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author | Silvio Rhatto <rhatto@riseup.net> | 2013-03-29 14:46:03 -0300 |
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committer | Silvio Rhatto <rhatto@riseup.net> | 2013-03-29 14:46:03 -0300 |
commit | 94dbae38c91dd2e2817d06921b347bf486805397 (patch) | |
tree | 2e4e3c17530ac2e0037e2b790c52603fd5d5e978 /README | |
parent | 869c94126999d8291cbb936edb2790693bfb63a4 (diff) | |
download | keyringer-94dbae38c91dd2e2817d06921b347bf486805397.tar.gz keyringer-94dbae38c91dd2e2817d06921b347bf486805397.tar.bz2 |
Moving README to index and vice-versa
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@@ -1,223 +0,0 @@ -Keyringer -========= - -Keyringer lets you manage and share secrets using GPG and git in a distributed -fashion. It has custom commands to encrypt, decrypt, recrypt, create key pairs, -etc. - -Homepage: https://keyringer.sarava.org - -Requirements ------------- - -Keyringer needs: - - - Bash - http://tiswww.case.edu/php/chet/bash/bashtop.html - - Git - http://git-scm.com - - GNU Privacy Guard - http://gnupg.org - - Grep, awk, tail, cut, sed and other GNU tools - -Optional dependencies if you want to manage ssl keys: - - - OpenSSL - http://www.openssl.org - -Installation ------------- - -Just clone - - git clone git://git.sarava.org/keyringer.git - -And then leave it somewhere, optionally adding it to your $PATH environment variable. -You can also package it to your preferred distro. - -Creating a keyringer repository -------------------------------- - -The first step is to setup a keyring. - -Keyringer supports management of multiple isolated keyrings. To start -a new keyring (or register an existing one with your config file), -run: - - keyringer <keyring> init <path> [remote] - -This will - - 1. Add an entry at $HOME/.keyringer/config aliasing 'keyring' to 'path'. - 2. Initialize a git repository if needed. - -For example, - - keyringer friends init $HOME/keyrings/friends - -will create an alias "friends" pointing to $HOME/keyrings/friends. Call all -other keyring actions using this alias. - -If there is an existing remote keyring git repository and you just -want to checkout it, use - - keyringer friends init $HOME/keyrings/friends <repository-url> - -Managing recipients -------------------- - -Your next step is tell keyringer the GPG key ids to encrypt files to: - - keyringer <keyring> recipients edit [recipient-name] - keyringer <keyring> recipients ls - -Keyringer support multiple recipients in a per-folder style. Try it by -creating a sample keyringer - - keyringer <keyring> recipients edit closest-friends - -Fill it with your friends key IDs. Now encrypt a secret just for then: - - keyringer <keyring> encrypt closest-friends/secret - -In other words, if keyringer finds a recipient file matching a given path, -it will use it instead of the global recipients file. - -Managing keys ----------------- - -Each key has a corresponding file in your keys subdirectory. - -keyringer is agnostic about how you store your secrets. You may choose to have -one key file that contains one line for each secret, e.g. a single file called -secrets with lines such as: - -emma : root : secret1 -emma - /dev/hda : : secret2 - -Or you may also have a different key file for each secret, e.g. a file called -emma.root that contains the root passphrase for the server named emma and -another called emma.hda with the passphrase to decrypt /dev/hda on emma. - -Encrypting a key - - keyringer <keyring> encrypt <file> - -Decrypting a key (only to stdout) - - keyringer <keyring> decrypt <file> - -Re-encrypting a key or the whole repository - - keyringer <keyring> recrypt [file] - -Appending information to a key - - keyringer <keyring> append <file> - -Editing a key - -To edit a key, use - - keyringer <keyring> edit <file> - -Use this option with caution as it keeps temporary unencrypted data -into keyringer temp folder and at your editor's temp files. - -Listing keys - - keyringer <keyring> ls [arguments] - -Git wrapper ------------ - -Keyringer comes with a simple git wrapper to ease common management tasks: - - keyringer <keyring> git remote add keyringer <url> - keyringer <keyring> git push keyringer master - keyringer <keyring> git pull - -Configuration files, preferences and options --------------------------------------------- - - 1. Main config file: $HOME/.keyringer/config: store the location of - each keyring. - - 2. User preferences per keyring: $HOME/.keyringer/<keyring>: managed by - "keyringer <keyring> preferences". - - 3. Custom keyring options: $KEYRING_FOLDER/config/options: managed by - "keyringer <keyring> options". - -Using a non-default OpenPGP key -------------------------------- - -If you want to use a different key other than your default for a given -keyringer, use - - keyringer <keyring> preferences add KEYID=FINGERPRINT - -Notes ------ - - 1. The <file> is any file inside the keys/ folder of your - keyring directory. - - 2. Never decrypt a key and write it to the disk, except - if you're adding it to your personall keyring. - - 3. Recipients are defined at file config/recipients. - Please add just trustable recipients. - -Concepts --------- - -Basic idea is: - - - Encrypt stuff with ppl's gpg pubkeys and push the output - in a git repo. - - - Let ppl keep it in sync with the repo and the keys are - shared :) - -For "key" it's meant anything as the script work with stdin and output things to -files, so it can be passphrases, private keys or other kind of info. - -It's possible to share keys using an encrypted mailing list, but the main -difficulty is to track the message where the keys are. - -With theses scripts, the workflow is more or less like this: - - - You have a git repo for secret keys. - - - You run the "encrypt" command and paste your private key to this - command (so no plaintext disk write). - - - The encrypt command writes an encrypted file to the repo. - - - You manually add it to git and push it to remote repositories. - - - Optionally, other ppl pulls the changes but they dont need to - decrypt anything until they need to use the keys. - -So it's just gpg-encrypted data atop of a git repository (one can think of a -kind of distributed encrypted filesystem). - -Git was chosen to host encrypted info mostly for two reasos: easy to distribute -and its the only VCS known to make easier repository history manipulation. - -One possible drawback: the repo has pubkey information attached, which can be -linked to real ppl (and then disclose the information about who has access to a -given key), but it's possible to: - - - Keep the repo just atop of an encrypted and non-public place. - - - Or to consider an integration with gpg's --hidden-recipient option. - -Notes: Using with GNU Privacy Guard ------------------------------------ - -Exporting public keys: - - gpg --armor --export <keyid> - -Exporting private keys (take care): - - gpg --armor --export-secret-keys - |