From d8a4c6a4037b89ebe24817fe7f0e1a4aa67ec92e Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Nick Zana Date: Wed, 17 May 2023 19:02:12 -0400 Subject: [PATCH] Partial revert "remove outdated projects" Temporarily restores ciphey project --- content/projects/ciphey/index.md | 268 +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ 1 file changed, 268 insertions(+) create mode 100644 content/projects/ciphey/index.md diff --git a/content/projects/ciphey/index.md b/content/projects/ciphey/index.md new file mode 100644 index 0000000..c40467c --- /dev/null +++ b/content/projects/ciphey/index.md @@ -0,0 +1,268 @@ ++++ +title = "ciphey" +weight = 1 +[taxonomies] +tags = [] ++++ + +Simply put, `ciphey` is a password and secret manager that is like +[`pass`](https://passwordstore.org) if it used +[`age`](https://age-encryption.org) instead of PGP. More than anything, it is +an experiment to determine how cryptography can be combined in a minimalist +manner to protect passwords in a way that accounts for the most realistic +threats to their confidentiality, reliability, usability, and resiliency. It +takes many of the database and key management ideas from +[1Password](https://1password.com) and [Bitwarden](https://bitwarden.com) and +combines them with the Unix-like philosophy of `pass`. + +To be clear, `ciphey` is still in development. [The remaining work is outlined +below](#remaining-work). While I will be using it as my actual password manager, +I strongly recommend that you only experiment with it and not rely on it for any +actual passwords. + +*NOTE: This page is a work in progress.* + +## The Basics + +My goal is for `ciphey` to be simple enough that someone with a bit of knowledge +about cryptography who wants to understand how their passwords are protected can +do so after a short explanation. This sections aims to be that explanation. + +### Entries + +Everything you store in `ciphey` goes into an entry. Generally, you'll have one +`entry` per password. However, passwords come in many different forms: as a +result, entries are plaintext, which means any file can be used as an entry. + +This doesn't mean there is no structure to entries. For example, take a look at +the entry for a hypothetical [`xkcd.com`](https://xkcd.com) account below: + +``` +correct horse battery staple +name: xkcd.com +tag: comics +username: Tr0ub4dor&3 +url: https://xkcd.com/936 + +To anyone who understands information theory and security and is in an +infuriating argument with someone who does not (possibly involving mixed case), +I sincerely apologize. +``` + +The first line of every entry is interpreted as the entry's "secret." In this +case, the secret is `correct horse battery staple`, the password for the +account. This is usually a password or private key, but can be any value that +you might want to access by default. If this doesn't work for you for some +reason, no worries; just leave the line blank. + +The secret is followed by any number of optional field-value pairs. Every +field-value pair lives on its own line and can contain any information you want, +so long as it follows the format `FIELD: VALUE`. Fields can be repeated and in +any order. The only limitation is that your `FIELD` cannot contain a `: ` (`:` +followed by a space), but the `VALUE` can. + +There are no `FIELD`s with any special meaning (yet), but keeping them +consistent will help you find entries more quickly. I strongly recommend giving +each entry a `name` field, as this is what `ciphey` uses to search for entries +by default. + +Finally, the contents of the file from the first line that doesn't match the +pattern `FIELD: VALUE` down to the end of the file is left uninterpreted, +meaning that you can save any text that you'd like there. This is called the +"note." In the example above, the "note" is the caption text from +[xkcd.com/936](https://xkcd.com/936). Separate the notes and the preceding +section with a newline. + +### The Entries + +Your `ciphey` database is a folder of files that can live on any filesystem. +This folder is completely encrypted, and thus can safely be backed up, shared, +or otherwise accessed without any unauthorized party gaining access to the +contents of the file. + +``` +ciphey/ +└── entries/ + ├── age1sdnql3ksstj7krh7azddygh860f6uttus5t3e9j52t4k5z34kutqyzgr4e.age + ├── age1ryutmsg486w4y06kq7w0rqm2s08r3sgzlwcl9p9p00jducedevvqkgrvyw.age + ├── age1mqr5htmadgzlmcdjks79d6ucfe5k46ruavnaxm08m64lpl6h5udqhkwwvp.age + └── age1r908d20yj3ntp9q8g0448kwflfgf3au2qmhkkx7zp8xnesfdjfhqpd3r2d.age +``` + +Each file in the "entries" folder contains a single "entry." The name of each +file is the `age` public key the entry is encrypted to. Every entry into your +database is encrypted to a unique public key. Without that public key's +corresponding private key, the contents of the entry cannot be accessed. + +However, keep in mind that some metadata does leak. Namely, any data associated +with the filesystem (date created, date last modified, owner/group, etc.) is NOT +protected by `ciphey` by default. It's still a good idea to keep your database +away from any curious eyes when it's avoidable. + +### Your Keys + +Every time you unlock your `ciphey` database, you must have two things: + +1. Your `Primary Passphrase` (something you know) +2. A `Device Key` (something you have) + +Every "device" you have (i.e. your desktop, laptop, and phone) has its own +`Device Key`. This key is generated and stored as a normal file when you first +set up `ciphey` on the device, and never leaves it. + +Each `Device Key` is encrypted with your `Primary Passphrase`. Without your +`Primary Passphrase`, the `Device Key` cannot be used. + +Alternatively, you can use a `Device Key` stored on a hardware token, such as a +Yubikey or OnlyKey. This has the added benefit that the key material never +leaves the hardware token, protecting against attacks that can steal key +material from your