glenda.party
term% ls -F
term% cat index.txt
SECSTORE(1)                 General Commands Manual                SECSTORE(1)



NAME
       aescbc, ipso, secstore - secstore commands

SYNOPSIS
       auth/secstore [ -cinv ] [ -(g|G) getfile ] [ -p putfile ] [ -r rmfile ]
       [ -s server ] [ -u user ]

       auth/aescbc -e [ -in ] <cleartext >ciphertext
       auth/aescbc -d [ -in ] <ciphertext >cleartext

       ipso [ -a -e -l -f -s ] [ file ...  ]

DESCRIPTION
       Secstore authenticates to a secure-store server using  a  password  and
       optionally  a  hardware token, then saves or retrieves a file.  This is
       intended to be a credentials store (public/private keypairs, passwords,
       and other secrets) for a factotum.

       Option -c prompts for a password change.

       Option  -g retrieves a file to the local directory; option -G writes it
       to standard output instead.  Specifying getfile of will send  to  stan‐
       dard output a list of remote files with dates, lengths and SHA1 hashes.

       Option -i says that the password should be read from standard input in‐
       stead of from /dev/cons.

       Option -n says that the password should be read from NVRAM  (see  auth‐
       srv(2)) instead of from /dev/cons.

       Option -p stores a file on the secstore.

       Option -r removes a file from the secstore.

       The server is tcp!$auth!secstore, or the server specified by option -s.

       Option -u accesses the secure-store files belonging to user.

       Option  -v  produces more verbose output, in particular providing a few
       bits of feedback to help the user detect mistyping.

       For example, to add a  secret  to  the  file  read  by  factotum(4)  at
       startup, open a new window, type

         % ramfs -p; cd /tmp
         % auth/secstore -g factotum
         secstore password:
         % echo 'key proto=apop dom=x.com user=ehg !password=hi' >> factotum
         % auth/secstore -p factotum
         secstore password:
         % read -m factotum > /mnt/factotum/ctl

       and delete the window.  The first line creates an ephemeral memory-res‐
       ident workspace, invisible to others and automatically removed when the
       window  is  deleted.  The next three commands fetch the persistent copy
       of the secrets, append a new secret, and save the updated file back  to
       secstore.  The final command loads the new secret into the running fac‐
       totum.

       The ipso command packages this sequence into  a  convenient  script  to
       simplify  editing  of  files  stored  on a secure store.  It copies the
       named files into a local ramfs(4) and invokes acme(1)  on  them.   When
       the  editor  exits, ipso prompts the user to confirm copying modifed or
       newly created files back to secstore.  If no file  is  mentioned,  ipso
       grabs all the user's files from secstore for editing.

       By  default,  ipso  will edit the secstore files and, if one of them is
       named factotum, flush current keys from factotum and load the new  ones
       from  the file.  If the -e, -f, or -l options are given, ipso will just
       perform only the requested operations, i.e., edit, flush, and/or load.

       The -s option of ipso invokes sam(1) as the editor insted of acme;  the
       -a  option  provides  a  similar  service for files encrypted by aescbc
       (q.v.).  With the -a option, the full rooted pathname of the file  must
       be  specified  and all files must be encrypted with the same key.  Also
       with -a, newly created files are ignored.

       Aescbc encrypts (under and decrypts (under using AES (Rijndael) in  ci‐
       pher  block  chaining (CBC) mode.  Options and are as per secstore, ex‐
       cept that reads from file descriptor 3.

SOURCE
       /rc/bin/ipso
       /sys/src/cmd/auth/secstore

SEE ALSO
       factotum(4), secstore(8)

BUGS
       There is deliberately no backup of files on the secstore, so -r  (or  a
       disk crash) is irrevocable.  You are advised to store important secrets
       in a second location.

       When using ipso, secrets will appear as plain text in the  editor  win‐
       dow, so use the command in private.



                                                                   SECSTORE(1)