EncryptPad is an application for viewing and editing symmetrically
encrypted text. Using a simple and convenient graphical and command line
interface, EncryptPad provides a tool for encrypting and decrypting
binary files on disk while offering effective measures for protecting
information, and it uses the most widely chosen quality file format
OpenPGP RFC 4880. Unlike other
OpenPGP software which main purpose is asymmetric encryption, the
primary focus of EncryptPad is symmetric encryption.
Table of Contents
Features
- Symmetric encryption
- Passphrase protection
- Key file protection
- Combination of passphrase and key file
- Random key file generator
- Key repository in a hidden directory in the user’s
home folder
- Path to a key file can be stored in an encrypted file. If enabled,
you do not need to specify the key file every time you
open files.
- Encryption of binary files (images, videos,
archives etc.)
- FakeVim mode to edit files with a Vim-like user
interface
- Read only mode to prevent accidental file
modification
- UTF8 text encoding
- Windows/Unix configurable line endings
- Customisable passphrase generator helps create
strong random passphrases.
- File format compatible with OpenPGP
- Iterated and salted S2K
- Passphrases are not kept in the memory for reuse,
only S2K results (more …)
- Cipher algorithms: TripleDES, CAST5, AES, AES192, AES256,
Camellia128, Camellia192, Camellia256, Twofish
- Hash algorithms: SHA-1, SHA-256, SHA-384, SHA-512,
SHA-224
- Integrity protection: SHA-1
- Compression: ZLIB, ZIP, Bzip2
- ASCII armor
- Large multi-gigabyte files are supported
Why use EncryptPad?
Multi-platform codebase: it has been compiled on
three popular operating systems and can be adapted to more.
Portable: simply copy the executable to a memory
stick or a network drive and use on all your computers.
Simple to use: EncryptPad is a text editor and
an encryption tool for binary files but it saves encrypted, compressed
and integrity protected files.
Open source with concise codebase: you can read
the code or ask somebody you trust to read it for you to ensure that
there are no back doors and your information is safe.
OpenPGP file format: you can encrypt a file with
another tool (gpg for example) implementing the format and open it with
EncryptPad and vice versa.
Double protection: randomly generated key files
in addition to passphrases.
When do I need EncryptPad?
You have a file containing sensitive information such as account
names, passphrases or IDs. It is stored on an unprotected media or you
can’t control who accesses the file, whether it is located on a computer
at work, a laptop while on the move, a memory stick or a cloud
drive.
You need to send an encrypted file to somebody with whom you
prearranged a shared secret (a passphrase or a key file). In this case,
you need to exchange the secret personally (not via an accessible
Internet protocol) for the protected file to be decrypted by the
recipient.
You store or receive a file and need to ensure that it has not
been tampered with or corrupted during transmission. EncryptPad uses
SHA-1 hashing algorithm to verify the data’s integrity.
You need protection against a brute force attack in case your
storage gets in somebody’s hands. EncryptPad allows to generate a key
and store it separately from encrypted information. The unwanted person
would need two secrets to open an encrypted file: the passphrase and the
key. Consider this example: you store your encrypted file on a memory
stick, and protect it with a passphrase. In addition to that, you
protect the file with a file key and store the key on computers where
you open the file. If the memory stick is lost, the passphrase is not
enough to decrypt your information. The key file is also needed and it
is not on the memory stick.
When can I not use
EncryptPad?
You need to send a file to somebody with whom you have
not prearranged a shared secret (a passphrase or a key
file). In this case, you need asymmetric encryption with public and
private keys. Fortunately, there are many convenient tools suitable for
the task.
You are on public transport or a common area where
somebody can see your screen.
EncryptPad is not effective on a computer infected with spyware
or a virus. Do not use it on a public, shared or compromised
computer if you do not trust its safety.
IMPORTANT: Before using EncryptPad ensure that
it is legal in your country to use encryption ciphers that EncryptPad
provides. You may find useful information at cryptolaw.org.
IMPORTANT: If you forgot your passphrase or lost
a key file, there is nothing that can be done to open your encrypted
information. There are no backdoors in the formats that EncryptPad
supports. EncryptPad developers take no responsibility for corrupted or
invalid files in accordance with the license.
File types
The format is determined by an extension of a file. Main extensions
of encrypted files are GPG and EPD.
GPG
This file type conforms to OpenPGP format and it is compatible with
other OpenPGP tools. Use it if you need to open a file where EncryptPad
is not available. The format does not support double protection (key
file + passphrase). So you need to choose between key file or passphrase
and cannot use both. In addition, it cannot store file key path in the
encrypted file. It means that every time you open a file encrypted with
a key file, the application will ask you which key file to use.
