1===================================== 2Filesystem-level encryption (fscrypt) 3===================================== 4 5Introduction 6============ 7 8fscrypt is a library which filesystems can hook into to support 9transparent encryption of files and directories. 10 11Note: "fscrypt" in this document refers to the kernel-level portion, 12implemented in ``fs/crypto/``, as opposed to the userspace tool 13`fscrypt <https://github.com/google/fscrypt>`_. This document only 14covers the kernel-level portion. For command-line examples of how to 15use encryption, see the documentation for the userspace tool `fscrypt 16<https://github.com/google/fscrypt>`_. Also, it is recommended to use 17the fscrypt userspace tool, or other existing userspace tools such as 18`fscryptctl <https://github.com/google/fscryptctl>`_ or `Android's key 19management system 20<https://source.android.com/security/encryption/file-based>`_, over 21using the kernel's API directly. Using existing tools reduces the 22chance of introducing your own security bugs. (Nevertheless, for 23completeness this documentation covers the kernel's API anyway.) 24 25Unlike dm-crypt, fscrypt operates at the filesystem level rather than 26at the block device level. This allows it to encrypt different files 27with different keys and to have unencrypted files on the same 28filesystem. This is useful for multi-user systems where each user's 29data-at-rest needs to be cryptographically isolated from the others. 30However, except for filenames, fscrypt does not encrypt filesystem 31metadata. 32 33Unlike eCryptfs, which is a stacked filesystem, fscrypt is integrated 34directly into supported filesystems --- currently ext4, F2FS, and 35UBIFS. This allows encrypted files to be read and written without 36caching both the decrypted and encrypted pages in the pagecache, 37thereby nearly halving the memory used and bringing it in line with 38unencrypted files. Similarly, half as many dentries and inodes are 39needed. eCryptfs also limits encrypted filenames to 143 bytes, 40causing application compatibility issues; fscrypt allows the full 255 41bytes (NAME_MAX). Finally, unlike eCryptfs, the fscrypt API can be 42used by unprivileged users, with no need to mount anything. 43 44fscrypt does not support encrypting files in-place. Instead, it 45supports marking an empty directory as encrypted. Then, after 46userspace provides the key, all regular files, directories, and 47symbolic links created in that directory tree are transparently 48encrypted. 49 50Threat model 51============ 52 53Offline attacks 54--------------- 55 56Provided that userspace chooses a strong encryption key, fscrypt 57protects the confidentiality of file contents and filenames in the 58event of a single point-in-time permanent offline compromise of the 59block device content. fscrypt does not protect the confidentiality of 60non-filename metadata, e.g. file sizes, file permissions, file 61timestamps, and extended attributes. Also, the existence and location 62of holes (unallocated blocks which logically contain all zeroes) in 63files is not protected. 64 65fscrypt is not guaranteed to protect confidentiality or authenticity 66if an attacker is able to manipulate the filesystem offline prior to 67an authorized user later accessing the filesystem. 68 69Online attacks 70-------------- 71 72fscrypt (and storage encryption in general) can only provide limited 73protection, if any at all, against online attacks. In detail: 74 75Side-channel attacks 76~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 77 78fscrypt is only resistant to side-channel attacks, such as timing or 79electromagnetic attacks, to the extent that the underlying Linux 80Cryptographic API algorithms or inline encryption hardware are. If a 81vulnerable algorithm is used, such as a table-based implementation of 82AES, it may be possible for an attacker to mount a side channel attack 83against the online system. Side channel attacks may also be mounted 84against applications consuming decrypted data. 85 86Unauthorized file access 87~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 88 89After an encryption key has been added, fscrypt does not hide the 90plaintext file contents or filenames from other users on the same 91system. Instead, existing access control mechanisms such as file mode 92bits, POSIX ACLs, LSMs, or namespaces should be used for this purpose. 93 94(For the reasoning behind this, understand that while the key is 95added, the confidentiality of the data, from the perspective of the 96system itself, is *not* protected by the mathematical properties of 97encryption but rather only by the correctness of the kernel. 98Therefore, any encryption-specific access control checks would merely 99be enforced by kernel *code* and therefore would be largely redundant 100with the wide variety of access control mechanisms already available.) 101 102Kernel memory compromise 103~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 104 105An attacker who compromises the system enough to read from arbitrary 106memory, e.g. by mounting a physical attack or by exploiting a kernel 107security vulnerability, can compromise all encryption keys that are 108currently in use. 109 110However, fscrypt allows encryption keys to be removed from the kernel, 111which may protect them from later compromise. 112 113In more detail, the FS_IOC_REMOVE_ENCRYPTION_KEY ioctl (or the 114FS_IOC_REMOVE_ENCRYPTION_KEY_ALL_USERS ioctl) can wipe a master 115encryption key from kernel memory. If it does so, it will also try to 116evict all cached inodes which had been "unlocked" using the key, 117thereby wiping their per-file keys and making them once again appear 118"locked", i.e. in ciphertext or encrypted form. 119 120However, these ioctls have some limitations: 121 122- Per-file keys for in-use files will *not* be removed or wiped. 123 Therefore, for maximum effect, userspace should close the relevant 124 encrypted files and directories before removing a master key, as 125 well as kill any processes whose working directory is in an affected 126 encrypted directory. 127 128- The kernel cannot magically wipe copies of the master key(s) that 129 userspace might have as well. Therefore, userspace must wipe all 130 copies of the master key(s) it makes as well; normally this should 131 be done immediately after FS_IOC_ADD_ENCRYPTION_KEY, without waiting 132 for FS_IOC_REMOVE_ENCRYPTION_KEY. Naturally, the same also applies 133 to all higher levels in the key hierarchy. Userspace should also 134 follow other security precautions such as mlock()ing memory 135 containing keys to prevent it from being swapped out. 136 137- In general, decrypted contents and filenames in the kernel VFS 138 caches are freed but not wiped. Therefore, portions thereof may be 139 recoverable from freed memory, even after the corresponding key(s) 140 were wiped. To partially solve this, you can set 141 CONFIG_PAGE_POISONING=y in your kernel config and add page_poison=1 142 to your kernel command line. However, this has a performance cost. 143 144- Secret keys might still exist in CPU registers, in crypto 145 accelerator hardware (if used by the crypto API to implement any of 146 the algorithms), or in other places not explicitly considered here. 147 148Limitations of v1 policies 149~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 150 151v1 encryption policies have some weaknesses with respect to online 152attacks: 153 154- There is no verification that the provided master key is correct. 155 Therefore, a malicious user can temporarily associate the wrong key 156 with another user's encrypted files to which they have read-only 157 access. Because of filesystem caching, the wrong key will then be 158 used by the other user's accesses to those files, even if the other 159 user has the correct key in their own keyring. This violates the 160 meaning of "read-only access". 161 162- A compromise of a per-file key also compromises the master key from 163 which it was derived. 164 165- Non-root users cannot securely remove encryption keys. 166 167All the above problems are fixed with v2 encryption policies. For 168this reason among others, it is recommended to use v2 encryption 169policies on all new encrypted directories. 170 171Key hierarchy 172============= 173 174Master Keys 175----------- 176 177Each encrypted directory tree is protected by a *master key*. Master 178keys can be up to 64 bytes long, and must be at least as long as the 179greater of the security strength of the contents and filenames 180encryption modes being used. For example, if any AES-256 mode is 181used, the master key must be at least 256 bits, i.e. 32 bytes. A 182stricter requirement applies if the key is used by a v1 encryption 183policy and AES-256-XTS is used; such keys must be 64 bytes. 