computer's local disk. In order to decrypt your entries, an +attacker would have to physically have access your hardware token, in addition +to learning your `Primary Passphrase`. + +### Entry Keys + +Every entry in your database is encrypted to a specific `Entry Key`. These entry +keys are stored next to the `database` directory in the `keys` directory. Every +entry gets its own key so that access can be cryptographically restricted on an +entry-by-entry basis. + +The keys stored on the filesystem are encrypted to every `Device Key` that +you've given access to the entry. + +### Disaster Recovery + +When you set up your `ciphey` database for the first time, you'll be prompted to +create a `Recovery Key`, which is an `age` key encrypted with your `Recovery +Passphrase` (By default, your `Primary Passphrase`, but this can optionally be +changed). This key should be written down and stored in a safe place, such as in +a safe. This way, if you lose all of your devices, you can still regain access +to your passwords. + +You can also give a copy of this key and your `Recovery Passphrase` to anybody +else who should have access to your accounts in case of an emergency. This way, +you can be sure that you're unlikely to ever lose access to your `ciphey` keys. + +### Summary + +Every entry is encrypted with its own unique `Entry Key`. + +`Entry Key`s are encrypted to each `Device Key` that is granted access to the +entry. They can be encrypted to other people's `Device Key`s to share an entry +with them. + +`Device Key`s are encrypted with your `Primary Passphrase`. They can either live +on your filesystem or on a hardware token, like a Yubikey. + +When you first set up `ciphey`, you also create a `Recovery Key`, which every +`Entry Key` is encrypted to by default. This `Recovery Key` is encrypted with +your `Recovery Passphrase`, which are to be stored offline in a safe place +and/or given to trusted individuals so they can be used in case of an emergency. + +### Usage + +## Implementation + +### Entry Parsing + +The entry format was designed to be easy to parse for both humans and programs. +The following Rust snippet is a (simplified) example of parsing an Entry from a +String `s`: + +```rust +// The entry's secret +let mut secret: String; +// A vector of key/value pairs +let mut fields: (String, String) = Vec::new(); +// The entry's notes +let mut notes: Option = None; + +// An iterator over the decrypted lines of the entry file +let mut lines = s.lines(); + +// The first line contains the secret +secret = lines.next(); + +while let Some(line) = lines.by_ref().next() { + if let Some((key, value)) = line.split_once(": ") { + // Add the key and value to fields + fields.push((key, value)); + } else { + // Take the rest of the lines and put them into notes + notes = Some( + std::iter::once(line) + .chain(lines.by_ref()) + .collect::>() + .join("\n"), + ); + } +} +``` + +This particular implementation has a lot of room for improvement. The biggest +issue adding complexity is that Rust's `take_while` iterator method is +consuming, not peekable, meaning that ownership of the lines it checks is passed +to its closure. Thus, the following snippet, which is much easier to +read, would not work: + +```rust +// An iterator over the decrypted lines of the entry file +let mut lines = s.lines(); + +// The first line contains the secret +secret = lines.next(); + +// Take lines while they can be parsed as key/value pairs split by ": " +fields = lines.take_while(line.split_once(": ")).map(...); +// first line failing take_while is incorrectly dropped here + +// Join the remaining lines as notes +notes = lines.collect::>().join("\n"); +``` + +This is because even though the first line that fails the conditional is +consumed by `take_while`, it would neither be added to the fields (as it cannot +be parsed as one) nor collected into the vector over the lines of notes, instead +being dropped, causing data loss. + +There are a few Rust crates that provide a peekable `take_while`, but they're +too big to justify as adding as dependencies for just this feature. It's +possible that a simpler approach is possible using an iterative method, but I +have not been able to come up with one yet. + +## Remaining Work + +### Password History + +At the moment, there is no built-in support for keeping track of entry changes +over time. `pass` uses git to keep track of changes at the filesystem level, +while password managers like Bitwarden have built-in support for storing the +history of passwords over time. + +Currently, there is nothing stopping someone from manually checking entries into +git or another backup solution. However, one way to provide better integration +into `ciphey` would be to allow for `pre-hooks` and `post-hooks`. These hooks +are scripts that are run before or after specific actions are taken by `ciphey`. +This would allow, for example, automatically committing the changes to a git +repository and pushing those changes to a remote server after every change made +by `ciphey`. + +### File storage + +For the moment, entries must be plaintext files. If you want to encrypt an +arbitrary file with `ciphey`, you have to manually create an encryption key, +store that key as an entry in `ciphey`, and then manually encrypt said file with +the newly-created key. + +It would be beneficial to devise a way to treat encrypted files just like any +entry so that the key material for other files can be automatically managed in +the same way. + +### Backup + +While `ciphey` makes sure that you don't lose your secret key material through +the use of `Recovery Key`s, `ciphey` does not have any built-in backup system +for the encrypted `ciphey` database. Of course, you can still back up `ciphey` +like any other directory (which is a benefit of it living as just a plain +directory), but it may be useful to consider ways that `ciphey` can better +integrate or accomodate backups.