EPD
EncryptPad specific format. Other OpenPGP software will not be able
to open it unless the file was only protected with a passphrase. If
passphrase only protection was used, the file is effectively a GPG file
(see GPG section above). However, when a key file protection is
involved, it is a GPG file in a WAD container. See the
following chapter for details.
Feature support
Type
|
Feature
|
Supported
|
Key file path*
|
OpenPGP compatible
|
File format
|
GPG
|
Passphrase
|
yes
|
n/a
|
yes
|
OpenPGP file
|
GPG
|
Key file
|
yes
|
no
|
yes
|
OpenPGP file
|
GPG
|
Key file and passphrase
|
no
|
n/a
|
n/a
|
n/a
|
EPD
|
Passphrase
|
yes
|
n/a
|
yes
|
OpenPGP file
|
EPD
|
Key file
|
yes
|
yes
|
no
|
Nested: WAD/OpenPGP
|
EPD
|
Key file and passphrase
|
yes
|
yes
|
no
|
Nested: OpenPGP/WAD/OpenPGP
|
* Key file location is persisted in the header of an encrypted file
so the user does not need to specify it when decrypting.
What is an EncryptPad key
file?
In symmetric encryption the same sequence is used to encrypt and
decrypt data. The user or another application usually provides this
sequence in the form of an entered passphrase or a file. In addition to
entered passphrases, EncryptPad generates files with random sequences
called “key files”.
When the user creates a key file, EncryptPad generates a random
sequence of bytes, asks the user for a passphrase, encrypts the
generated sequence and saves it to a file.
The format of the file is OpenPGP. Other OpenPGP implementations can
also create and open EncryptPad key files as below shell commands
demonstrate.
When EncryptPad generates a new key file, it is roughly equivalent to
the following gpg2
command.
pwmake 1024 | gpg2 -c --armor --cipher-algo AES256 > ~/.encryptpad/foo.key
pwmake
generates a random sequence, which
gpg2
in-turn encrypts. It will ask for the passphrase to
encrypt the sequence.
When you use this key to encrypt test3.txt
, the
equivalent gpg
command is below:
gpg2 --decrypt ~/.encryptpad/foo.key \
| gpg2 --passphrase-fd 0 --batch -c --cipher-algo AES256 \
-o /tmp/test3.txt.gpg /tmp/test3.txt
The first gpg2
process decrypts foo.key
and
directs it to descriptor 0 of the second process through a pipe.
gpg2
reads the sequence from the descriptor with
--passphrase-fd 0
.
When EncryptPad opens the encrypted file protected with
foo.key
, the equivalent gpg
commands are:
gpg2 --decrypt ~/.encryptpad/foo.key \
| gpg2 --passphrase-fd 0 --batch --decrypt \
-o /tmp/test4.txt /tmp/test3.txt.gpg
As you see, other OpenPGP implementations can also use EncryptPad
keys.
There are three different structures a saved file can have depending
on protection mode:
Passphrase only (passphrase is used to protect a
file but no keys are specified). The file is an ordinary OpenPGP
file.
Key only (passphrase is not set but a key file
is used for protection). The file is a WAD file. WAD is a simple format
for combining multiple binary files in one. You can open a WAD file in
Slade. It contains two files
internally:
- OpenPGP file encrypted with the key
__X2_KEY
is a plain text file containing the path to
the key if “Persistent key location in the encrypted file” is enabled.
Otherwise, it has zero length.
Protected with passphrase and key. The resulting
file is an OpenPGP file containing a WAD file as explained in
2.
Use
CURL to automatically download keys from a remote storage
If CURL URL is
specified in Key File Path field in the Set
Encryption Key dialogue, EncryptPad will attempt to start a
curl process to download the key from a remote host. If you want to use
this feature, you need to set the path to the CURL executable in the
EncryptPad settings.
Consider this use case scenario: you travel with your laptop and open
an encrypted file on the laptop. If you protect the file with a
passphrase and a key and your laptop is lost or stolen, the perpetrator
will be able to make a brute force attack on your file because the key
is also stored on the laptop. To avoid this, EncryptPad takes the
following steps:
- Encrypts the plain text file with the key
- Copies the encrypted file into a WAD file together with the
unencrypted HTTPS or SFTP URL to the key file containing authentication
parameters.
- Encrypts the WAD file from point 2 with the passphrase.
If this file gets into the hands of a wrongdoer, he or she will need
to brute force the passphrase first to be able to obtain the key URL and
the authentication parameters. Since a brute force attack takes a lot of
time, the user will be able to remove the key or change the
authentication so the previous parameters become obsolete.
Known weaknesses
- EncryptPad stores unencrypted text in memory. If a memory dump is
automatically taken after a system or application crash or some of the
memory is saved to a swap file, the sensitive information will be
present on the disk. Sometimes it is possible to configure an operating
system not to use a dump and swap files. It is a good practice to close
EncryptPad when not in use.