184 185To "unlock" an encrypted directory tree, userspace must provide the 186appropriate master key. There can be any number of master keys, each 187of which protects any number of directory trees on any number of 188filesystems. 189 190Master keys must be real cryptographic keys, i.e. indistinguishable 191from random bytestrings of the same length. This implies that users 192**must not** directly use a password as a master key, zero-pad a 193shorter key, or repeat a shorter key. Security cannot be guaranteed 194if userspace makes any such error, as the cryptographic proofs and 195analysis would no longer apply. 196 197Instead, users should generate master keys either using a 198cryptographically secure random number generator, or by using a KDF 199(Key Derivation Function). The kernel does not do any key stretching; 200therefore, if userspace derives the key from a low-entropy secret such 201as a passphrase, it is critical that a KDF designed for this purpose 202be used, such as scrypt, PBKDF2, or Argon2. 203 204Key derivation function 205----------------------- 206 207With one exception, fscrypt never uses the master key(s) for 208encryption directly. Instead, they are only used as input to a KDF 209(Key Derivation Function) to derive the actual keys. 210 211The KDF used for a particular master key differs depending on whether 212the key is used for v1 encryption policies or for v2 encryption 213policies. Users **must not** use the same key for both v1 and v2 214encryption policies. (No real-world attack is currently known on this 215specific case of key reuse, but its security cannot be guaranteed 216since the cryptographic proofs and analysis would no longer apply.) 217 218For v1 encryption policies, the KDF only supports deriving per-file 219encryption keys. It works by encrypting the master key with 220AES-128-ECB, using the file's 16-byte nonce as the AES key. The 221resulting ciphertext is used as the derived key. If the ciphertext is 222longer than needed, then it is truncated to the needed length. 223 224For v2 encryption policies, the KDF is HKDF-SHA512. The master key is 225passed as the "input keying material", no salt is used, and a distinct 226"application-specific information string" is used for each distinct 227key to be derived. For example, when a per-file encryption key is 228derived, the application-specific information string is the file's 229nonce prefixed with "fscrypt\\0" and a context byte. Different 230context bytes are used for other types of derived keys. 231 232HKDF-SHA512 is preferred to the original AES-128-ECB based KDF because 233HKDF is more flexible, is nonreversible, and evenly distributes 234entropy from the master key. HKDF is also standardized and widely 235used by other software, whereas the AES-128-ECB based KDF is ad-hoc. 236 237Per-file encryption keys 238------------------------ 239 240Since each master key can protect many files, it is necessary to 241"tweak" the encryption of each file so that the same plaintext in two 242files doesn't map to the same ciphertext, or vice versa. In most 243cases, fscrypt does this by deriving per-file keys. When a new 244encrypted inode (regular file, directory, or symlink) is created, 245fscrypt randomly generates a 16-byte nonce and stores it in the 246inode's encryption xattr. Then, it uses a KDF (as described in `Key 247derivation function`_) to derive the file's key from the master key 248and nonce. 249 250Key derivation was chosen over key wrapping because wrapped keys would 251require larger xattrs which would be less likely to fit in-line in the 252filesystem's inode table, and there didn't appear to be any 253significant advantages to key wrapping. In particular, currently 254there is no requirement to support unlocking a file with multiple 255alternative master keys or to support rotating master keys. Instead, 256the master keys may be wrapped in userspace, e.g. as is done by the 257`fscrypt <https://github.com/google/fscrypt>`_ tool. 258 259DIRECT_KEY policies 260------------------- 261 262The Adiantum encryption mode (see `Encryption modes and usage`_) is 263suitable for both contents and filenames encryption, and it accepts 264long IVs --- long enough to hold both an 8-byte logical block number 265and a 16-byte per-file nonce. Also, the overhead of each Adiantum key 266is greater than that of an AES-256-XTS key. 267 268Therefore, to improve performance and save memory, for Adiantum a 269"direct key" configuration is supported. When the user has enabled 270this by setting FSCRYPT_POLICY_FLAG_DIRECT_KEY in the fscrypt policy, 271per-file encryption keys are not used. Instead, whenever any data 272(contents or filenames) is encrypted, the file's 16-byte nonce is 273included in the IV. Moreover: 274 275- For v1 encryption policies, the encryption is done directly with the 276 master key. Because of this, users **must not** use the same master 277 key for any other purpose, even for other v1 policies. 278 279- For v2 encryption policies, the encryption is done with a per-mode 280 key derived using the KDF. Users may use the same master key for 281 other v2 encryption policies. 282 283IV_INO_LBLK_64 policies 284----------------------- 285 286When FSCRYPT_POLICY_FLAG_IV_INO_LBLK_64 is set in the fscrypt policy, 287the encryption keys are derived from the master key, encryption mode 288number, and filesystem UUID. This normally results in all files 289protected by the same master key sharing a single contents encryption 290key and a single filenames encryption key. To still encrypt different 291files' data differently, inode numbers are included in the IVs. 292Consequently, shrinking the filesystem may not be allowed. 293 294This format is optimized for use with inline encryption hardware 295compliant with the UFS standard, which supports only 64 IV bits per 296I/O request and may have only a small number of keyslots. 297 298IV_INO_LBLK_32 policies 299----------------------- 300 301IV_INO_LBLK_32 policies work like IV_INO_LBLK_64, except that for 302IV_INO_LBLK_32, the inode number is hashed with SipHash-2-4 (where the 303SipHash key is derived from the master key) and added to the file 304logical block number mod 2^32 to produce a 32-bit IV. 305 306This format is optimized for use with inline encryption hardware 307compliant with the eMMC v5.2 standard, which supports only 32 IV bits 308per I/O request and may have only a small number of keyslots. This 309format results in some level of IV reuse, so it should only be used 310when necessary due to hardware limitations. 311 312Key identifiers 313--------------- 314 315For master keys used for v2 encryption policies, a unique 16-byte "key 316identifier" is also derived using the KDF. This value is stored in 317the clear, since it is needed to reliably identify the key itself. 318 319Dirhash keys 320------------ 321 322For directories that are indexed using a secret-keyed dirhash over the 323plaintext filenames, the KDF is also used to derive a 128-bit 324SipHash-2-4 key per directory in order to hash filenames. This works 325just like deriving a per-file encryption key, except that a different 326KDF context is used. Currently, only casefolded ("case-insensitive") 327encrypted directories use this style of hashing. 328 329Encryption modes and usage 330========================== 331 332fscrypt allows one encryption mode to be specified for file contents 333and one encryption mode to be specified for filenames. Different 334directory trees are permitted to use different encryption modes. 335 336Supported modes 337--------------- 338 339Currently, the following pairs of encryption modes are supported: 340 341- AES-256-XTS for contents and AES-256-CTS-CBC for filenames 342- AES-256-XTS for contents and AES-256-HCTR2 for filenames 343- Adiantum for both contents and filenames 344- AES-128-CBC-ESSIV for contents and AES-128-CTS-CBC for filenames 345- SM4-XTS for contents and SM4-CTS-CBC for filenames 346 347Authenticated encryption modes are not currently supported because of 348the difficulty of dealing with ciphertext expansion. Therefore, 349contents encryption uses a block cipher in `XTS mode 350<https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Disk_encryption_theory#XTS>`_ or 351`CBC-ESSIV mode 352<https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Disk_encryption_theory#Encrypted_salt-sector_initialization_vector_(ESSIV)>`_, 353or a wide-block cipher. Filenames encryption uses a 354block cipher in `CTS-CBC mode 355<https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ciphertext_stealing>`_ or a wide-block 356cipher. 