
.IP "-g"
|
|
Tell tomb to use a asymmetric GnuPG key encryption instead of a
|
|
symmetric passphrase to protect a tomb key. This option can be followed by \fI-r\fR when the command needs to specify recipient(s).
|
|
.B
|
|
.IP "-r \fI<gpg_id>[,<gpg_id2>]\fR"
|
|
Provide a new set of recipient(s) to encrypt a tomb key. \fIgpg_ids\fR
|
|
can be one or more GPG key ID, comma separated.
|
|
.B
|
|
.IP "--kdf \fI<itertime>\fR"
|
|
Activate the KDF feature against dictionary attacks when creating a
|
|
key: forces a delay of \fI<itertime>\fR times every time this key is
|
|
used. The actual time to wait depends on the CPU speed of the
|
|
computer where the key is used. Using 5 or 10 is a sane amount for
|
|
modern computers, the value is multiplied by 1 million.
|
|
.B
|
|
.IP "-h"
|
|
Display a help text and quit.
|
|
.B
|
|
.IP "-v"
|
|
Display version and quit.
|
|
.B
|
|
.IP "-q"
|
|
Run more quietly
|
|
.B
|
|
.IP "-D"
|
|
Print more information while running, for debugging purposes
|
|
|
|
.SH DEV MODE
|
|
.B
|
|
.IP "--no-color"
|
|
Suppress colors in console output (needed for string parsing by
|
|
wrappers).
|
|
.B
|
|
.IP "--unsafe"
|
|
Enable using dev-mode arguments, i.e. to pass passwords from
|
|
commandline options. This is mostly used needed for execution by
|
|
wrappers and testing suite.
|
|
.B
|
|
.IP "--use-urandom"
|
|
Use a non-blocking random source to improve the speed of the
|
|
\fIforge\fR command (key generation): tomb uses /dev/urandom instead
|
|
of /dev/random. According to some people using the non-blocking source
|
|
of Linux kernel doesn't degrades the quality of random.
|
|
.B
|
|
.IP "--tomb-pwd <string>"
|
|
Use string as password when needed on tomb.
|
|
.B
|
|
.IP "--tomb-old-pwd <string>"
|
|
Use string as old password when needed in tomb commands requiring
|
|
multiple keys, like \fIpasswd\fR or \fIsetkey\fR.
|
|
.B
|
|
.IP "-U"
|
|
Switch to this user ID when dropping privileges.
|
|
.B
|
|
.IP "-G"
|
|
Switch to this group ID when dropping privileges.
|
|
.B
|
|
.IP "-T"
|
|
Switch to this TTY terminal when dropping privileges.
|
|
|
|
.SH HOOKS
|
|
|
|
Hooks are special files that can be placed inside the tomb and trigger
|
|
actions when it is opened and closed; there are two kinds of such
|
|
files: \fIbind-hooks\fR and \fIpost-hooks\fR can be placed in the
|
|
base root of the tomb.
|
|
|
|
.B
|
|
.IP "bind-hooks"
|
|
This hook file consists of a simple two column list of files or
|
|
directories inside the tomb to be made directly accessible inside the
|
|
current user's home directory. Tomb will use the "mount \-o bind"
|
|
command to bind locations inside the tomb to locations found in $HOME
|
|
so in the first column are indicated paths relative to the tomb and in
|
|
the second column are indicated paths relative to $HOME contents, for
|
|
example:
|
|
.EX
|
|
mail mail
|
|
.gnupg .gnupg
|
|
.fmrc .fetchmailrc
|
|
.mozilla .mozilla
|
|
.EE
|
|
|
|
.B
|
|
.IP "exec-hooks"
|
|
This hook file gets executed as user by tomb with the first argument
|
|
determining the step of execution: "open" or "close". The exec-hooks
|
|
file should be an executable (ELF or shell script) present inside the
|
|
Tomb. Tomb executes this hook as user supplying two or more arguments,
|
|
the first being the step, followed by the mountpoint of the tomb and,
|
|
on close events, its name, loopback device and dev-mapper device
|
|
paths.
|
|
|
|
.SH PRIVILEGE ESCALATION
|
|
|
|
The tomb commandline tool needs to acquire super user rights to
|
|
execute most of its operations: to do so it uses sudo(8), while
|
|
pinentry(1) is adopted to collect passwords from the user. Tomb
|
|
executes as super user only when required.
