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Encrypt/Decrypt a File using your SSH Public/Private Key on Mac OS X

A Guide to Encrypting Files with Mac OS X

This guide will demonstrate the steps required to encrypt and decrypt files using OpenSSL on Mac OS X. The working assumption is that by demonstrating how to encrypt a file with your own public key, you'll also be able to encrypt a file you plan to send to somebody else using their private key, though you may wish to use this approach to keep archived data safe from prying eyes.

Too Long, Didn't Read

Assuming you've already done the setup described later in this document, that id_rsa.pub.pcks8 is the public key you want to use, that id_rsa is the private key the recipient will use, and secret.txt is the data you want to transmit…

Encrypting

$ openssl rand 192 -out key
$ openssl aes-256-cbc -in secret.txt -out secret.txt.enc -pass file:key
$ openssl rsautl -encrypt -pubin -inkey ~/.ssh/id_rsa.pub.pkcs8 -in key -out key.enc
$ tar -zcvf secret.tgz *.enc

Decrypting

$ tar -xzvf secret.tgz
$ openssl rsautl -decrypt -ssl -inkey ~/.ssh/id_rsa -in key.enc -out key
$ openssl aes-256-cbc -d -in secret.txt.enc -out secret.txt -pass file:key

Using Passwords

OpenSSL makes it easy to encrypt/decrypt files using a passphrase. Unfortunately, pass phrases are usually "terrible" and difficult to manage and distribute securely.

To Encrypt a File

$ openssl aes-256-cbc -in secret.txt -out secret.txt.enc

You can add -base64 if you expect the context of the text may be subject to being 'visible' to people (e.g., you're printing the message on a pbulic forum). If you do, you'll need to add it to the decoding step as well. You can choose from several cypers but aes-256-cbc is reasonably fast, strong, and widely supported. Base64 will increase the size of the encrypted file by approximately 30%

To Decrypt a File

$ openssl aes-256-cbc -d -in secret.txt.enc -out secret.txt

You will need to provide the same password used to encrypt the file. All that changes between the encrypt and decrypt phases is the input/output file and the addition of the -d flag. If you pass an incorrect password or cypher then an error will be displayed.

Encrypting Files Using your RSA keys

RSA encryption can only work with very short sections of data (e.g. an SHA1 hash of a file, or a password) and cannot be used to encrypt a large file. The solution is to generate a strong random password, use that password to encrypt the file with AES-256 in CBC mode (as above), then encrypt that password with a public RSA key. The encrypted password will only decrypt with a matching public key, and the encrypted file will require the unique password encrypted in the by the RSA key.

Replace OpenSSL

The copy of OpenSSL bundled with Mac OS X has several issues. Mac OS X 10.7 and earlier are not PCI compliant. It is best to replace it. See here for details: http://www.dctrwatson.com/2013/07/how-to-update-openssh-on-mac-os-x/

$ brew tap homebrew/dupes
$ brew install openssh --with-brewed-openssl --with-keychain-support

Generate Your Private/Public Key-pair

$ ssh-keygen -t rsa -C "[email protected]"

By default your private key will be stored in

  • ~/.ssh/id_rsa : This is your private key and it must be kept secret
  • ~/.ssh/id_rsa.pub : This is your public key, you can share it (for example) with servers as an authorized key for your account. You can change the location of where you store your keys, but this location is typical. Typically you want to ensure the private key is chmod 600, andd the public key is chmod 644.

Generate a PKCS8 Version of Your Public Key

The default format of id_rsa.pub isn't particularly friendly. If you are going to public your key (for example) on your website so that other people can verify the authorship of files attributed to you then you'll want to distribute it in another format. I find it useful to keep a copy in my .ssh folder so I don't have to re-generate it, but you can store it anywhere you like.

$ ssh-keygen -e -f ~/.ssh/id_rsa.pub -m PKCS8 > ~/.ssh/id_rsa.pub.pkcs8

Generate a One-Time-Use Password to Encrypt the File

The passwords used to encrypt files should be reasonably long 32+ characters, random, and never used twice. To do this we'll generate a random password which we will use to encrypt the file.

$ openssl rand 192 -out secret.txt.key

This will generate 192 bytes of random data which we will use as a key. If you think a person may need to view the contents of the key (e.g., they're going to display it on a terminal or copy/paste it between computers) then you should consider base-64 encoding it, however:

  1. The password will become approximately 30% longer (and there is a limit to the length of data we can RSA-encrypt using your public key
  2. The password will be "padded" with '=' characters if it's not a multiple of 4 bytes.

A Note on Long Passwords

There is a limit to the maximum length of a message that can be encrypted using RSA public key encryption. If you want to use very long keys then you'll have to split it into several short messages, encrypt them independently, and then concatinate them into a single long string. Decrypting the password will require reversing the technique: splitting the file into smaller chuncks, decrypting them independently, and then concatinating those into the original password key file.

Encrypt the File Using the Generated Key

Now that you have a good random password, you can use that to AES encrypt a file as seen in the "with passwords" section

$ openssl aes-256-cbc -in secret.txt -out secret.txt.enc -pass file:secret.txt.key

Decrypting the file works the same way as the "with passwords" section, except you'll have to pass the key.

$ openssl aes-256-cbc -d -in secret.txt.enc -out secret.txt -pass file:secret.txt.key

Encrypt the Key Used to Encrypt the File

We used fast symetric encryption with a very strong password to encrypt the file to avoid limitations in how we can use asymetric encryption. Finally, we'll use asymetric encryption to encrypt the password. This solves the problem of "how do I safely transmit the password for the encrypted file" problem. You can encrypt is using the recipients public key and they can decode it using their private key. Encrypt the password using a public key:

$ openssl rsautl -encrypt -pubin -inkey ~/.ssh/id_rsa.pub.pkcs8 -in secret.txt.key -out secret.txt.key.enc

The recipient can decode the password using a matching private key:

$ openssl rsautl -decrypt -ssl -inkey ~/.ssh/id_rsa -in secret.txt.key.enc -out secret.txt.key

Package the Encrypted File and Key

There are a number of ways to do this step, but typically you'll want just a single file you can send to the recipent to make transfer less of a pain. I'd recommend just making a tarball and delivering it through normal methods (email, sftp, dropbox, whatever). Though a secure method of exchange is obviously preferable, if you have to make the data public it should still be resistent to attempts to recover the information.

$ tar -zcvf foo.tgz *.enc

The file can be extracted in the usual way:

$ tar -zxvf foo.tgz

You may want to securely delete the unecrypted keyfile as the recipient will be able to decode it using their private key and you already have the unencrypted data.

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