git-remote-gcrypt is a git remote helper to push and pull from
repositories encrypted with GnuPG, using a custom format. This remote
helper handles URIs prefixed with gcrypt::.
Supported backends are local, rsync:// and sftp://, where the
repository is stored as a set of files, or instead any <giturl>
where gcrypt will store the same representation in a git repository,
bridged over arbitrary git transport. See "Performance" below for
backends comparison.
There is also an experimental rclone:// backend for early adoptors
only (you have been warned).
The aim is to provide confidential, authenticated git storage and
collaboration using typical untrusted file hosts or services.
Installation
use your GNU/Linux distribution's package manager -- Debian, Ubuntu,
Fedora, Arch and some smaller distros are known to have packages
run the supplied install.sh script on other systems
Quickstart
Create an encrypted remote by pushing to it:
git remote add cryptremote gcrypt::rsync://example.com/repo
git push cryptremote master
> gcrypt: Setting up new repository
> gcrypt: Remote ID is :id:7VigUnLVYVtZx8oir34R
> [ more lines .. ]
> To gcrypt::[...]
> * [new branch] master -> master
Configuration
The following git-config(1) variables are supported:
remote.<name>.gcrypt-participants
gcrypt.participants
Space-separated list of GPG key identifiers. The remote is encrypted
to these participants and only signatures from these are accepted.
gpg -k lists all public keys you know.
If this option is not set, we encrypt to your default key and accept
any valid signature. This behavior can also be requested explicitly
by setting participants to simple.
The gcrypt-participants setting on the remote takes precedence
over the repository variable gcrypt.participants.
remote.<name>.gcrypt-publish-participants
gcrypt.publish-participants
By default, the gpg key ids of the participants are obscured by
encrypting using gpg -R. Setting this option to true disables
that security measure.
The problem with using gpg -R is that to decrypt, gpg tries each
available secret key in turn until it finds a usable key.
This can result in unnecessary passphrase prompts.
gcrypt.gpg-args
The contents of this setting are passed as arguments to gpg.
E.g. --use-agent.
remote.<name>.gcrypt-signingkey
user.signingkey
(The latter from regular git configuration) The key to use for signing.
You should set user.signingkey if your default signing key is not
part of the participant list. You may use the per-remote version
to sign different remotes using different keys.
remote.<name>.gcrypt-rsync-put-flags
gcrypt.rsync-put-flags
Flags to be passed to rsync when uploading to a remote using the
rsync:// backend. If the flags are set to a specific remote, the
global flags, if also set, will not be applied for that remote.
remote.<name>.gcrypt-require-explicit-force-push
gcrypt.require-explicit-force-push
A longstanding bug is that every git push effectively has a --force.
If this flag is set to true, git-remote-gcrypt will refuse to push,
unless --force is passed, or refspecs are prefixed with +.
Environment variables
GCRYPT_FULL_REPACK
When set (to anything), this environment variable forces a full repack when pushing.
# notice that the target git repo must already exist and its
# `next` branch will be overwritten!
git remote add gitcrypt gcrypt::[email protected]:repo#next
git push gitcrypt master
The URL fragment (#next here) indicates which backend branch is used.
Notes
Collaboration
The encryption of the manifest is updated for each push to match the
participant configuration. Each pushing user must have the public
keys of all collaborators and correct participant config.
Dependencies
rsync, curl and rclone for remotes rsync:, sftp: and
rclone: respectively. The main executable requires a POSIX-compliant
shell that supports local.
GNU Privacy Guard
Both GPG 1.4 and 2 are supported. You need a personal GPG key. GPG
configuration applies to algorithm choices for public-key
encryption, symmetric encryption, and signing. See man gpg for
more information.
Remote ID
The Remote ID is not secret; it only ensures that two repositories
signed by the same user can be distinguished. You will see
a warning if the Remote ID changes, which should only happen if the
remote was re-created.
Performance
Using an arbitrary <giturl> or an sftp:// URI requires
uploading the entire repository history with each push. If your
repository history is large or you are pushing over a slow link,
consider using the rsync:// transport, which performs
incremental pushes. Note that the latter won't work with a
repository hosting service like Gitolite, GitHub or GitLab.
rsync URIs
The URI format for the rsync backend is rsync://user@host/path,
which translates to the rsync location user@host:/path,
accessed over ssh. Note that the path is absolute, not relative to the
home directory. An earlier non-standard URI format is also supported:
rsync://user@host:path, which translates to the rsync location
user@host:path
rclone backend
In addition to adding the rclone backend as a remote with URI like
gcrypt::rclone://remote:subdir, you must add the remote to the
rclone configuration too. This is typically done by executing
rclone config. See rclone(1).
The rclone backend is considered experimental and is for early
adoptors only. You have been warned.
Repository format
EncSign(X): Sign and Encrypt to GPG key holder
Encrypt(K,X): Encrypt using symmetric-key algorithm
Hash(X): SHA-2/256
B: branch list
L: list of the hash (Hi) and key (Ki) for each packfile
R: Remote ID
To write the repository:
Store each packfile P as Encrypt(Ki, P) → P' in filename Hi
where Ki is a new random string and Hash(P') → Hi
Store EncSign(B || L || R) in the manifest
To read the repository:
Get manifest, decrypt and verify using GPG keyring → (B, L, R)
Warn if R does not match previously seen Remote ID
for each Hi, Ki in L:
Get file Hi from the server → P'
Verify Hash(P') matches Hi
Decrypt P' using Ki → P then open P with git
Manifest file
Example manifest file (with ellipsis for brevity):
Each item extends until newline, and matches one of the following:
<sha-1> <gitref>
Git object id and its ref
pack :<hashtype>:<hash> <key>
Packfile hash (Hi) and corresponding symmetric key (Ki).
keep :<hashtype>:<hash> <generation>
Packfile hash and its repack generation
repo <id>
The remote id
extn <name> ...
Extension field, preserved but unused.
Detecting gcrypt repos
To detect if a git url is a gcrypt repo, use: git-remote-gcrypt --check url
Exit status is 0 if the repo exists and can be decrypted, 1 if the repo
uses gcrypt but could not be decrypted, and 100 if the repo is not
encrypted with gcrypt (or could not be accessed).
Note that this has to fetch the repo contents into the local git
repository, the same as is done when using a gcrypt repo.
Known issues
Every git push effectively has --force. Be sure to pull before
pushing.
git-remote-gcrypt can decide to repack the remote without warning,
which means that your push can suddenly take significantly longer than
you were expecting, as your whole history has to be reuploaded.
This push might fail over a poor link.
git-remote-gcrypt might report a repository as "not found" when the
repository does in fact exist, but git-remote-gcrypt is having
authentication, port, or network connectivity issues.
See also
git-remote-helpers(1), gpg(1)
Credits
The original author of git-remote-gcrypt was GitHub user bluss.
The de facto maintainer in 2013 and 2014 was Joey Hess.
The current maintainer, since 2016, is Sean Whitton
<[email protected]>.
License
This document and git-remote-gcrypt are licensed under identical terms,
GPL-3 (or 2+); see the git-remote-gcrypt file.
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