357 358The (AES-256-XTS, AES-256-CTS-CBC) pair is the recommended default. 359It is also the only option that is *guaranteed* to always be supported 360if the kernel supports fscrypt at all; see `Kernel config options`_. 361 362The (AES-256-XTS, AES-256-HCTR2) pair is also a good choice that 363upgrades the filenames encryption to use a wide-block cipher. (A 364*wide-block cipher*, also called a tweakable super-pseudorandom 365permutation, has the property that changing one bit scrambles the 366entire result.) As described in `Filenames encryption`_, a wide-block 367cipher is the ideal mode for the problem domain, though CTS-CBC is the 368"least bad" choice among the alternatives. For more information about 369HCTR2, see `the HCTR2 paper <https://eprint.iacr.org/2021/1441.pdf>`_. 370 371Adiantum is recommended on systems where AES is too slow due to lack 372of hardware acceleration for AES. Adiantum is a wide-block cipher 373that uses XChaCha12 and AES-256 as its underlying components. Most of 374the work is done by XChaCha12, which is much faster than AES when AES 375acceleration is unavailable. For more information about Adiantum, see 376`the Adiantum paper <https://eprint.iacr.org/2018/720.pdf>`_. 377 378The (AES-128-CBC-ESSIV, AES-128-CTS-CBC) pair exists only to support 379systems whose only form of AES acceleration is an off-CPU crypto 380accelerator such as CAAM or CESA that does not support XTS. 381 382The remaining mode pairs are the "national pride ciphers": 383 384- (SM4-XTS, SM4-CTS-CBC) 385 386Generally speaking, these ciphers aren't "bad" per se, but they 387receive limited security review compared to the usual choices such as 388AES and ChaCha. They also don't bring much new to the table. It is 389suggested to only use these ciphers where their use is mandated. 390 391Kernel config options 392--------------------- 393 394Enabling fscrypt support (CONFIG_FS_ENCRYPTION) automatically pulls in 395only the basic support from the crypto API needed to use AES-256-XTS 396and AES-256-CTS-CBC encryption. For optimal performance, it is 397strongly recommended to also enable any available platform-specific 398kconfig options that provide acceleration for the algorithm(s) you 399wish to use. Support for any "non-default" encryption modes typically 400requires extra kconfig options as well. 401 402Below, some relevant options are listed by encryption mode. Note, 403acceleration options not listed below may be available for your 404platform; refer to the kconfig menus. File contents encryption can 405also be configured to use inline encryption hardware instead of the 406kernel crypto API (see `Inline encryption support`_); in that case, 407the file contents mode doesn't need to supported in the kernel crypto 408API, but the filenames mode still does. 409 410- AES-256-XTS and AES-256-CTS-CBC 411 - Recommended: 412 - arm64: CONFIG_CRYPTO_AES_ARM64_CE_BLK 413 - x86: CONFIG_CRYPTO_AES_NI_INTEL 414 415- AES-256-HCTR2 416 - Mandatory: 417 - CONFIG_CRYPTO_HCTR2 418 - Recommended: 419 - arm64: CONFIG_CRYPTO_AES_ARM64_CE_BLK 420 - arm64: CONFIG_CRYPTO_POLYVAL_ARM64_CE 421 - x86: CONFIG_CRYPTO_AES_NI_INTEL 422 - x86: CONFIG_CRYPTO_POLYVAL_CLMUL_NI 423 424- Adiantum 425 - Mandatory: 426 - CONFIG_CRYPTO_ADIANTUM 427 - Recommended: 428 - arm32: CONFIG_CRYPTO_CHACHA20_NEON 429 - arm32: CONFIG_CRYPTO_NHPOLY1305_NEON 430 - arm64: CONFIG_CRYPTO_CHACHA20_NEON 431 - arm64: CONFIG_CRYPTO_NHPOLY1305_NEON 432 - x86: CONFIG_CRYPTO_CHACHA20_X86_64 433 - x86: CONFIG_CRYPTO_NHPOLY1305_SSE2 434 - x86: CONFIG_CRYPTO_NHPOLY1305_AVX2 435 436- AES-128-CBC-ESSIV and AES-128-CTS-CBC: 437 - Mandatory: 438 - CONFIG_CRYPTO_ESSIV 439 - CONFIG_CRYPTO_SHA256 or another SHA-256 implementation 440 - Recommended: 441 - AES-CBC acceleration 442 443fscrypt also uses HMAC-SHA512 for key derivation, so enabling SHA-512 444acceleration is recommended: 445 446- SHA-512 447 - Recommended: 448 - arm64: CONFIG_CRYPTO_SHA512_ARM64_CE 449 - x86: CONFIG_CRYPTO_SHA512_SSSE3 450 451Contents encryption 452------------------- 453 454For file contents, each filesystem block is encrypted independently. 455Starting from Linux kernel 5.5, encryption of filesystems with block 456size less than system's page size is supported. 457 458Each block's IV is set to the logical block number within the file as 459a little endian number, except that: 460 461- With CBC mode encryption, ESSIV is also used. Specifically, each IV 462 is encrypted with AES-256 where the AES-256 key is the SHA-256 hash 463 of the file's data encryption key. 464 465- With `DIRECT_KEY policies`_, the file's nonce is appended to the IV. 466 Currently this is only allowed with the Adiantum encryption mode. 467 468- With `IV_INO_LBLK_64 policies`_, the logical block number is limited 469 to 32 bits and is placed in bits 0-31 of the IV. The inode number 470 (which is also limited to 32 bits) is placed in bits 32-63. 471 472- With `IV_INO_LBLK_32 policies`_, the logical block number is limited 473 to 32 bits and is placed in bits 0-31 of the IV. The inode number 474 is then hashed and added mod 2^32. 475 476Note that because file logical block numbers are included in the IVs, 477filesystems must enforce that blocks are never shifted around within 478encrypted files, e.g. via "collapse range" or "insert range". 479 480Filenames encryption 481-------------------- 482 483For filenames, each full filename is encrypted at once. Because of 484the requirements to retain support for efficient directory lookups and 485filenames of up to 255 bytes, the same IV is used for every filename 486in a directory. 487 488However, each encrypted directory still uses a unique key, or 489alternatively has the file's nonce (for `DIRECT_KEY policies`_) or 490inode number (for `IV_INO_LBLK_64 policies`_) included in the IVs. 491Thus, IV reuse is limited to within a single directory. 492 493With CTS-CBC, the IV reuse means that when the plaintext filenames share a 494common prefix at least as long as the cipher block size (16 bytes for AES), the 495corresponding encrypted filenames will also share a common prefix. This is 496undesirable. Adiantum and HCTR2 do not have this weakness, as they are 497wide-block encryption modes. 498 499All supported filenames encryption modes accept any plaintext length 500>= 16 bytes; cipher block alignment is not required. However, 501filenames shorter than 16 bytes are NUL-padded to 16 bytes before 502being encrypted. In addition, to reduce leakage of filename lengths 503via their ciphertexts, all filenames are NUL-padded to the next 4, 8, 50416, or 32-byte boundary (configurable). 32 is recommended since this 505provides the best confidentiality, at the cost of making directory 506entries consume slightly more space. Note that since NUL (``\0``) is 507not otherwise a valid character in filenames, the padding will never 508produce duplicate plaintexts. 509 510Symbolic link targets are considered a type of filename and are 511encrypted in the same way as filenames in directory entries, except 512that IV reuse is not a problem as each symlink has its own inode. 513 514User API 515======== 516 517Setting an encryption policy 518---------------------------- 519 520FS_IOC_SET_ENCRYPTION_POLICY 521~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 522 523The FS_IOC_SET_ENCRYPTION_POLICY ioctl sets an encryption policy on an 524empty directory or verifies that a directory or regular file already 525has the specified encryption policy. It takes in a pointer to 526struct fscrypt_policy_v1 or struct fscrypt_policy_v2, defined as 527follows:: 528 529 #define FSCRYPT_POLICY_V1 0 530 #define FSCRYPT_KEY_DESCRIPTOR_SIZE 8 531 struct fscrypt_policy_v1 { 532 __u8 version; 533 __u8 contents_encryption_mode; 534 __u8 filenames_encryption_mode; 535 __u8 flags; 536 __u8 master_key_descriptor[FSCRYPT_KEY_DESCRIPTOR_SIZE]; 537 }; 538 #define fscrypt_policy fscrypt_policy_v1 539 540 #define FSCRYPT_POLICY_V2 2 541 #define FSCRYPT_KEY_IDENTIFIER_SIZE 16 542 struct fscrypt_policy_v2 { 543 __u8 version; 544 __u8 contents_encryption_mode; 545 __u8 filenames_encryption_mode; 546 __u8 flags; 547 __u8 __reserved[4]; 548 __u8 master_key_identifier[FSCRYPT_KEY_IDENTIFIER_SIZE]; 549 }; 550 551This structure must be initialized as follows: 552 553- ``version`` must be FSCRYPT_POLICY_V1 (0) if 554 struct fscrypt_policy_v1 is used or FSCRYPT_POLICY_V2 (2) if 555 struct fscrypt_policy_v2 is used. (Note: we refer to the original 556 policy version as "v1", though its version code is really 0.) 