1CLEVIS(1) CLEVIS(1)
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6 clevis - Automated decryption policy framework
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9 clevis COMMAND [OPTIONS]
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12 Clevis is a framework for automated decryption policy. It allows you to
13 define a policy at encryption time that must be satisfied for the data
14 to decrypt. Once this policy is met, the data is decrypted.
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16 Clevis is pluggable. Our plugins are called pins. The job of a pin is
17 to take a policy as its first argument and plaintext on standard input
18 and to encrypt the data so that it can be automatically decrypted if
19 the policy is met. Lets walk through an example.
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22 Clevis provides support for the Tang network binding server. Tang
23 provides a stateless, lightweight alternative to escrows. Encrypting
24 data using the Tang pin works much like our HTTP pin above:
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26 $ clevis encrypt tang '{"url":"http://tang.srv"}' < PT > JWE
27 The advertisement contains the following signing keys:
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29 _OsIk0T-E2l6qjfdDiwVmidoZjA
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31 Do you wish to trust these keys? [ynYN] y
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33 As you can see above, Tang utilizes a trust-on-first-use workflow.
34 Alternatively, Tang can perform entirely offline encryption if you
35 pre-share the server advertisement. Decryption, too works like our
36 first example:
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38 $ clevis decrypt < JWE > PT
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40 For more information, see clevis-encrypt-tang(1).
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43 Clevis provides support to encrypt a key in a Trusted Platform Module
44 2.0 (TPM2) chip. The cryptographically-strong, random key used for
45 encryption is encrypted using the TPM2 chip, and then at decryption
46 time is decrypted using the TPM2 to allow clevis to decrypt the secret
47 stored in the JWE.
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49 Encrypting data using the tpm2 pin works the same than the pins
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52 $ clevis encrypt tpm2 '{}' < PT > JWE
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54 The pin has reasonable defaults for its configuration, but a different
55 hierarchy, hash, and key algorithms can be chosen if the defaults used
56 are not suitable.
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58 Decryption also works similar to other pins, only the JWE needs to be
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61 $ clevis decrypt < JWE > PT
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63 Note that like other pins no configuration is used for decryption, this
64 is due clevis storing the public and private keys to unseal the TPM2
65 encrypted object in the JWE so clevis can fetch that information from
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68 For more information see clevis-encrypt-tpm2(1).
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71 Clevis provides a way to mix pins together to create sophisticated
72 unlocking and high availability policies. This is accomplished by using
73 an algorithm called Shamir’s Secret Sharing (SSS).
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75 SSS is a thresholding scheme. It creates a key and divides it into a
76 number of pieces. Each piece is encrypted using another pin (possibly
77 even SSS recursively). Additionally, you define the threshold t. If at
78 least t pieces can be decrypted, then the encryption key can be
79 recovered and decryption can succeed.
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81 For example, let’s create a high-availability setup using Tang:
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83 $ cfg='{"t":1,"pins":{"tang":[{"url":...},{"url":...}]}}'
84 $ clevis encrypt sss "$cfg" < PT > JWE
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86 In this policy, we are declaring that we have a threshold of 1, but
87 that there are multiple key fragments encrypted using different Tang
88 servers. Since our threshold is 1, so long as any of the Tang servers
89 are available, decryption will succeed. As always, decryption is
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92 $ clevis decrypt < JWE > PT
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94 For more information, see clevis-encrypt-tang(1).
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97 Clevis can be used to bind an existing LUKS volume to its automation
98 policy. This is accomplished with a simple command:
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100 $ clevis luks bind -d /dev/sda tang '{"url":...}'
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102 This command performs four steps:
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104 1. Creates a new key with the same entropy as the LUKS master key.
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106 2. Encrypts the new key with Clevis.
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108 3. Stores the Clevis JWE in the LUKS header with LUKSMeta.
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110 4. Enables the new key for use with LUKS.
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112 This disk can now be unlocked with your existing password as well as
113 with the Clevis policy. Clevis provides two unlockers for LUKS volumes.
114 First, we provide integration with Dracut to automatically unlock your
115 root volume during early boot. Second, we provide integration with
116 UDisks2 to automatically unlock your removable media in your desktop
117 session.
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119 For more information, see clevis-luks-bind(1).
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122 clevis-encrypt-tang(1), clevis-encrypt-tpm2(1), clevis-encrypt-sss(1),
123 clevis-luks-bind(1), clevis-decrypt(1)
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127 01/31/2019 CLEVIS(1)