|
|
|
|
To be made available on multi user systems, the superuser execution of
|
|
the tomb script can be authorized for users without jeopardizing the
|
|
whole system's security: just add such a line to \fI/etc/sudoers\fR:
|
|
|
|
.EX
|
|
username ALL=NOPASSWD: /usr/local/bin/tomb
|
|
.EE
|
|
|
|
Password input is handled by the pinentry program: it can be text
|
|
based or graphical and is usually configured with a symlink. When
|
|
using Tomb in X11 it is better to use a graphical pinentry-gtk2 or
|
|
pinentry-qt because it helps preventing keylogging by other X
|
|
clients. When using it from a remote ssh connection it might be
|
|
necessary to force use of pinentry-curses for instance by unsetting
|
|
the DISPLAY environment var.
|
|
|
|
|
|
.SH SWAP
|
|
|
|
On execution of certain commands Tomb will complain about swap memory
|
|
on disk when present and \fIabort if your system has swap
|
|
activated\fR. You can disable this behaviour using the
|
|
\fI--force\fR. Before doing that, however, you may be interested in
|
|
knowing the risks of doing so:
|
|
.IP \(bu
|
|
During such operations a lack of available memory could cause the swap
|
|
to write your secret key on the disk.
|
|
.IP \(bu
|
|
Even while using an opened tomb, another application could occupy too
|
|
much memory so that the swap needs to be used, this way it is possible
|
|
that some contents of files contained into the tomb are physically
|
|
written on your disk, not encrypted.
|
|
.P
|
|
|
|
If you don't need swap, execute \fI swapoff -a\fR. If you really need
|
|
it, you could make an encrypted swap partition. Tomb doesn't detect if
|
|
your swap is encrypted, and will complain anyway.
|
|
|
|
.SH DENIABILITY
|
|
|
|
The possibility to have an encrypted volume which is invisible and
|
|
cannot be detected is called "deniability". The cryptographic layer of
|
|
the device mapper in Linux (dm-crypt) does not implement
|
|
deniability. Tomb is just a wrapper on top of that and it doesn't add
|
|
cryptographic deniability. However a certain way of using tomb can
|
|
facilitate a weak sort of deniability outside of the scenario of
|
|
seized devices and forensic analysis of files and blocks on disc.
|
|
|
|
For instance to eliminate any trace of tomb usage from the shell
|
|
history ZSh users can activate the "HISTIGNORESPACE" feature and
|
|
prefix all invokations of tomb with a blank space, including two lines
|
|
in ".zshrc":
|
|
|
|
.EX
|
|
export HISTIGNORESPACE=1
|
|
alias tomb=' tomb'
|
|
.EE
|
|
|
|
.SH PASSWORD INPUT
|
|
|
|
Tomb uses the external program "pinentry" to let users type the key password into a terminal or a graphical window. This program works in conjunction with "gpg-agent", a daemon running in background to facilitate secret key management with gpg. It is recommended one runs "gpg-agent" launching it from the X session initialization ("~/.xsession" or "~/.xinitrc" files) with this command:
|
|
|
|
.EX
|
|
eval $(gpg-agent --daemon --write-env-file "${HOME}/.gpg-agent-info")
|
|
.EE
|
|
|
|
In the future it may become mandatory to run gpg-agent when using tomb.
|
|
|
|
.SH SHARE A TOMB
|
|
A tomb key can be encrypted with more than one recipient. Therefore, a
|
|
tomb can be shared between different users. The recipients are given
|
|
using the \fI-r\fR (or/and \fI-R\fR) option and if multiple each GPG
|
|
key ID must be separated by a comma (\fI,\fR). Sharing a tomb is a
|
|
very sensitive action and the user needs to trust that all the GPG
|
|
public keys used are kept safe. If one of them its stolen or lost, it
|
|
will be always possible to use it to access the tomb key unless all
|
|
its copies are destroyed. The \fI-r\fR option can be used in the tomb
|
|
commands: \fIopen\fR, \fIforge\fR \fIsetkey\fR, \fIpasswd\fR,
|
|
\fIbury\fR, \fIexhume\fR and \fIresize\fR.