557 For new encrypted directories, use v2 policies. 558 559- ``contents_encryption_mode`` and ``filenames_encryption_mode`` must 560 be set to constants from ``<linux/fscrypt.h>`` which identify the 561 encryption modes to use. If unsure, use FSCRYPT_MODE_AES_256_XTS 562 (1) for ``contents_encryption_mode`` and FSCRYPT_MODE_AES_256_CTS 563 (4) for ``filenames_encryption_mode``. For details, see `Encryption 564 modes and usage`_. 565 566 v1 encryption policies only support three combinations of modes: 567 (FSCRYPT_MODE_AES_256_XTS, FSCRYPT_MODE_AES_256_CTS), 568 (FSCRYPT_MODE_AES_128_CBC, FSCRYPT_MODE_AES_128_CTS), and 569 (FSCRYPT_MODE_ADIANTUM, FSCRYPT_MODE_ADIANTUM). v2 policies support 570 all combinations documented in `Supported modes`_. 571 572- ``flags`` contains optional flags from ``<linux/fscrypt.h>``: 573 574 - FSCRYPT_POLICY_FLAGS_PAD_*: The amount of NUL padding to use when 575 encrypting filenames. If unsure, use FSCRYPT_POLICY_FLAGS_PAD_32 576 (0x3). 577 - FSCRYPT_POLICY_FLAG_DIRECT_KEY: See `DIRECT_KEY policies`_. 578 - FSCRYPT_POLICY_FLAG_IV_INO_LBLK_64: See `IV_INO_LBLK_64 579 policies`_. 580 - FSCRYPT_POLICY_FLAG_IV_INO_LBLK_32: See `IV_INO_LBLK_32 581 policies`_. 582 583 v1 encryption policies only support the PAD_* and DIRECT_KEY flags. 584 The other flags are only supported by v2 encryption policies. 585 586 The DIRECT_KEY, IV_INO_LBLK_64, and IV_INO_LBLK_32 flags are 587 mutually exclusive. 588 589- For v2 encryption policies, ``__reserved`` must be zeroed. 590 591- For v1 encryption policies, ``master_key_descriptor`` specifies how 592 to find the master key in a keyring; see `Adding keys`_. It is up 593 to userspace to choose a unique ``master_key_descriptor`` for each 594 master key. The e4crypt and fscrypt tools use the first 8 bytes of 595 ``SHA-512(SHA-512(master_key))``, but this particular scheme is not 596 required. Also, the master key need not be in the keyring yet when 597 FS_IOC_SET_ENCRYPTION_POLICY is executed. However, it must be added 598 before any files can be created in the encrypted directory. 599 600 For v2 encryption policies, ``master_key_descriptor`` has been 601 replaced with ``master_key_identifier``, which is longer and cannot 602 be arbitrarily chosen. Instead, the key must first be added using 603 `FS_IOC_ADD_ENCRYPTION_KEY`_. Then, the ``key_spec.u.identifier`` 604 the kernel returned in the struct fscrypt_add_key_arg must 605 be used as the ``master_key_identifier`` in 606 struct fscrypt_policy_v2. 607 608If the file is not yet encrypted, then FS_IOC_SET_ENCRYPTION_POLICY 609verifies that the file is an empty directory. If so, the specified 610encryption policy is assigned to the directory, turning it into an 611encrypted directory. After that, and after providing the 612corresponding master key as described in `Adding keys`_, all regular 613files, directories (recursively), and symlinks created in the 614directory will be encrypted, inheriting the same encryption policy. 615The filenames in the directory's entries will be encrypted as well. 616 617Alternatively, if the file is already encrypted, then 618FS_IOC_SET_ENCRYPTION_POLICY validates that the specified encryption 619policy exactly matches the actual one. If they match, then the ioctl 620returns 0. Otherwise, it fails with EEXIST. This works on both 621regular files and directories, including nonempty directories. 622 623When a v2 encryption policy is assigned to a directory, it is also 624required that either the specified key has been added by the current 625user or that the caller has CAP_FOWNER in the initial user namespace. 626(This is needed to prevent a user from encrypting their data with 627another user's key.) The key must remain added while 628FS_IOC_SET_ENCRYPTION_POLICY is executing. However, if the new 629encrypted directory does not need to be accessed immediately, then the 630key can be removed right away afterwards. 631 632Note that the ext4 filesystem does not allow the root directory to be 633encrypted, even if it is empty. Users who want to encrypt an entire 634filesystem with one key should consider using dm-crypt instead. 635 636FS_IOC_SET_ENCRYPTION_POLICY can fail with the following errors: 637 638- ``EACCES``: the file is not owned by the process's uid, nor does the 639 process have the CAP_FOWNER capability in a namespace with the file 640 owner's uid mapped 641- ``EEXIST``: the file is already encrypted with an encryption policy 642 different from the one specified 643- ``EINVAL``: an invalid encryption policy was specified (invalid 644 version, mode(s), or flags; or reserved bits were set); or a v1 645 encryption policy was specified but the directory has the casefold 646 flag enabled (casefolding is incompatible with v1 policies). 647- ``ENOKEY``: a v2 encryption policy was specified, but the key with 648 the specified ``master_key_identifier`` has not been added, nor does 649 the process have the CAP_FOWNER capability in the initial user 650 namespace 651- ``ENOTDIR``: the file is unencrypted and is a regular file, not a 652 directory 653- ``ENOTEMPTY``: the file is unencrypted and is a nonempty directory 654- ``ENOTTY``: this type of filesystem does not implement encryption 655- ``EOPNOTSUPP``: the kernel was not configured with encryption 656 support for filesystems, or the filesystem superblock has not 657 had encryption enabled on it. (For example, to use encryption on an 658 ext4 filesystem, CONFIG_FS_ENCRYPTION must be enabled in the 659 kernel config, and the superblock must have had the "encrypt" 660 feature flag enabled using ``tune2fs -O encrypt`` or ``mkfs.ext4 -O 661 encrypt``.) 662- ``EPERM``: this directory may not be encrypted, e.g. because it is 663 the root directory of an ext4 filesystem 664- ``EROFS``: the filesystem is readonly 665 666Getting an encryption policy 667---------------------------- 668 669Two ioctls are available to get a file's encryption policy: 670 671- `FS_IOC_GET_ENCRYPTION_POLICY_EX`_ 672- `FS_IOC_GET_ENCRYPTION_POLICY`_ 673 674The extended (_EX) version of the ioctl is more general and is 675recommended to use when possible. However, on older kernels only the 676original ioctl is available. Applications should try the extended 677version, and if it fails with ENOTTY fall back to the original 678version. 679 680FS_IOC_GET_ENCRYPTION_POLICY_EX 681~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 682 683The FS_IOC_GET_ENCRYPTION_POLICY_EX ioctl retrieves the encryption 684policy, if any, for a directory or regular file. No additional 685permissions are required beyond the ability to open the file. It 686takes in a pointer to struct fscrypt_get_policy_ex_arg, 687defined as follows:: 688 689 struct fscrypt_get_policy_ex_arg { 690 __u64 policy_size; /* input/output */ 691 union { 692 __u8 version; 693 struct fscrypt_policy_v1 v1; 694 struct fscrypt_policy_v2 v2; 695 } policy; /* output */ 696 }; 697 698The caller must initialize ``policy_size`` to the size available for 699the policy struct, i.e. ``sizeof(arg.policy)``. 700 701On success, the policy struct is returned in ``policy``, and its 702actual size is returned in ``policy_size``. ``policy.version`` should 703be checked to determine the version of policy returned. Note that the 704version code for the "v1" policy is actually 0 (FSCRYPT_POLICY_V1). 705 706FS_IOC_GET_ENCRYPTION_POLICY_EX can fail with the following errors: 707 708- ``EINVAL``: the file is encrypted, but it uses an unrecognized 709 encryption policy version 710- ``ENODATA``: the file is not encrypted 711- ``ENOTTY``: this type of filesystem does not implement encryption, 712 or this kernel is too old to support FS_IOC_GET_ENCRYPTION_POLICY_EX 713 (try FS_IOC_GET_ENCRYPTION_POLICY instead) 714- ``EOPNOTSUPP``: the kernel was not configured with encryption 715 support for this filesystem, or the filesystem superblock has not 716 had encryption enabled on it 717- ``EOVERFLOW``: the file is encrypted and uses a recognized 718 encryption policy version, but the policy struct does not fit into 719 the provided buffer 720 721Note: if you only need to know whether a file is encrypted or not, on 722most filesystems it is also possible to use the FS_IOC_GETFLAGS ioctl 723and check for FS_ENCRYPT_FL, or to use the statx() system call and 724check for STATX_ATTR_ENCRYPTED in stx_attributes. 