Command line interface
encryptcli
encryptcli is the executable to encrypt / decrypt
files in command line. Run it without arguments to see available
parameters. Below is an example of encrypting a file with a key:
# generate a new key and protect it with the passphrase "key".
# --key-pwd-fd 0 for reading the key passphrase from descriptor 0
echo -n "key" | encryptcli --generate-key --key-pwd-fd 0 my_key.key
# encrypt plain_text.txt with my_key.key created above.
# The key passphrase is sent through file descriptor 3
cat plain_text.txt | encryptcli -e --key-file my_key.key \
--key-only --key-pwd-fd 3 -o plain_text.txt.gpg 3< <(echo -n "key")
encryptpad
encryptpad is the GUI executable. It has the command
line parameters below:
`--lang` - to enforce the language for the GUI
`--log-file` - specify the log file for diagnostics
`--log-severity` - log severity can be one of the following list: `none`, `fatal`, `error`, `warning`, `info`, `debug`, `verbose`
Installing EncryptPad
Portable executable
Portable binaries are available for Windows and macOS. They can be
copied on a memory stick or placed on a network share.
Arch Linux
Use fingerprints to receive gpg keys for EncryptPad and Botan.
gpg --recv-key 621DAF6411E1851C4CF9A2E16211EBF1EFBADFBC
gpg --recv-key 634BFC0CCC426C74389D89310F1CFF71A2813E85
Install the AUR packages below:
pacaur
installs botan-stable
automatically
as encryptpad
dependency.
Ubuntu or Linux Mint via PPA
There are several PPAs on Launchpad built on Canonical servers from
EncryptPad source files. Use the commands below to install the
packages:
sudo add-apt-repository ppa:evpo/main
sudo apt update
sudo apt install encryptpad encryptcli
For Ubuntu versions before Impish use Alin Andrei’s PPA below:
sudo add-apt-repository ppa:nilarimogard/webupd8
sudo apt update
sudo apt install encryptpad encryptcli
Compile EncryptPad on
Windows
Prerequisites
- Qt
framework based on MingW 32 bit (the latest build has been
tested with Qt 5.10.1).
- MSYS: you can use one bundled with Git For
Windows. You probably use Git anyway.
- Python: any recent version will work.
Steps
Modify the session PATH environment variable to
include the Qt build toolset and Python. mingw32-make,
g++, qmake,
python.exe should be in the global search path in your
Git Bash session. I personally modify bash.bashrc and add a line like
PATH=/c/Python35-32:/c/Qt/5.10.1/mingw53_32/bin:/c/Qt/Tools/mingw530_32/bin:/c/MinGW/msys/1.0/bin:/bin
not to pollute the system wide PATH variable.
Extract the EncryptPad source files to a directory.
Run configure.py –help script to see available
options. To build everything:
./configure.py –cpu x86 –os mingw –static make
The configure.py
command will always work if your
console is running with administrative privileges. If you don’t want to
run as administrator, add --link-method hardlink
to the
options. If the build is successful, you should see the executable
./bin/release/encryptpad.exe
Note that if you want EncryptPad to work as a single executable
without dlls, you need to build Qt framework yourself statically. It
takes a few hours. There are plenty of instructions on how to do this in
the Internet. The most popular article recommends using a PowerShell
script. While it is convenient and I did it once, sometimes you don’t
want to upgrade your PowerShell and install heavy dependencies coming
with it. So the next time I had to do that, I read the script and did
everything manually. Luckily there are not too many steps in it.
Compile EncryptPad on macOS
You need to install Qt 5, Python and run:
export PATH=$HOME/Qt/5.12.11/clang_64/bin/:$PATH
./configure.py --ldflags "-mmacosx-version-min=11.0" --cxxflags "-mmacosx-version-min=11.0"
make
Change the Qt path and replace the minimal macOS versions as needed.
The command will work without them, but the result will be limited to
the current version.
