CFS & TCFS (was Re: Linux Encrypted File System)

If you are running Red Hat Linux and want the Cryptographic File System (also available for most BSD-derived Unix systems and most current Linux releases), go to http://www.replay.com/redhat/cfs.html If you are running Linux 2.0.X and want the Transparent Cryptographic File System (improves on Matt Blaze's CFS, they say), go to http://vales.uni.net/tcfs/ - d.

Ok, so that was an especially clueless question for me to have asked. Oh well. :) mib wrote:
On Sat, Dec 12, 1998 at 05:57:42PM +0000, Michael Hohensee wrote:
These are just NFS servers. Do there exist any programs which actually keep the contents of the filesystem on your hard-drive encrypted?
ftp://ftp.research.att.com/dist/mab/cfs.announce ...

These are just NFS servers. Do there exist any programs which actually keep the contents of the filesystem on your hard-drive encrypted? mib wrote:
If you are running Red Hat Linux and want the Cryptographic File System (also available for most BSD-derived Unix systems and most current Linux releases), go to http://www.replay.com/redhat/cfs.html
If you are running Linux 2.0.X and want the Transparent Cryptographic File System (improves on Matt Blaze's CFS, they say), go to http://vales.uni.net/tcfs/
- d.

On Sat, Dec 12, 1998 at 05:57:42PM +0000, Michael Hohensee wrote:
These are just NFS servers. Do there exist any programs which actually keep the contents of the filesystem on your hard-drive encrypted?
ftp://ftp.research.att.com/dist/mab/cfs.announce ...
CFS pushes encryption services into the Unix(tm) file system. It supports secure storage at the system level through a standard Unix file system interface to encrypted files. Users associate a cryptographic key with the directories they wish to protect. Files in these directories (as well as their pathname components) are transparently encrypted and decrypted with the specified key without further user intervention; cleartext is never stored on a disk or sent to a remote file server. CFS employs a novel combination of DES stream and codebook cipher modes to provide high security with good performance on a modern workstation. CFS can use any available file system for its underlying storage without modification, including remote file servers such as NFS. System management functions, such as file backup, work in a normal manner and without knowledge of the key.
http://vales.uni.net/tcfs/tcfs-faq.html#Q1.1 ...
Question 1.1. What is TCFS? TCFS is a Transparent Cryptographic File System that is a suitable solution to the problem of privacy for distributed file system. By a deeper integration between the encryption service and the file system, it results in a complete trasparency of use to the user applications. Files are stored in encrypted form and are decrypted before they are read. The encryption/decryption process takes place on the client machine and thus the encryption/decryption key never travels on the network.
- d.
participants (2)
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mib
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Michael Hohensee