725 726FS_IOC_GET_ENCRYPTION_POLICY 727~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 728 729The FS_IOC_GET_ENCRYPTION_POLICY ioctl can also retrieve the 730encryption policy, if any, for a directory or regular file. However, 731unlike `FS_IOC_GET_ENCRYPTION_POLICY_EX`_, 732FS_IOC_GET_ENCRYPTION_POLICY only supports the original policy 733version. It takes in a pointer directly to struct fscrypt_policy_v1 734rather than struct fscrypt_get_policy_ex_arg. 735 736The error codes for FS_IOC_GET_ENCRYPTION_POLICY are the same as those 737for FS_IOC_GET_ENCRYPTION_POLICY_EX, except that 738FS_IOC_GET_ENCRYPTION_POLICY also returns ``EINVAL`` if the file is 739encrypted using a newer encryption policy version. 740 741Getting the per-filesystem salt 742------------------------------- 743 744Some filesystems, such as ext4 and F2FS, also support the deprecated 745ioctl FS_IOC_GET_ENCRYPTION_PWSALT. This ioctl retrieves a randomly 746generated 16-byte value stored in the filesystem superblock. This 747value is intended to used as a salt when deriving an encryption key 748from a passphrase or other low-entropy user credential. 749 750FS_IOC_GET_ENCRYPTION_PWSALT is deprecated. Instead, prefer to 751generate and manage any needed salt(s) in userspace. 752 753Getting a file's encryption nonce 754--------------------------------- 755 756Since Linux v5.7, the ioctl FS_IOC_GET_ENCRYPTION_NONCE is supported. 757On encrypted files and directories it gets the inode's 16-byte nonce. 758On unencrypted files and directories, it fails with ENODATA. 759 760This ioctl can be useful for automated tests which verify that the 761encryption is being done correctly. It is not needed for normal use 762of fscrypt. 763 764Adding keys 765----------- 766 767FS_IOC_ADD_ENCRYPTION_KEY 768~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 769 770The FS_IOC_ADD_ENCRYPTION_KEY ioctl adds a master encryption key to 771the filesystem, making all files on the filesystem which were 772encrypted using that key appear "unlocked", i.e. in plaintext form. 773It can be executed on any file or directory on the target filesystem, 774but using the filesystem's root directory is recommended. It takes in 775a pointer to struct fscrypt_add_key_arg, defined as follows:: 776 777 struct fscrypt_add_key_arg { 778 struct fscrypt_key_specifier key_spec; 779 __u32 raw_size; 780 __u32 key_id; 781 __u32 __reserved[8]; 782 __u8 raw[]; 783 }; 784 785 #define FSCRYPT_KEY_SPEC_TYPE_DESCRIPTOR 1 786 #define FSCRYPT_KEY_SPEC_TYPE_IDENTIFIER 2 787 788 struct fscrypt_key_specifier { 789 __u32 type; /* one of FSCRYPT_KEY_SPEC_TYPE_* */ 790 __u32 __reserved; 791 union { 792 __u8 __reserved[32]; /* reserve some extra space */ 793 __u8 descriptor[FSCRYPT_KEY_DESCRIPTOR_SIZE]; 794 __u8 identifier[FSCRYPT_KEY_IDENTIFIER_SIZE]; 795 } u; 796 }; 797 798 struct fscrypt_provisioning_key_payload { 799 __u32 type; 800 __u32 __reserved; 801 __u8 raw[]; 802 }; 803 804struct fscrypt_add_key_arg must be zeroed, then initialized 805as follows: 806 807- If the key is being added for use by v1 encryption policies, then 808 ``key_spec.type`` must contain FSCRYPT_KEY_SPEC_TYPE_DESCRIPTOR, and 809 ``key_spec.u.descriptor`` must contain the descriptor of the key 810 being added, corresponding to the value in the 811 ``master_key_descriptor`` field of struct fscrypt_policy_v1. 812 To add this type of key, the calling process must have the 813 CAP_SYS_ADMIN capability in the initial user namespace. 814 815 Alternatively, if the key is being added for use by v2 encryption 816 policies, then ``key_spec.type`` must contain 817 FSCRYPT_KEY_SPEC_TYPE_IDENTIFIER, and ``key_spec.u.identifier`` is 818 an *output* field which the kernel fills in with a cryptographic 819 hash of the key. To add this type of key, the calling process does 820 not need any privileges. However, the number of keys that can be 821 added is limited by the user's quota for the keyrings service (see 822 ``Documentation/security/keys/core.rst``). 823 824- ``raw_size`` must be the size of the ``raw`` key provided, in bytes. 825 Alternatively, if ``key_id`` is nonzero, this field must be 0, since 826 in that case the size is implied by the specified Linux keyring key. 827 828- ``key_id`` is 0 if the raw key is given directly in the ``raw`` 829 field. Otherwise ``key_id`` is the ID of a Linux keyring key of 830 type "fscrypt-provisioning" whose payload is 831 struct fscrypt_provisioning_key_payload whose ``raw`` field contains 832 the raw key and whose ``type`` field matches ``key_spec.type``. 833 Since ``raw`` is variable-length, the total size of this key's 834 payload must be ``sizeof(struct fscrypt_provisioning_key_payload)`` 835 plus the raw key size. The process must have Search permission on 836 this key. 837 838 Most users should leave this 0 and specify the raw key directly. 839 The support for specifying a Linux keyring key is intended mainly to 840 allow re-adding keys after a filesystem is unmounted and re-mounted, 841 without having to store the raw keys in userspace memory. 842 843- ``raw`` is a variable-length field which must contain the actual 844 key, ``raw_size`` bytes long. Alternatively, if ``key_id`` is 845 nonzero, then this field is unused. 846 847For v2 policy keys, the kernel keeps track of which user (identified 848by effective user ID) added the key, and only allows the key to be 849removed by that user --- or by "root", if they use 850`FS_IOC_REMOVE_ENCRYPTION_KEY_ALL_USERS`_. 851 852However, if another user has added the key, it may be desirable to 853prevent that other user from unexpectedly removing it. Therefore, 854FS_IOC_ADD_ENCRYPTION_KEY may also be used to add a v2 policy key 855*again*, even if it's already added by other user(s). In this case, 856FS_IOC_ADD_ENCRYPTION_KEY will just install a claim to the key for the 857current user, rather than actually add the key again (but the raw key 858must still be provided, as a proof of knowledge). 859 860FS_IOC_ADD_ENCRYPTION_KEY returns 0 if either the key or a claim to 861the key was either added or already exists. 862 863FS_IOC_ADD_ENCRYPTION_KEY can fail with the following errors: 864 865- ``EACCES``: FSCRYPT_KEY_SPEC_TYPE_DESCRIPTOR was specified, but the 866 caller does not have the CAP_SYS_ADMIN capability in the initial 867 user namespace; or the raw key was specified by Linux key ID but the 868 process lacks Search permission on the key. 869- ``EDQUOT``: the key quota for this user would be exceeded by adding 870 the key 871- ``EINVAL``: invalid key size or key specifier type, or reserved bits 872 were set 873- ``EKEYREJECTED``: the raw key was specified by Linux key ID, but the 874 key has the wrong type 875- ``ENOKEY``: the raw key was specified by Linux key ID, but no key 876 exists with that ID 877- ``ENOTTY``: this type of filesystem does not implement encryption 878- ``EOPNOTSUPP``: the kernel was not configured with encryption 879 support for this filesystem, or the filesystem superblock has not 880 had encryption enabled on it 881 882Legacy method 883~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 884 885For v1 encryption policies, a master encryption key can also be 886provided by adding it to a process-subscribed keyring, e.g. to a 887session keyring, or to a user keyring if the user keyring is linked 888into the session keyring. 889 890This method is deprecated (and not supported for v2 encryption 891policies) for several reasons. First, it cannot be used in 892combination with FS_IOC_REMOVE_ENCRYPTION_KEY (see `Removing keys`_), 893so for removing a key a workaround such as keyctl_unlink() in 894combination with ``sync; echo 2 > /proc/sys/vm/drop_caches`` would 895have to be used. Second, it doesn't match the fact that the 896locked/unlocked status of encrypted files (i.e. whether they appear to 897be in plaintext form or in ciphertext form) is global. This mismatch 898has caused much confusion as well as real problems when processes 899running under different UIDs, such as a ``sudo`` command, need to 900access encrypted files. 