A Cryptographic File System for Unix

Source: AT&T Intellectual Property

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Although cryptographic techniques are playing an increasingly important role in modern computing system security, userlevel tools for encrypting file data are cumbersome and suffer from a number of inherent vulnerabilities. The Cryptographic File System (CFS) pushes encryption services into the file system itself. CFS supports secure storage at the system level through a standard Unix file system interface to encrypted files. Users associate a cryptographic key with the directories they wish to protect. Files in these directories (as well as their pathname components) are transparently encrypted and decrypted with the specified key without further user intervention; cleartext is never stored on a disk or sent to a remote file server.
Format:PDF Size:82.50
Date:Jan 2010