shavee is a simple program and a pam module to automatically decrypt and mount encrypted ZFS user home directories using Yubikey HMAC or a Simple USB drive as 2FA written in rust.
NOTE: Shavee v1.0.0 and greater are NOT backwards compatible with Datasets created with earlier versions. See Migration Guide.
This program currently supports two methods for 2FA:
Yubikeys are secure authetication USB devices we can use for our Strong second factor.
Yubikey comes pre-programmed with a HMAC key on Slot 2 which can be used to derive our final encryption key along with our password.
Programmed HMAC secret in the Yubikey CANNOT be extracted once programmed in.
If you want to use Multiple keys on the same dataset (eg. backup keys) it is required for you to program SAME fresh HMAC secrets on all those keys.
NOTE: You will need to use the manual unlock options if you want to use a diffrent key as auto mode looks for keys by serial.
Yubikey mode is set with the -y
flag.
If diffrent datasets require diffrent keys you can plug all of them together.
In this mode the program looks for a Yubikey on login and uses it's HMAC mode along with your password to derive the final encryption key.
Yubikey HMAC Slot can be set with the -s
flag, defaults to SLOT 2
In this mode the program looks for a file (can be any file) and use that along with your password to derive the final encryption.
File mode is set using the -f <path to file>
option.
File can be a local file, a http(s) or a sftp location
Example HTTPS
shavee -f https://foo.org/secret.png
Exmaple SFTP
shavee -f sftp://[email protected]/mnt/secretfile -P 4242
-P
Option Sets port for both HTTP and SFTP.
Exmaple Local File
shavee -f /mnt/usb/secret.png
The idea with this method is to keep the file on a USB storage device or a Netork location you control and have it present during the login to derive the final encryption key.
You can use any pre existing file of your choice.
Or create one using
dd if=/dev/uranson of=./secretfile bs=4096 count=4096
Note: Since the file becomes part of your encryption key and its Security cannot be guaranteed as with Yubikey you are responsible for keeping it secure.
If no second factor is specified the program will use only password as a single factor.
- Install Rust
- Clone repo using
git clone https://github.com/ashuio/shavee.git
- [Optional] Enable or diasable
yubikey
andfile
feature by modifyingshavee-bin
Cargo.toml
to include or remove those features from the compiled binary. - [Optional] Enable or disable verbose debug
trace
logs by modifyingshavee-core
Cargo.toml
to include or remove that feature from the compiled binary.- If
trace
log feature is enabled,RUST_LOG=trace
environment variable must also be set to generate logs. Otherwise no log will be generaged. NOTE: Enabling the trace logs, will increase the binary size and may expose the passphrase in the output logs. ONLY ENABLE IT FOR DEBUGGING PURPOSE AND DISABLE IT IN THE FINAL BINARY!
- If
- Build using the binary
cargo build --release
- Place the binary in your bin directory with
sudo cp target/release/shavee /usr/bin
- Place Pam module in your module directory with
sudo cp target/release/libshavee_pam.so /usr/lib/security/
Modes
- Shavee PAM Module : shavee PAM module to unlock home dir on login
- Shavee Binary : Admin function for dataset management using shavee
Flags/Options
-y
: Use Yubikey for 2FA. Optionally takes in yubikey serial number or uses the first key-f
: Use any file as 2FA, takes filepath or a HTTP(S) location as an argument.-p
: Prints out the secret key.-d
: Adds dataset name to print output.-P
: Set port for HTTP and SFTP requests (Upper case P )-s
: Set Yubikey HMAC Slot (Can be either 1 or 2)-c
: Create/Change key of ZFS dataset with the derived encryption key-m
: Unlocks and Mounts the ZFS Dataset.-r
: Perform Operations Recursively to all child datasets.-a
: Automatically Detect Dataset Unlock Properties ( can only be used withPrint
andMount
)-z
: ZFS Dataset(s) to operate on. ( can take multiple options )
NOTE: The -y
(Yubikey mode) flag and the -f <path to file>
(File mode) option are interchangeable.
