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Encryption is a recurring subject when discussing Garage. Garage does not handle data encryption by itself, but many things can already be done with Garage's current feature set and the existing ecosystem.
This page takes a high level approach to security in general and data encryption in particular.
Examining your need for encryption
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Why do you want encryption in Garage?
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What is your threat model? What are you fearing?
- A stolen HDD?
- A curious administrator?
- A malicious administrator?
- A remote attacker?
- etc.
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What services do you want to protect with encryption?
- An existing application? Which one? (eg. Nextcloud)
- An application that you are writing
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Any expertise you may have on the subject
This page explains what Garage provides, and how you can improve the situation by yourself by adding encryption at different levels.
We would be very curious to know your needs and thougs about ideas such as encryption practices and things like key management, as we want Garage to be a serious base platform for the developpment of secure, encrypted applications. Do not hesitate to come talk to us if you have any thoughts or questions on the subject.
Capabilities provided by Garage
Traffic is encrypted between Garage nodes
RPCs between Garage nodes are encrypted. More specifically, contrary to many
distributed software, it is impossible in Garage to have clear-text RPC. We
use the kuska handshake library which
implements a protocol that has been clearly reviewed, Secure ScuttleButt's
Secret Handshake protocol. This is why setting a rpc_secret
is mandatory,
and that's also why your nodes have super long identifiers.
HTTP API endpoints provided by Garage are in clear text
Adding TLS support built into Garage is not currently planned.
Garage stores data in plain text on the filesystem
Garage does not handle data encryption at rest by itself, and instead delegates to the user to add encryption, either at the storage layer (LUKS, etc) or on the client side (or both). There are no current plans to add data encryption directly in Garage.
Implementing data encryption directly in Garage might make things simpler for end users, but also raises many more questions, especially around key management: for encryption of data, where could Garage get the encryption keys from ? If we encrypt data but keep the keys in a plaintext file next to them, it's useless. We probably don't want to have to manage secrets in garage as it would be very hard to do in a secure way. Maybe integrate with an external system such as Hashicorp Vault?
Adding data encryption using external tools
Encrypting traffic between a Garage node and your client
You have multiple options to have encryption between your client and a node:
- Setup a reverse proxy with TLS / ACME / Let's encrypt
- Setup a Garage gateway locally, and only contact the garage daemon on
localhost
- Only contact your Garage daemon over a secure, encrypted overlay network such as Wireguard
Encrypting data at rest
Protects against the following threats:
- Stolen HDD
Crucially, does not protect againt malicious sysadmins or remote attackers that might gain access to your servers.
Methods include full-disk encryption with tools such as LUKS.
Encrypting data on the client side
Protects againt the following threats:
- A honest-but-curious administrator
- A malicious administrator that tries to corrupt your data
- A remote attacker that can read your server's data
Implementations are very specific to the various applications. Examples:
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Matrix: uses the OLM protocol for E2EE of user messages. Media files stored in Matrix are probably encrypted using symmetric encryption, with a key that is distributed in the end-to-end encrypted message that contains the link to the object.
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XMPP: clients normally support either OMEMO / OpenPGP for the E2EE of user messages. Media files are encrypted per XEP-0454.
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Aerogramme: use the user's password as a key to decrypt data in the user's bucket
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Cyberduck: comes with support for Cryptomator which allows users to create client-side vaults to encrypt files in before they are uploaded to a cloud storage endpoint.