Compile EncryptPad on Linux
Fedora
Install dependencies and tools:
dnf install gcc make qt5-qtbase-devel qt5-qtsvg gcc-c++ python libstdc++-static glibc-static botan2-devel bzip2-devel zlib-devel
Open the EncryptPad directory:
./configure.py
make
sudo make install
Ubuntu
Install dependencies and tools:
apt-get install qt5-default qtbase5-dev libqt5svg5-dev gcc g++ make python3 pkg-config zlib1g-dev libbotan-2-dev libbz2-dev
Open the EncryptPad source directory:
./configure.py
make
sudo make install
Debian
Install dependencies and tools:
apt-get install qtbase5-dev libqt5svg5-dev gcc g++ make python3 zlib1g-dev pkg-config libbotan-2-dev libbz2-dev
Open the EncryptPad source directory:
python3 ./configure.py
make
sudo make install
openSUSE
Install dependencies and tools:
zypper install gcc gcc-c++ make python3 pkg-config zlib-devel libqt5-qtbase-devel libqt5-qtsvg-devel libbotan-devel libbz2-devel
Open the EncryptPad source directory:
./configure.py
make
sudo make install
Archlinux
Install dependencies and tools:
pacman -S --needed base-devel
pacman -S qt5-base qt5-svg python3 botan zlib bzip2
Open the EncryptPad source directory:
./configure.py
make
sudo make install
FreeBSD
Install dependencies and tools:
pkg install python3 pkgconf botan2 qt5 qt5-svg
Open the EncryptPad source directory:
./configure.py
make
Void Linux
Install dependencies and tools:
sudo xbps-install base-devel qt5-devel qt5-svg-devel python3 botan-devel bzip2-devel libzip-devel
Open the EncryptPad source directory:
./configure.py
sudo make install
Portable mode
EncryptPad checks the executable directory for a sub-directory called
encryptpad_repository
. If exists, it is used for key files
and settings. The directory .encryptpad
in the user’s
profile is then ignored. The EncryptPad executable and
encryptpad_repository
can both be copied to a removable
media and used on multiple computers. It should be noted that keeping
encrypted material with the key files on the same removable media is
less secure. Separate them if possible.
FakeVim mode
FakeVim mode lets edit files with Vim-like interface.
To enable the mode:
- open Settings… / Preferences …
- Set “Enable FakeVim”
- Restart EncryptPad
To configure FakeVim, create and edit the file at the location
below:
Linux and macOS:
~/.encryptpad/vimrc
On Windows in the user profile directory:
_encryptpad/vimrc
You can find more information about the FakeVim interface on the FakeVim library web page
The ex mode supports commands to read and write files. The input and
output commands are integrated with the following EncryptPad
operations:
:r <file> - File > Open…
:w - File > Save
:w <file> - File > Save As…
:q - File > Exit
The combinations of the above commands are also supported:
:wq
:wq <file>
Vim’s + register integrates with the system clipboard. You can also
add the below line to the vimrc file to integrate the unnamed register
with the system clipboard:
set clipboard=unnamedplus
Does
EncryptPad store passphrases in the memory to reopen files?
No, it does not. After being entered, a passphrase and random salt
are hashed with an S2K algorithm. The result is used as the encryption
key to encrypt or decrypt the file. A pool of these S2K results is
generated every time the user enters a new passphrase. It allows to save
and load files protected with this passphrase multiple times without
having the passphrase. The size of the pool can be changed in the
Preferences dialogue. The latest version at the moment of writing has
this number set to 8 by default. It means that you can save a file 8
times before EncryptPad will ask you to enter the passphrase again. You
can increase this number but it will have an impact on the performance
because S2K algorithms with many iterations are slow by design.
Acknowledgements
EncryptPad uses the following frameworks and libraries:
- Qt Framework
- Botan
- STLplus
- Makefiles
- zlib
- gtest
- famfamfam
Silk iconset 1.3
- plog
- FakeVim
- Breeze
Icons
- tinyexpr
EncryptPad integrity
verification
OpenPGP signing and
certification authority
All EncryptPad related downloads are signed with the following
OpenPGP key.
EncryptPad (Releases) 2048R/A2813E85
[email protected]
Key fingerprint = 634B FC0C CC42 6C74 389D 8931 0F1C FF71 A281 3E85
I also have a code signing certificate issued by a certification
authority (CA). To establish a connection between my CA certificate and
the above OpenPGP key, I created an executable signed with the CA
certificate containing fingerprints and the OpenPGP key. You can find
ca_signed_pgp_signing_instructions
in downloads.
Effectively I created a bridge of trust between my CA certificate and
the OpenPGP key.
There is a few reasons why I did not simply use the CA
certificate:
- EncryptPad is based on the OpenPGP standard and promotes it.
- OpenPGP signing is more flexible.
- There is no yearly CA certification running cost.
Step by step verification
process
- Download packages and their detached OpenPGP signatures.
- Import the EncryptPad (Releases) key to your GPG keyring.
- Ensure that it is the valid EncryptPad (Releases) key by checking
its fingerprint with
ca_signed_pgp_signing_instructions
.
- Verify signatures on the downloaded files with GPG.
License
EncryptPad is free software: you can redistribute it and/or modify it
under the terms of the GNU
General Public License as published by the Free Software Foundation,
either version 2 of the License, or (at your option) any later
version.
EncryptPad is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but
WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU General
Public License for more details.
If your question is related to EncryptPad, send it to the mailing
list: [email protected] linked to the public
discussion group.
Bug tracker and contributions: github.com/evpo/EncryptPad/issues
For other matters, please contact Evgeny Pokhilko
[email protected]
http://www.evpo.net/encryptpad