* TmpFs Incorporation Of FsCrypt? @ 2026-01-14 7:03 Nathan Royce 2026-01-14 20:43 ` Theodore Tso 0 siblings, 1 reply; 4+ messages in thread From: Nathan Royce @ 2026-01-14 7:03 UTC (permalink / raw) To: LKML; +Cc: linux-mm, Andrew Morton, Hugh Dickins [-- Attachment #1: Type: text/plain, Size: 1089 bytes --] I recently saw the PRs for BTRFS relating to FSCRYPT, and thought I'd explore the fscrypt package. I started with `status` before moving to `setup` on the `/tmp` path which is tmpfs. As expected I'm sure, I got: `[ERROR] fscrypt setup: filesystem type tmpfs is not supported for fscrypt setup` Looking in https://github.com/google/fscrypt, I saw: https://github.com/google/fscrypt/blob/ea916da7fa9844cc3da608e75510f478c7b09f7d/cli-tests/t_not_supported.sh which coincides with my presumably expected error. But I also saw: `The source files are located on an in-memory filesystem such as tmpfs.` in the main README, which makes me wonder if there is intent/plan to bring fscrypt to tmpfs. I'm kind of thinking a use case of having keys and/or a password manager database on external/encrypted storage, that gets transferred to some random path in `/run/user/<#>` (tmpfs) on login where it is encrypted as well (then the storage is unmounted/locked/removed), and the respective program that uses the file(s) would point to a freshly generated config that points to the random location. [-- Attachment #2: Type: text/html, Size: 1408 bytes --] ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 4+ messages in thread
* Re: TmpFs Incorporation Of FsCrypt? 2026-01-14 7:03 TmpFs Incorporation Of FsCrypt? Nathan Royce @ 2026-01-14 20:43 ` Theodore Tso 2026-01-14 23:32 ` Nathan Royce 0 siblings, 1 reply; 4+ messages in thread From: Theodore Tso @ 2026-01-14 20:43 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Nathan Royce; +Cc: LKML, linux-mm, Andrew Morton, Hugh Dickins On Wed, Jan 14, 2026 at 01:03:20AM -0600, Nathan Royce wrote: > But I also saw: `The source files are located on an in-memory filesystem > such as tmpfs.` in the main README, which makes me wonder if there is > intent/plan to bring fscrypt to tmpfs. > > I'm kind of thinking a use case of having keys and/or a password manager > database on external/encrypted storage, that gets transferred to some > random path in `/run/user/<#>` (tmpfs) on login where it is encrypted as > well (then the storage is unmounted/locked/removed), and the respective > program that uses the file(s) would point to a freshly generated config > that points to the random location. I'm not aware of anyone considering adding fscrypt to tmpfs. One reason why it might not make sense is that the primary value that fscrypt add is encryption at rest. For example, if you are using fscrypt to protect user files on a mobile phone, the file system level encryption protects the data from being accessible immediately after the phone is rebooted or power cycled. Many of the attacks which require direct access to the flash storage, or attempts to replace the kernel with one special "enhancements" courtesy of the NSA, KGB, Mossad, or MSS. However, if there is a zero day vulnerability which allows the attacker to compromise the currently running kernel without requiring a reboot, and while the encryption keys are in memory because the user is logged in --- fscrypt will likely not provide much protection. That's because if the keys are loaded, and the decrypted file contents are in the page cache, the only thing that prevents the attacker from gaining access to the file contents is the Unix permissions, and the system's discretionary access controls are very likely going to be compromised if the kernel has been compromised. This is why fscrypt for tmpfs might not be that useful. Tmpfs is not applicable for storage at rest. So when you copy the encrypted files from the persistent storage to the tmpfs, if you use fscrypt with tmpfs, the only way it would add value is if you want to remove the encryption keys from memory, without actually deleting the files from tmpfs. Otherwise, why not just zero the files and deleting the files from tmpfs, and when the user logs back in, just copy the files from the persistent storage into tmpfs? Cheers, - Ted ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 4+ messages in thread
