Re: Wireless Keys stored unencrypted?



On Tue, Jun 21, 2011 at 12:27 PM, Jirka Klimes <jklimes redhat com> wrote:
> On Tuesday 21 of June 2011 14:04:58 Darren Albers wrote:
>> On Tue, Jun 21, 2011 at 1:08 AM, Dan Williams <dcbw redhat com> wrote:
>> > On Mon, 2011-06-20 at 17:18 +0530, Ritesh Khadgaray wrote:
>> >> Hi
>> >>
>> >> On Sat, Jun 18, 2011 at 7:57 AM, Darren Albers <dalbers gmail com> wrote:
>> >> > While doing some research I noticed that wireless keys are located
>> >> > unencrypted in /etc/sysconfig/network-scripts  It even does this when
>> >> > I set the wireless to not be a system-connection.   It used to be that
>> >> > wireless keys were stored in the keyring which seems much safer to me
>> >> > than storing them locally unencrypted.
>> >>
>> >> interesting, I am not an nm developer but this seems to stem from
>> >> keyfile plugin and relies on file selinux label/permission for
>> >> protection.
>> >>
>> >> I also do not  see an option to not save the password.
>> >
>> > Correct, the passwords are not encrypted because there is no user
>> > available to provide passwords.  The passwords are, however, only
>> > visible too 'root' and thus should be protected; if your root user is
>> > compromised you're hosed.  This is also how existing system have worked
>> > for years, so NM certainly isn't a regression here.
>> >
>> > You can also opt to keep your secrets in the user keyring, which is
>> > accomplished by "secret flags".  For example, if you set 'psk-flags=0x1'
>> > in the keyfile for a WPA-PSK connection, then NM will ask a user agent
>> > (like nm-applet) for the password instead of keeping it in /etc.  This
>> > option is only exposed for 802.1x and LEAP passwords though (via the
>> > "Always ask for this password" checkbox) because only those password
>> > types are really personal passwords; a WPA-PSK or WEP key really isn't
>> > personal.
>> >
>> > VPN connections also default to having secrets owned by the user's
>> > session in a keyring.
>> >
>> > Dan
>>
>> Thank you Dan!   It sounds like I am incorrect but I used to recall
>> that if a connection was not a system connection that the key would be
>> stored in the keyring and that was the default.  Is that not the case
>> any longer?
>>
>
> With NM 0.9 we get rid of user connections, so we have just system connections
> (stored and managed by NM itself). And connection visibility only for some
> users is obtained via permissions in every connection (see USERS= in ifcfg
> files).
> As far as secrets are concerned, there are now "Secret Propery Flags" flags
> saying where the password is stored; see
> http://projects.gnome.org/NetworkManager/developers/migrating-to-09/secrets-
> flags.html
> By default, secrets are stored by NM (flag 0x00). But, as Dan said, for certain
> connection types (like VPN), the password is rather stored by the client (in a
> keyring) by default.
>
> Jirka
>

Jirka,

Thank you for the detailed reply, so if I want to tell NM to store my
password as Agent-Owned for my wpa-psk connection how would I do that?
  I tried playing with the various ifcfg settings for my wireless and
nothing I did seemed to force it to use the option 0x1 to ask the
agent.   Should this setting be placed in the keyfile or in ifcfg?
The link you sent indicates the dbus commands to send which don't seem
to match up with the options in either the keyfile or ifcfg so I even
tried psk_flags and psk-flags and similar variations.   The
documentation has this:
psk-flags  uint32  0 	Flags indicating how to handle the WPA PSK key.
(see the section called “Secret flag types” for flag values)

I assume that is the correct attribute to set?

Thank you!


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