It is recommended to run the command to change keys again of your Datasets after version updates.
NOTE: If using with PAM your dataset password should be the SAME as your user account password for it to work automatically
NOTE: Remember to update your encryption key as well if you update your password.
You can change/update the key for existing ZFS datasets by running
shavee -c -z <zfs dataset path>
Example
shavee -y -c -z zroot/data/home/hunter zroot/data/home/hunter2
Or to use a specific key eneter it's serial number
shavee -y 12345678 -c -z zroot/data/home/hunter zroot/data/home/hunter2
Here we use Yubikey as our second factor. (Can be omitted for password only auth) and operate on TWO datasets together.
Note: Encryption must already be enabled and the key loaded to change key of an exisiting dataset if not created with shavee.
Create a new dataset
To create a new dataset with our derived encryption key simply run
sudo shavee -c -z <Desired dataset>
Example
sudo shavee -f /mnt/usb/secretfile -c -z zroot/data/home/hunter
Here we use a FILE for our second factor (Can be omitted for password auth only)
Simply use the option -m
to unlock any zfs dataset
Example
shavee -y -m -z zroot/data/home/hunter/secrets
To backup the key simply use the -p
option to print the secret key to stdout
Example
shavee -p -y -z zroot/data/home/hunter/secrets
NOTE: Secret Keys are unique to your dataset even if you use the same password for multiple datasets.
You can also pipe the password directly into shavee to use with scripts
Example
echo "hunter2" | shavee -y -m -z zroot/data/home/hunter/secrets
Here "hunter2" will be treated as the password
You can use the -f
option instead of the -y
flag to substitute a Yubikey with any USB Drive.
Auto mount the USB so shavee can find the required keyfile on login
We can use udev
for this, simply create and add the following to /etc/udev/rules.d/99-usb-automount.rules
ACTION=="add", SUBSYSTEMS=="usb", SUBSYSTEM=="block", ENV{ID_FS_UUID}=="<UUID of partition>", RUN{program}+="/usr/bin/systemd-mount --no-block --automount=yes --collect $devnode <Desired Mount point>"
Example
ACTION=="add", SUBSYSTEMS=="usb", SUBSYSTEM=="block", ENV{ID_FS_UUID}=="ADB0-DA9C", RUN{program}+="/usr/bin/systemd-mount --no-block --automount=yes --collect $devnode /media/usb"
Here we're mounting the first partition of the usb disk to /media/usb
You can get the UUID by running
udevadm info --query=all --name=<Target disk> | grep ID_FS_UUID=
Example
udevadm info --query=all --name=/dev/sdb1 | grep ID_FS_UUID=
Run udevadm control --reload-rules
after to make sure new rules are loaded.
This program comes with a pam module to execute during the login process.
simply add the following line to your desired pam login method file.
In our example we will be adding it to /etc/pam.d/sddm to handle graphical logins and /etc/pam.d/login to handle CLI logins.
Add the following line to you pam config file
auth optional libshavee_pam.so <Base home Dataset>
session optional libshavee_pam.so <Base home Dataset>
Example
auth optional libshavee_pam.so zroot/data/home
session optional libshavee_pam.so zroot/data/home
Where zroot/data/home
mounts to /home
NOTE: PAM module unlocks and mounts datasets recursively, any failure in any dataset will result in Failed Auth. This shold not stop you from logging in if PAM module is set to optional
like we did in the Example.
To Force fail auth on dataset mount failure change it from optional
to required
Since ZFS mounts datasets OVER preexisting directories and we defined our module in PAM as optional we still get authenticated with JUST the pass even though our dataset is NOT decrypted (eg. Because Yubikey was not inserted).
We can use this to our advantage and essentially have TWO home directories.
First which would be your normal encrypted home directory which would be unlocked and mounted when your Yubikey is present at login.
Second would be the directory which would already be present and would be loaded on decryption failure i.e when no Yubikey is inserted during login.
Let me know if interested and maybe i can write up a more detailed guide.