* Re: TmpFs Incorporation Of FsCrypt? 2026-01-14 20:43 ` Theodore Tso @ 2026-01-14 23:32 ` Nathan Royce 0 siblings, 0 replies; 4+ messages in thread From: Nathan Royce @ 2026-01-14 23:32 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Theodore Tso; +Cc: LKML, linux-mm, Andrew Morton, Hugh Dickins Yeah, I believe I had read that once root has been compromised, it's game-over. They'd have access to the entire keyring for all sessions. I think I also understand that if one were to counter kernel corruption attempts, signed kernels, using a BL key, would be the way to go. What I like about fscrypt is it does appear to be session-based, so compared to LUKS, which just needs a key once to unlock it for everyone, fscrypt looks like it remains encrypted for everyone except the user that unlocked the path for that session. So if a user account maybe shares a path within their user path, with another user/group, a misconfiguration would supposedly keep an encrypted path still encrypted to the other shared user, even if the originating user has it unlocked for themselves. It was just a mere curiosity, and sounds like I got my answer. I'm really anxious for BTRFS to implement it, as I expect I may transition to fscrypt from luks. I'm just not really seeing the issue with not having metadata encrypted. My view may flip-flop as I try it. I could always use both I guess, though luks would be limited to 32 key slots. On Wed, Jan 14, 2026 at 2:43 PM Theodore Tso <tytso@mit.edu> wrote: > I'm not aware of anyone considering adding fscrypt to tmpfs. One > reason why it might not make sense is that the primary value that > fscrypt add is encryption at rest. For example, if you are using > fscrypt to protect user files on a mobile phone, the file system level > encryption protects the data from being accessible immediately after > the phone is rebooted or power cycled. Many of the attacks which > require direct access to the flash storage, or attempts to replace the > kernel with one special "enhancements" courtesy of the NSA, KGB, > Mossad, or MSS. > > However, if there is a zero day vulnerability which allows the > attacker to compromise the currently running kernel without requiring > a reboot, and while the encryption keys are in memory because the user > is logged in --- fscrypt will likely not provide much protection. > That's because if the keys are loaded, and the decrypted file contents > are in the page cache, the only thing that prevents the attacker from > gaining access to the file contents is the Unix permissions, and the > system's discretionary access controls are very likely going to be > compromised if the kernel has been compromised. > > This is why fscrypt for tmpfs might not be that useful. Tmpfs is not > applicable for storage at rest. So when you copy the encrypted files > from the persistent storage to the tmpfs, if you use fscrypt with > tmpfs, the only way it would add value is if you want to remove the > encryption keys from memory, without actually deleting the files from > tmpfs. Otherwise, why not just zero the files and deleting the files > from tmpfs, and when the user logs back in, just copy the files from > the persistent storage into tmpfs? > > Cheers, > > - Ted > ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 4+ messages in thread
* TmpFs Incorporation Of FsCrypt? @ 2026-01-14 7:25 Nathan Royce 0 siblings, 0 replies; 4+ messages in thread From: Nathan Royce @ 2026-01-14 7:25 UTC (permalink / raw) To: LKML; +Cc: linux-mm, Andrew Morton, Hugh Dickins I recently saw the PRs for BTRFS relating to FSCRYPT, and thought I'd explore the fscrypt package. I started with `status` before moving to `setup` on the `/tmp` path which is tmpfs. As expected I'm sure, I got: `[ERROR] fscrypt setup: filesystem type tmpfs is not supported for fscrypt setup` Looking in https://github.com/google/fscrypt, I saw: https://github.com/google/fscrypt/blob/ea916da7fa9844cc3da608e75510f478c7b09f7d/cli-tests/t_not_supported.sh which coincides with my presumably expected error. But I also saw: `The source files are located on an in-memory filesystem such as tmpfs.` in the main README, which makes me wonder if there is intent/plan to bring fscrypt to tmpfs. I'm kind of thinking a use case of having keys and/or a password manager database on external/encrypted storage, that gets transferred to some random path in `/run/user/<#>` (tmpfs) on login where it is encrypted as well (then the storage is unmounted/locked/removed), and the respective program that uses the file(s) would point to a freshly generated config that points to the random location. ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 4+ messages in thread
end of thread, other threads:[~2026-01-14 23:33 UTC | newest] Thread overview: 4+ messages (download: mbox.gz / follow: Atom feed) -- links below jump to the message on this page -- 2026-01-14 7:03 TmpFs Incorporation Of FsCrypt? Nathan Royce 2026-01-14 20:43 ` Theodore Tso 2026-01-14 23:32 ` Nathan Royce 2026-01-14 7:25 Nathan Royce
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