901 902Nevertheless, to add a key to one of the process-subscribed keyrings, 903the add_key() system call can be used (see: 904``Documentation/security/keys/core.rst``). The key type must be 905"logon"; keys of this type are kept in kernel memory and cannot be 906read back by userspace. The key description must be "fscrypt:" 907followed by the 16-character lower case hex representation of the 908``master_key_descriptor`` that was set in the encryption policy. The 909key payload must conform to the following structure:: 910 911 #define FSCRYPT_MAX_KEY_SIZE 64 912 913 struct fscrypt_key { 914 __u32 mode; 915 __u8 raw[FSCRYPT_MAX_KEY_SIZE]; 916 __u32 size; 917 }; 918 919``mode`` is ignored; just set it to 0. The actual key is provided in 920``raw`` with ``size`` indicating its size in bytes. That is, the 921bytes ``raw[0..size-1]`` (inclusive) are the actual key. 922 923The key description prefix "fscrypt:" may alternatively be replaced 924with a filesystem-specific prefix such as "ext4:". However, the 925filesystem-specific prefixes are deprecated and should not be used in 926new programs. 927 928Removing keys 929------------- 930 931Two ioctls are available for removing a key that was added by 932`FS_IOC_ADD_ENCRYPTION_KEY`_: 933 934- `FS_IOC_REMOVE_ENCRYPTION_KEY`_ 935- `FS_IOC_REMOVE_ENCRYPTION_KEY_ALL_USERS`_ 936 937These two ioctls differ only in cases where v2 policy keys are added 938or removed by non-root users. 939 940These ioctls don't work on keys that were added via the legacy 941process-subscribed keyrings mechanism. 942 943Before using these ioctls, read the `Kernel memory compromise`_ 944section for a discussion of the security goals and limitations of 945these ioctls. 946 947FS_IOC_REMOVE_ENCRYPTION_KEY 948~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 949 950The FS_IOC_REMOVE_ENCRYPTION_KEY ioctl removes a claim to a master 951encryption key from the filesystem, and possibly removes the key 952itself. It can be executed on any file or directory on the target 953filesystem, but using the filesystem's root directory is recommended. 954It takes in a pointer to struct fscrypt_remove_key_arg, defined 955as follows:: 956 957 struct fscrypt_remove_key_arg { 958 struct fscrypt_key_specifier key_spec; 959 #define FSCRYPT_KEY_REMOVAL_STATUS_FLAG_FILES_BUSY 0x00000001 960 #define FSCRYPT_KEY_REMOVAL_STATUS_FLAG_OTHER_USERS 0x00000002 961 __u32 removal_status_flags; /* output */ 962 __u32 __reserved[5]; 963 }; 964 965This structure must be zeroed, then initialized as follows: 966 967- The key to remove is specified by ``key_spec``: 968 969 - To remove a key used by v1 encryption policies, set 970 ``key_spec.type`` to FSCRYPT_KEY_SPEC_TYPE_DESCRIPTOR and fill 971 in ``key_spec.u.descriptor``. To remove this type of key, the 972 calling process must have the CAP_SYS_ADMIN capability in the 973 initial user namespace. 974 975 - To remove a key used by v2 encryption policies, set 976 ``key_spec.type`` to FSCRYPT_KEY_SPEC_TYPE_IDENTIFIER and fill 977 in ``key_spec.u.identifier``. 978 979For v2 policy keys, this ioctl is usable by non-root users. However, 980to make this possible, it actually just removes the current user's 981claim to the key, undoing a single call to FS_IOC_ADD_ENCRYPTION_KEY. 982Only after all claims are removed is the key really removed. 983 984For example, if FS_IOC_ADD_ENCRYPTION_KEY was called with uid 1000, 985then the key will be "claimed" by uid 1000, and 986FS_IOC_REMOVE_ENCRYPTION_KEY will only succeed as uid 1000. Or, if 987both uids 1000 and 2000 added the key, then for each uid 988FS_IOC_REMOVE_ENCRYPTION_KEY will only remove their own claim. Only 989once *both* are removed is the key really removed. (Think of it like 990unlinking a file that may have hard links.) 991 992If FS_IOC_REMOVE_ENCRYPTION_KEY really removes the key, it will also 993try to "lock" all files that had been unlocked with the key. It won't 994lock files that are still in-use, so this ioctl is expected to be used 995in cooperation with userspace ensuring that none of the files are 996still open. However, if necessary, this ioctl can be executed again 997later to retry locking any remaining files. 998 999FS_IOC_REMOVE_ENCRYPTION_KEY returns 0 if either the key was removed 1000(but may still have files remaining to be locked), the user's claim to 1001the key was removed, or the key was already removed but had files 1002remaining to be the locked so the ioctl retried locking them. In any 1003of these cases, ``removal_status_flags`` is filled in with the 1004following informational status flags: 1005 1006- ``FSCRYPT_KEY_REMOVAL_STATUS_FLAG_FILES_BUSY``: set if some file(s) 1007 are still in-use. Not guaranteed to be set in the case where only 1008 the user's claim to the key was removed. 1009- ``FSCRYPT_KEY_REMOVAL_STATUS_FLAG_OTHER_USERS``: set if only the 1010 user's claim to the key was removed, not the key itself 1011 1012FS_IOC_REMOVE_ENCRYPTION_KEY can fail with the following errors: 1013 1014- ``EACCES``: The FSCRYPT_KEY_SPEC_TYPE_DESCRIPTOR key specifier type 1015 was specified, but the caller does not have the CAP_SYS_ADMIN 1016 capability in the initial user namespace 1017- ``EINVAL``: invalid key specifier type, or reserved bits were set 1018- ``ENOKEY``: the key object was not found at all, i.e. it was never 1019 added in the first place or was already fully removed including all 1020 files locked; or, the user does not have a claim to the key (but 1021 someone else does). 1022- ``ENOTTY``: this type of filesystem does not implement encryption 1023- ``EOPNOTSUPP``: the kernel was not configured with encryption 1024 support for this filesystem, or the filesystem superblock has not 1025 had encryption enabled on it 1026 1027FS_IOC_REMOVE_ENCRYPTION_KEY_ALL_USERS 1028~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 1029 1030FS_IOC_REMOVE_ENCRYPTION_KEY_ALL_USERS is exactly the same as 1031`FS_IOC_REMOVE_ENCRYPTION_KEY`_, except that for v2 policy keys, the 1032ALL_USERS version of the ioctl will remove all users' claims to the 1033key, not just the current user's. I.e., the key itself will always be 1034removed, no matter how many users have added it. This difference is 1035only meaningful if non-root users are adding and removing keys. 1036 1037Because of this, FS_IOC_REMOVE_ENCRYPTION_KEY_ALL_USERS also requires 1038"root", namely the CAP_SYS_ADMIN capability in the initial user 1039namespace. Otherwise it will fail with EACCES. 1040 1041Getting key status 1042------------------ 1043 1044FS_IOC_GET_ENCRYPTION_KEY_STATUS 1045~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 1046 1047The FS_IOC_GET_ENCRYPTION_KEY_STATUS ioctl retrieves the status of a 1048master encryption key. It can be executed on any file or directory on 1049the target filesystem, but using the filesystem's root directory is 1050recommended. It takes in a pointer to 1051struct fscrypt_get_key_status_arg, defined as follows:: 1052 1053 struct fscrypt_get_key_status_arg { 1054 /* input */ 1055 struct fscrypt_key_specifier key_spec; 1056 __u32 __reserved[6]; 1057 1058 /* output */ 1059 #define FSCRYPT_KEY_STATUS_ABSENT 1 1060 #define FSCRYPT_KEY_STATUS_PRESENT 2 1061 #define FSCRYPT_KEY_STATUS_INCOMPLETELY_REMOVED 3 1062 __u32 status; 1063 #define FSCRYPT_KEY_STATUS_FLAG_ADDED_BY_SELF 0x00000001 1064 __u32 status_flags; 1065 __u32 user_count; 1066 __u32 __out_reserved[13]; 1067 }; 1068 1069The caller must zero all input fields, then fill in ``key_spec``: 1070 1071 - To get the status of a key for v1 encryption policies, set 1072 ``key_spec.type`` to FSCRYPT_KEY_SPEC_TYPE_DESCRIPTOR and fill 1073 in ``key_spec.u.descriptor``. 1074 1075 - To get the status of a key for v2 encryption policies, set 1076 ``key_spec.type`` to FSCRYPT_KEY_SPEC_TYPE_IDENTIFIER and fill 1077 in ``key_spec.u.identifier``. 1078 1079On success, 0 is returned and the kernel fills in the output fields: 1080 1081- ``status`` indicates whether the key is absent, present, or 1082 incompletely removed. Incompletely removed means that the master 1083 secret has been removed, but some files are still in use; i.e., 1084 `FS_IOC_REMOVE_ENCRYPTION_KEY`_ returned 0 but set the informational 1085 status flag FSCRYPT_KEY_REMOVAL_STATUS_FLAG_FILES_BUSY. 1086 1087- ``status_flags`` can contain the following flags: 1088 1089 - ``FSCRYPT_KEY_STATUS_FLAG_ADDED_BY_SELF`` indicates that the key 1090 has added by the current user. This is only set for keys 1091 identified by ``identifier`` rather than by ``descriptor``. 1092 1093- ``user_count`` specifies the number of users who have added the key. 1094 This is only set for keys identified by ``identifier`` rather than 1095 by ``descriptor``. 