e2f0f8e3c6
Previously, we used raw pointers to the FileNode as FUSE file handles. With this change, we instead pass an arbitrary value (a uint64 counter) to the kernel as FUSE file handle, and use the "fuseFhMap" look-up table to convert back to the FileNode pointer. This gets rid of a lot of scary void pointer casts. The performance cost is not measurable. |
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ci | ||
cmake | ||
encfs | ||
internal | ||
intl | ||
model | ||
po | ||
tests | ||
.clang-format | ||
.gitignore | ||
.travis.yml | ||
AUTHORS | ||
build.sh | ||
ChangeLog | ||
circle.yml | ||
CMakeLists.txt | ||
config.h.cmake | ||
COPYING | ||
COPYING.GPL | ||
COPYING.LGPL | ||
create-dev-pkg.sh | ||
DESIGN.md | ||
devmode | ||
INSTALL.md | ||
PERFORMANCE.md | ||
README-NLS | ||
README.md | ||
test.sh |
EncFS - an Encrypted Filesystem
Build Status
About
EncFS provides an encrypted filesystem in user-space. It runs in userspace, using the FUSE library for the filesystem interface. EncFS is open source software, licensed under the LGPL.
EncFS is now over 10 years old (first release in 2003). It was written because older NFS and kernel-based encrypted filesystems such as CFS had not kept pace with Linux development. When FUSE became available, I wrote a CFS replacement for my own use and released the first version to Open Source in 2003.
EncFS encrypts individual files, by translating all requests for the virtual EncFS filesystem into the equivalent encrypted operations on the raw filesystem.
For more info, see:
- The excellent encfs manpage
- The technical overview in DESIGN.md
Status
Over the last 10 years, a number of good alternatives have grown up. Computing power has increased to the point where it is reasonable to encrypt the entire filesystem of personal computers (and even mobile phones!). On Linux, ecryptfs provides a nice dynamically mountable encrypted home directory, and is well integrated in distributions I use, such as Ubuntu.
EncFS has been dormant for a while. I've started cleaning up in order to try and provide a better base for a version 2, but whether EncFS flowers again depends upon community interest. In order to make it easier for anyone to contribute, it is moving a new home on Github. So if you're interested in EncFS, please dive in!
Unique Features
EncFS has a few features still not found anywhere else (as of Dec 2014) that may be interesing to you:
Reverse mode
encfs --reverse
provides an encrypted view of an unencrypted folder.
This enables encrypted remote backups using standard tools like rsync.
Fast on classical HDDs
EncFS is typically much faster than ecryptfs for stat()-heavy workloads when the backing device is a classical hard disk. This is because ecryptfs has to to read each file header to determine the file size - EncFS does not. This is one additional seek for each stat. See PERFORMANCE.md for detailed benchmarks on HDD, SSD and ramdisk.
Works on top of network filesystems
EncFS works on network file systems (NFS, CIFS...), while ecryptfs is known to still have problems.
Development
The master branch contains the latest stable codebase. This is where bug fixes and improvments should go.
The dev branch contains experimental work, some of which may be back-ported to the master branch when it is stable. The dev branch is not stable, and there is no guarantee of backward compatibility between changes.
Donations
How about a nice email instead?