securefs
gocryptfs
securefs | gocryptfs | |
---|---|---|
6 | 56 | |
700 | 3,303 | |
- | - | |
9.6 | 6.8 | |
12 days ago | 3 days ago | |
C++ | Go | |
GNU General Public License v3.0 or later | MIT License |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
Activity is a relative number indicating how actively a project is being developed. Recent commits have higher weight than older ones.
For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.
securefs
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What do you guys use for all your personal info?
There's cppcryptfs & securefs as Cryptomator alternatives too. SiriKali is an option for a GUI that works nicely with them.
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Client-side encryption for Hetzner Storage Box
There's also this: https://github.com/netheril96/securefs/
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Enigma: A simple cross-platform encrypted filesystem in Golang
Well, time to advertise my own competing offering: https://github.com/netheril96/securefs. Works on Win, Linux, Mac and BSD.
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Ask HN: What does everyone use for encrypting their personal stuff?
I wasn’t satisfied with the options available, so I wrote my own: https://github.com/netheril96/securefs. It has authenticated encryption, highest quality of password stretching, and works on both Unix-like and Windows.
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Cryptomator – Encrypt files on your cloud storage
If it is not against the rules, I want to promote my project (https://github.com/netheril96/securefs) here. It is essentially the same functionality, but with authenticated encryption, better password hashing and optionally file size obfuscation (but no fancy UI).
- WinFsp – Windows File System Proxy
gocryptfs
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Syncthing: Untrusted Device Encryption
I'm looking to improve my documents syncing setup. Currently I'm using owncloud, but that seems overkill for just files syncing and it requires maintenance, so I gave Syncthing a look. The "Untrusted device encryption" was not appealing to me because I'm not convinced by the security aspects yet, and also because it is in beta for now. I used gocryptfs [1] in the past and was quite happy with it, so I'm planning to use it on top of Syncthing to have files synced encrypted. As far as I have read this setup (Syncthing + gocryptfs) seems to be used by several people and has already been discussed by gocryptfs' author, who recommended a `-sharedstorage` flag for such use case [2]. Reading [3] I think gocryptfs is more suited for files syncing than cryfs. I'm aware that the metadata (file size, structure, …) of my files are not encrypted but that's a compromise I'm ready to make.
I would be happy to hear about opinions about this approach.
[1] https://nuetzlich.net/gocryptfs/
[2] https://github.com/rfjakob/gocryptfs/issues/549#issuecomment...
[3] https://www.cryfs.org/comparison
- Gocryptfs – An encrypted overlay filesystem written in Go
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My Mother Found Out I was Installing Linux...
If you want selective encryption, rather than full drive encryption, to be less conspicuous: gocryptfs (Linux)/cppcryptfs (Windows).
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Hertzner or other cloud encryption question
https://github.com/rfjakob/gocryptfs might be a solution. I dont use it, tried to for some backups but ran into some issues unrelated to the solution itself but with my backup solution.
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Mountpoint – file client for S3 written in Rust, from AWS
JungleDisk was backup software I used ~2008 that allowed mounting S3. They were bought by Rackspace and the product wasn't updated. Seems to be called/part of Cyberfortress now.
Later I used Panic's Transmit Disk but they removed the feature.
Recently I'd been looking at s3fs-fuse to use with gocryptfs but haven't actually installed it yet!
https://github.com/s3fs-fuse/s3fs-fuse
https://github.com/rfjakob/gocryptfs
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Does btrfs send/receive provide any benefit for moving new, non-incremental data?
I think the fundamental issue seem to maybe be the changing inode numbers with things like gocryptfs. Git annex needs those to be static as far as I can tell.
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Is veracrypt still the best option
Veracrypt is stil a fine option but if you want to have regular backups, it's not that great imo. Say you want to automatically backup your files to some cloud without having to trust their promises of privacy, you could use something like gocryptfs. It creates a folder of your files but in encrypted form. You then copy / sync that folder using any backup program.
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Enigma: A simple cross-platform encrypted filesystem in Golang
A comparison gocryptfs would be appreciated, since this software, at first glance, has no differentiating features from it.
https://nuetzlich.net/gocryptfs/
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A simple cross-platform encrypted filesystem in Golang
There is a pretty nice project gocryptfs that instead of encrypting container, it substitute on the fly virtual filesystem that encrypts content and file objects. So, if you would share to cloud that virtual filesystem, you don't sacrifice a byte on your system.
- Dropbox Buys Boxcryptor
What are some alternatives?
cryfs - Cryptographic filesystem for the cloud
rust-9p - Tokio-based asynchronous filesystems library using 9P2000.L protocol, an extended variant of 9P from Plan 9.
Cryptomator - Multi-platform transparent client-side encryption of your files in the cloud
winfsp - Windows File System Proxy - FUSE for Windows
DroidFS - Encrypted overlay filesystems implementation for Android. Also available on gitea: https://forge.chapril.org/hardcoresushi/DroidFS
syncthing-android - Wrapper of syncthing for Android.
sshfs-win - SSHFS For Windows
encfs - EncFS: an Encrypted Filesystem for FUSE.
loggedfs - LoggedFS - Filesystem monitoring with Fuse
rclone - "rsync for cloud storage" - Google Drive, S3, Dropbox, Backblaze B2, One Drive, Swift, Hubic, Wasabi, Google Cloud Storage, Azure Blob, Azure Files, Yandex Files