1096 1097FS_IOC_GET_ENCRYPTION_KEY_STATUS can fail with the following errors: 1098 1099- ``EINVAL``: invalid key specifier type, or reserved bits were set 1100- ``ENOTTY``: this type of filesystem does not implement encryption 1101- ``EOPNOTSUPP``: the kernel was not configured with encryption 1102 support for this filesystem, or the filesystem superblock has not 1103 had encryption enabled on it 1104 1105Among other use cases, FS_IOC_GET_ENCRYPTION_KEY_STATUS can be useful 1106for determining whether the key for a given encrypted directory needs 1107to be added before prompting the user for the passphrase needed to 1108derive the key. 1109 1110FS_IOC_GET_ENCRYPTION_KEY_STATUS can only get the status of keys in 1111the filesystem-level keyring, i.e. the keyring managed by 1112`FS_IOC_ADD_ENCRYPTION_KEY`_ and `FS_IOC_REMOVE_ENCRYPTION_KEY`_. It 1113cannot get the status of a key that has only been added for use by v1 1114encryption policies using the legacy mechanism involving 1115process-subscribed keyrings. 1116 1117Access semantics 1118================ 1119 1120With the key 1121------------ 1122 1123With the encryption key, encrypted regular files, directories, and 1124symlinks behave very similarly to their unencrypted counterparts --- 1125after all, the encryption is intended to be transparent. However, 1126astute users may notice some differences in behavior: 1127 1128- Unencrypted files, or files encrypted with a different encryption 1129 policy (i.e. different key, modes, or flags), cannot be renamed or 1130 linked into an encrypted directory; see `Encryption policy 1131 enforcement`_. Attempts to do so will fail with EXDEV. However, 1132 encrypted files can be renamed within an encrypted directory, or 1133 into an unencrypted directory. 1134 1135 Note: "moving" an unencrypted file into an encrypted directory, e.g. 1136 with the `mv` program, is implemented in userspace by a copy 1137 followed by a delete. Be aware that the original unencrypted data 1138 may remain recoverable from free space on the disk; prefer to keep 1139 all files encrypted from the very beginning. The `shred` program 1140 may be used to overwrite the source files but isn't guaranteed to be 1141 effective on all filesystems and storage devices. 1142 1143- Direct I/O is supported on encrypted files only under some 1144 circumstances. For details, see `Direct I/O support`_. 1145 1146- The fallocate operations FALLOC_FL_COLLAPSE_RANGE and 1147 FALLOC_FL_INSERT_RANGE are not supported on encrypted files and will 1148 fail with EOPNOTSUPP. 1149 1150- Online defragmentation of encrypted files is not supported. The 1151 EXT4_IOC_MOVE_EXT and F2FS_IOC_MOVE_RANGE ioctls will fail with 1152 EOPNOTSUPP. 1153 1154- The ext4 filesystem does not support data journaling with encrypted 1155 regular files. It will fall back to ordered data mode instead. 1156 1157- DAX (Direct Access) is not supported on encrypted files. 1158 1159- The maximum length of an encrypted symlink is 2 bytes shorter than 1160 the maximum length of an unencrypted symlink. For example, on an 1161 EXT4 filesystem with a 4K block size, unencrypted symlinks can be up 1162 to 4095 bytes long, while encrypted symlinks can only be up to 4093 1163 bytes long (both lengths excluding the terminating null). 1164 1165Note that mmap *is* supported. This is possible because the pagecache 1166for an encrypted file contains the plaintext, not the ciphertext. 1167 1168Without the key 1169--------------- 1170 1171Some filesystem operations may be performed on encrypted regular 1172files, directories, and symlinks even before their encryption key has 1173been added, or after their encryption key has been removed: 1174 1175- File metadata may be read, e.g. using stat(). 1176 1177- Directories may be listed, in which case the filenames will be 1178 listed in an encoded form derived from their ciphertext. The 1179 current encoding algorithm is described in `Filename hashing and 1180 encoding`_. The algorithm is subject to change, but it is 1181 guaranteed that the presented filenames will be no longer than 1182 NAME_MAX bytes, will not contain the ``/`` or ``\0`` characters, and 1183 will uniquely identify directory entries. 1184 1185 The ``.`` and ``..`` directory entries are special. They are always 1186 present and are not encrypted or encoded. 1187 1188- Files may be deleted. That is, nondirectory files may be deleted 1189 with unlink() as usual, and empty directories may be deleted with 1190 rmdir() as usual. Therefore, ``rm`` and ``rm -r`` will work as 1191 expected. 1192 1193- Symlink targets may be read and followed, but they will be presented 1194 in encrypted form, similar to filenames in directories. Hence, they 1195 are unlikely to point to anywhere useful. 1196 1197Without the key, regular files cannot be opened or truncated. 1198Attempts to do so will fail with ENOKEY. This implies that any 1199regular file operations that require a file descriptor, such as 1200read(), write(), mmap(), fallocate(), and ioctl(), are also forbidden. 1201 1202Also without the key, files of any type (including directories) cannot 1203be created or linked into an encrypted directory, nor can a name in an 1204encrypted directory be the source or target of a rename, nor can an 1205O_TMPFILE temporary file be created in an encrypted directory. All 1206such operations will fail with ENOKEY. 1207 1208It is not currently possible to backup and restore encrypted files 1209without the encryption key. This would require special APIs which 1210have not yet been implemented. 1211 1212Encryption policy enforcement 1213============================= 1214 1215After an encryption policy has been set on a directory, all regular 1216files, directories, and symbolic links created in that directory 1217(recursively) will inherit that encryption policy. Special files --- 1218that is, named pipes, device nodes, and UNIX domain sockets --- will 1219not be encrypted. 1220 1221Except for those special files, it is forbidden to have unencrypted 1222files, or files encrypted with a different encryption policy, in an 1223encrypted directory tree. Attempts to link or rename such a file into 1224an encrypted directory will fail with EXDEV. This is also enforced 1225during ->lookup() to provide limited protection against offline 1226attacks that try to disable or downgrade encryption in known locations 1227where applications may later write sensitive data. It is recommended 1228that systems implementing a form of "verified boot" take advantage of 1229this by validating all top-level encryption policies prior to access. 1230 1231Inline encryption support 1232========================= 1233 1234By default, fscrypt uses the kernel crypto API for all cryptographic 1235operations (other than HKDF, which fscrypt partially implements 1236itself). The kernel crypto API supports hardware crypto accelerators, 1237but only ones that work in the traditional way where all inputs and 1238outputs (e.g. plaintexts and ciphertexts) are in memory. fscrypt can 1239take advantage of such hardware, but the traditional acceleration 1240model isn't particularly efficient and fscrypt hasn't been optimized 1241for it. 1242 1243Instead, many newer systems (especially mobile SoCs) have *inline 1244encryption hardware* that can encrypt/decrypt data while it is on its 1245way to/from the storage device. Linux supports inline encryption 1246through a set of extensions to the block layer called *blk-crypto*. 1247blk-crypto allows filesystems to attach encryption contexts to bios 1248(I/O requests) to specify how the data will be encrypted or decrypted 1249in-line. For more information about blk-crypto, see 1250:ref:`Documentation/block/inline-encryption.rst <inline_encryption>`. 1251 1252On supported filesystems (currently ext4 and f2fs), fscrypt can use 1253blk-crypto instead of the kernel crypto API to encrypt/decrypt file 1254contents. To enable this, set CONFIG_FS_ENCRYPTION_INLINE_CRYPT=y in 1255the kernel configuration, and specify the "inlinecrypt" mount option 1256when mounting the filesystem. 1257 1258Note that the "inlinecrypt" mount option just specifies to use inline 1259encryption when possible; it doesn't force its use. fscrypt will 1260still fall back to using the kernel crypto API on files where the 1261inline encryption hardware doesn't have the needed crypto capabilities 1262(e.g. support for the needed encryption algorithm and data unit size) 1263and where blk-crypto-fallback is unusable. (For blk-crypto-fallback 1264to be usable, it must be enabled in the kernel configuration with 1265CONFIG_BLK_INLINE_ENCRYPTION_FALLBACK=y.) 1266 1267Currently fscrypt always uses the filesystem block size (which is 1268usually 4096 bytes) as the data unit size. Therefore, it can only use 1269inline encryption hardware that supports that data unit size. 1270 1271Inline encryption doesn't affect the ciphertext or other aspects of 1272the on-disk format, so users may freely switch back and forth between 1273using "inlinecrypt" and not using "inlinecrypt". 