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== How To Test ==
== How To Test ==
# Add yourself to the ecryptfs group.
# Add yourself to the ecryptfs group.
# Set up an ecryptfs private area under ~/Private using <tt>ecryptfs-setup-private.
# Set up an ecryptfs private area under ~/Private using <tt>ecryptfs-setup-private</tt>.
# Mount it with <tt>ecryptfs-mount-private</tt> and create a few files in it.  Unmount it with <tt>ecryptfs-umount-private</tt>.
# Mount it with <tt>ecryptfs-mount-private</tt> and create a few files in it.  Unmount it with <tt>ecryptfs-umount-private</tt>.
# Enable ecryptfs using authconfig (e.g. setting USE_ECRYPTFS=yes under /etc/sysconfig/authconfig and rerunning <tt>authconfig-tui --updateall</tt>)
# Enable ecryptfs using authconfig (e.g. setting USE_ECRYPTFS=yes under /etc/sysconfig/authconfig and rerunning <tt>authconfig-tui --updateall</tt>)

Revision as of 16:07, 1 February 2011


Support for ecryptfs in authconfig

Summary

Authconfig will allow the system administrator to configure automatic mounting of an encrypted area in each user's home directory.

Owner

Current status

  • Targeted release: Fedora 15
  • Last updated: 2010-12-22
  • Percentage of completion: 80%

Detailed Description

pam_ecryptfs is a PAM module that allows to mount a private part of the home directory (or the entire home directory) when a user logs in. However, using pam_ecryptfs in Fedora <=14 is complicated by the configuration style adopted by authconfig. This feature aims at simplifying this across various PAM users and integrating ecryptfs support into authconfig.

Benefit to Fedora

ecryptfs is a useful tool, but it is hard to configure under Fedora. Compared to encrypted partitions, for example, it easily lets the user do encrypted backups.

Scope

Changes are required to PAM, authconfig, and several pam users. All of these have been identified.

How To Test

  1. Add yourself to the ecryptfs group.
  2. Set up an ecryptfs private area under ~/Private using ecryptfs-setup-private.
  3. Mount it with ecryptfs-mount-private and create a few files in it. Unmount it with ecryptfs-umount-private.
  4. Enable ecryptfs using authconfig (e.g. setting USE_ECRYPTFS=yes under /etc/sysconfig/authconfig and rerunning authconfig-tui --updateall)
  5. Log out and log back in.
  6. mount should show an ecryptfs mount for ~/Private and the files you created in step 3 should show up.
  7. Log out and log in as root.
  8. The ecryptfs mount should not be there anymore.

Contingency Plan

The feature touches several independent packages, but all patches have precise dependencies included in their bugzilla entries (see here). In case the feature will not be available for F15, it is possible to either revert changes that were already included, or leave them in. In the latter case the changes will be unnecessary, but will not break anything.

Documentation

  • pam_ecryptfs(8) man page (note the man page is a bit Ubuntu-centric, we do not have /etc/pam.d/common-auth and the Fedora implementation will be different in order to support authconfig)

Release Notes

Fedora 15 brings in improved support for eCryptfs, a stacked cryptographic filesystem for Linux. Starting from Fedora 15, authconfig can be used to automatically mount a private encrypted part of the home directory when a user logs in.

Comments and Discussion