|
|
|
|
.SH EXAMPLES
|
|
|
|
.IP \(bu
|
|
Create a 128MB large "secret" tomb and its keys, then open it:
|
|
|
|
.EX
|
|
tomb dig -s 128 secret.tomb
|
|
|
|
tomb forge secret.tomb.key
|
|
|
|
tomb lock secret.tomb -k secret.tomb.key
|
|
|
|
tomb open secret.tomb -k secret.tomb.key
|
|
.EE
|
|
|
|
.IP \(bu
|
|
Open a Tomb using the key from a remote SSH shell, without saving any
|
|
local copy of it:
|
|
|
|
.EX
|
|
ssh user@my.shell.net 'cat .secrets/tomb.key' | tomb open secret.tomb -k -
|
|
.EE
|
|
|
|
.IP \(bu
|
|
Open a Tomb on a remote server passing the unencrypted local key on stdin via SSH,
|
|
without saving any remote copy of it:
|
|
|
|
.EX
|
|
gpg -d .secrets/tomb.key | ssh server tomb open secret.tomb -k cleartext --unsafe
|
|
.EE
|
|
|
|
.IP \(bu
|
|
Create a bind hook that places your GnuPG folder inside the tomb, but
|
|
makes it reachable from the standard $HOME/.gnupg location every time
|
|
the tomb will be opened:
|
|
|
|
.EX
|
|
tomb open GPG.tomb -k GPG.tomb.key
|
|
echo ".gnupg .gnupg" > /media/GPG.tomb/bind-hooks
|
|
mv ~/.gnupg /media/GPG.tomb/.gnupg && mkdir ~/.gnupg
|
|
tomb close GPG && tomb open GPG.tomb -k GPG.tomb.key
|
|
.EE
|
|
|
|
.IP \(bu
|
|
Script a tomb to launch the Firefox browser every time is opened,
|
|
keeping all its profile data inside it:
|
|
|
|
.EX
|
|
tomb open FOX.tomb -k FOX.tomb.key
|
|
cat <<EOF > /media/FOX.tomb/post-hooks
|
|
#!/bin/sh
|
|
if [ "$1" = "open" ]; then
|
|
firefox -no-remote -profile "$2"/firefox-pro &
|
|
fi
|
|
EOF
|
|
chmod +x /media/FOX.tomb/post-hooks
|
|
.EE
|
|
|
|
.IP \(bu
|
|
Script a tomb to archive Pictures using Shotwell, launching it on open:
|
|
|
|
.EX
|
|
tomb open Pictures.tomb -k Pictures.tomb.key
|
|
cat <<EOF > /media/Pictures.tomb/bind-hooks
|
|
Pictures Pictures
|
|
EOF
|
|
cat <<EOF > /media/Pictures.tomb/post-hooks
|
|
#!/bin/sh
|
|
if [ "$1" = "open" ]; then
|
|
which shotwell > /dev/null
|
|
if [ "$?" = "0" ]; then
|
|
shotwell -d "$2"/Pictures/.shotwell &
|
|
fi
|
|
fi
|
|
EOF
|
|
chmod +x /media/Pictures.tomb/post-hooks
|
|
.EE
|
|
|
|
.SH BUGS
|
|
Please report bugs on the Github issue tracker at
|
|
.UR https://github.com/dyne/Tomb/issues
|
|
.UE
|
|
|
|
One can also try to get in touch with developers via the #dyne chat
|
|
channel on \fIhttps://irc.dyne.org\fR.
|
|
|
|
.SH COPYING
|
|
|
|
This manual is Copyright (c) 2011-2017 by Denis Roio <\fIjaromil@dyne.org\fR>
|
|
|
|
This manual includes contributions by Boyska and Hellekin O. Wolf.
|
|
|
|
Permission is granted to copy, distribute and/or modify this manual
|
|
under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License, Version 1.1 or
|
|
any later version published by the Free Software Foundation.
|
|
Permission is granted to make and distribute verbatim copies of this
|
|
manual page provided the above copyright notice and this permission
|
|
notice are preserved on all copies.
|
|
|
|
.SH AVAILABILITY
|
|
|
|
The most recent version of Tomb sourcecode and up to date
|
|
documentation is available for download from its website on
|
|
\fIhttps://tomb.dyne.org\fR.
|
|
|
|
.SH SEE ALSO
|
|
|
|
.B
|
|
.IP cryptsetup(8)
|
|
.B
|
|
.IP pinentry(1)
|
|
.B
|
|
.IP gpg-agent(1)
|
|
|
|
GnuPG website: https://www.gnupg.org
|
|
|
|
DM-Crypt website: https://gitlab.com/cryptsetup/cryptsetup/wikis/DMCrypt
|
|
|
|
LUKS website: https://gitlab.com/cryptsetup/cryptsetup/wikis/home
|