1274 1275Direct I/O support 1276================== 1277 1278For direct I/O on an encrypted file to work, the following conditions 1279must be met (in addition to the conditions for direct I/O on an 1280unencrypted file): 1281 1282* The file must be using inline encryption. Usually this means that 1283 the filesystem must be mounted with ``-o inlinecrypt`` and inline 1284 encryption hardware must be present. However, a software fallback 1285 is also available. For details, see `Inline encryption support`_. 1286 1287* The I/O request must be fully aligned to the filesystem block size. 1288 This means that the file position the I/O is targeting, the lengths 1289 of all I/O segments, and the memory addresses of all I/O buffers 1290 must be multiples of this value. Note that the filesystem block 1291 size may be greater than the logical block size of the block device. 1292 1293If either of the above conditions is not met, then direct I/O on the 1294encrypted file will fall back to buffered I/O. 1295 1296Implementation details 1297====================== 1298 1299Encryption context 1300------------------ 1301 1302An encryption policy is represented on-disk by 1303struct fscrypt_context_v1 or struct fscrypt_context_v2. It is up to 1304individual filesystems to decide where to store it, but normally it 1305would be stored in a hidden extended attribute. It should *not* be 1306exposed by the xattr-related system calls such as getxattr() and 1307setxattr() because of the special semantics of the encryption xattr. 1308(In particular, there would be much confusion if an encryption policy 1309were to be added to or removed from anything other than an empty 1310directory.) These structs are defined as follows:: 1311 1312 #define FSCRYPT_FILE_NONCE_SIZE 16 1313 1314 #define FSCRYPT_KEY_DESCRIPTOR_SIZE 8 1315 struct fscrypt_context_v1 { 1316 u8 version; 1317 u8 contents_encryption_mode; 1318 u8 filenames_encryption_mode; 1319 u8 flags; 1320 u8 master_key_descriptor[FSCRYPT_KEY_DESCRIPTOR_SIZE]; 1321 u8 nonce[FSCRYPT_FILE_NONCE_SIZE]; 1322 }; 1323 1324 #define FSCRYPT_KEY_IDENTIFIER_SIZE 16 1325 struct fscrypt_context_v2 { 1326 u8 version; 1327 u8 contents_encryption_mode; 1328 u8 filenames_encryption_mode; 1329 u8 flags; 1330 u8 __reserved[4]; 1331 u8 master_key_identifier[FSCRYPT_KEY_IDENTIFIER_SIZE]; 1332 u8 nonce[FSCRYPT_FILE_NONCE_SIZE]; 1333 }; 1334 1335The context structs contain the same information as the corresponding 1336policy structs (see `Setting an encryption policy`_), except that the 1337context structs also contain a nonce. The nonce is randomly generated 1338by the kernel and is used as KDF input or as a tweak to cause 1339different files to be encrypted differently; see `Per-file encryption 1340keys`_ and `DIRECT_KEY policies`_. 1341 1342Data path changes 1343----------------- 1344 1345When inline encryption is used, filesystems just need to associate 1346encryption contexts with bios to specify how the block layer or the 1347inline encryption hardware will encrypt/decrypt the file contents. 1348 1349When inline encryption isn't used, filesystems must encrypt/decrypt 1350the file contents themselves, as described below: 1351 1352For the read path (->read_folio()) of regular files, filesystems can 1353read the ciphertext into the page cache and decrypt it in-place. The 1354folio lock must be held until decryption has finished, to prevent the 1355folio from becoming visible to userspace prematurely. 1356 1357For the write path (->writepage()) of regular files, filesystems 1358cannot encrypt data in-place in the page cache, since the cached 1359plaintext must be preserved. Instead, filesystems must encrypt into a 1360temporary buffer or "bounce page", then write out the temporary 1361buffer. Some filesystems, such as UBIFS, already use temporary 1362buffers regardless of encryption. Other filesystems, such as ext4 and 1363F2FS, have to allocate bounce pages specially for encryption. 1364 1365Filename hashing and encoding 1366----------------------------- 1367 1368Modern filesystems accelerate directory lookups by using indexed 1369directories. An indexed directory is organized as a tree keyed by 1370filename hashes. When a ->lookup() is requested, the filesystem 1371normally hashes the filename being looked up so that it can quickly 1372find the corresponding directory entry, if any. 1373 1374With encryption, lookups must be supported and efficient both with and 1375without the encryption key. Clearly, it would not work to hash the 1376plaintext filenames, since the plaintext filenames are unavailable 1377without the key. (Hashing the plaintext filenames would also make it 1378impossible for the filesystem's fsck tool to optimize encrypted 1379directories.) Instead, filesystems hash the ciphertext filenames, 1380i.e. the bytes actually stored on-disk in the directory entries. When 1381asked to do a ->lookup() with the key, the filesystem just encrypts 1382the user-supplied name to get the ciphertext. 1383 1384Lookups without the key are more complicated. The raw ciphertext may 1385contain the ``\0`` and ``/`` characters, which are illegal in 1386filenames. Therefore, readdir() must base64url-encode the ciphertext 1387for presentation. For most filenames, this works fine; on ->lookup(), 1388the filesystem just base64url-decodes the user-supplied name to get 1389back to the raw ciphertext. 1390 1391However, for very long filenames, base64url encoding would cause the 1392filename length to exceed NAME_MAX. To prevent this, readdir() 1393actually presents long filenames in an abbreviated form which encodes 1394a strong "hash" of the ciphertext filename, along with the optional 1395filesystem-specific hash(es) needed for directory lookups. This 1396allows the filesystem to still, with a high degree of confidence, map 1397the filename given in ->lookup() back to a particular directory entry 1398that was previously listed by readdir(). See 1399struct fscrypt_nokey_name in the source for more details. 1400 1401Note that the precise way that filenames are presented to userspace 1402without the key is subject to change in the future. It is only meant 1403as a way to temporarily present valid filenames so that commands like 1404``rm -r`` work as expected on encrypted directories. 1405 1406Tests 1407===== 1408 1409To test fscrypt, use xfstests, which is Linux's de facto standard 1410filesystem test suite. First, run all the tests in the "encrypt" 1411group on the relevant filesystem(s). One can also run the tests 1412with the 'inlinecrypt' mount option to test the implementation for 1413inline encryption support. For example, to test ext4 and 1414f2fs encryption using `kvm-xfstests 1415<https://github.com/tytso/xfstests-bld/blob/master/Documentation/kvm-quickstart.md>`_:: 1416 1417 kvm-xfstests -c ext4,f2fs -g encrypt 1418 kvm-xfstests -c ext4,f2fs -g encrypt -m inlinecrypt 1419 1420UBIFS encryption can also be tested this way, but it should be done in 1421a separate command, and it takes some time for kvm-xfstests to set up 1422emulated UBI volumes:: 1423 1424 kvm-xfstests -c ubifs -g encrypt 1425 1426No tests should fail. However, tests that use non-default encryption 1427modes (e.g. generic/549 and generic/550) will be skipped if the needed 1428algorithms were not built into the kernel's crypto API. Also, tests 1429that access the raw block device (e.g. generic/399, generic/548, 1430generic/549, generic/550) will be skipped on UBIFS. 1431 1432Besides running the "encrypt" group tests, for ext4 and f2fs it's also 1433possible to run most xfstests with the "test_dummy_encryption" mount 1434option. This option causes all new files to be automatically 1435encrypted with a dummy key, without having to make any API calls. 1436This tests the encrypted I/O paths more thoroughly. To do this with 1437kvm-xfstests, use the "encrypt" filesystem configuration:: 1438 1439 kvm-xfstests -c ext4/encrypt,f2fs/encrypt -g auto 1440 kvm-xfstests -c ext4/encrypt,f2fs/encrypt -g auto -m inlinecrypt 1441 1442Because this runs many more tests than "-g encrypt" does, it takes 1443much longer to run; so also consider using `gce-xfstests 1444<https://github.com/tytso/xfstests-bld/blob/master/Documentation/gce-xfstests.md>`_ 1445instead of kvm-xfstests:: 1446 1447 gce-xfstests -c ext4/encrypt,f2fs/encrypt -g auto 1448 gce-xfstests -c ext4/encrypt,f2fs/encrypt -g auto -m inlinecrypt 1449