I prefer to pass secrets between programs through standard input

(utcc.utoronto.ca)

61 points | by ingve 2 days ago ago

28 comments

  • kevin_thibedeau 2 days ago

    > Unfortunately you're using a browser (or client library) that my anti-crawler precautions consider suspicious because it's sending inconsistent values for Sec-CH-UA-* HTTP request headers...

    The world doesn't exclusively use Chrome. Nice to see even the nerds are contributing to the closed web.

    • Alex-Programs 2 days ago

      It's also moaning about me coming from a datacentre IP (proxy) with some vague complaints about load introduced by AI crawlers. I think this guy treats "protecting" his site as a hobby.

    • edwcross 2 days ago

      I'm using Firefox and didn't see that message.

      • swiftcoder 2 days ago

        Nor on Safari. I wonder what exotic browser the parent is using?

        • ErroneousBosh 2 days ago

          Doesn't appear to be Firefox, Chrome, Chromium, Edge, or Falkon on Linux, doesn't appear to be Falkon on Haiku.

          I also wonder what they're using and where can I get some so I can break stuff too?

    • 7e a day ago

      Not working well with something that doesn't conform to the WICG User-Agent Client Hints specification is an interesting definition of "closed." More like, "I have standards." And it's hardly closed if you can get the information by using literally almost any other client.

    • efilife 2 days ago

      I am on ungoogled chromium and I see this

    • mhitza 2 days ago

      Also site is not accessible via Mullvad VPN.

      • figmert 2 days ago

        I am on Mullvad (at the router), and I am able to connect.

        • mhitza 2 days ago

          Checks out, it was my preferred exit node.

          • sn9 2 days ago

            I had to disconnect Mullvad to load the page.

      • zxcvasd 2 days ago

        i am on mullvad and accessing it fine. if you are on one of the default exit nodes, try switching it. i find the default nodes get blocked by a lot of sites, likely due to malicious behavior of other users.

    • 2 days ago
      [deleted]
    • zxcvasd 2 days ago

      [dead]

  • azornathogron 2 days ago

    For one of my projects my server needs a private key, and it reads this from a file descriptor on startup and then closes the fd. The fd is set up by the systemd unit, which is also configured to restrict filesystem access for the server. So the server reads a key from a file that is never visible in its mount namespace.

    • computerfriend 2 days ago

      I do something similar with LoadCredential and it is quite amazing, especially when you want to run the application as a dynamic user.

    • infogulch 2 days ago

      If you keep the fd open maybe you could read refreshed secrets through it for live secret rotation.

  • juancn 2 days ago

    I used to do that, I had a sort of IDE that launched a local server, bound to localhost.

    The launching process would send a random password through stdin to the child after launch, and the child would use that to authenticate the further RPC calls.

    It's surprisingly hard to intercept a process' stdin stream.

  • Dwedit 2 days ago

    I haven't actually tested this, but aren't the input and output handles exposed on /proc/? What's stopping another process from seeing everything?

    • Lex-2008 2 days ago

      not a Linux expert, but I believe that at the very least it's time sensitive: after consumer process reads it, it's gone from the pipe. Unlike env vars and cli argument that stay there.

    • trashb 2 days ago

      Yes pipes are exposed /proc/$pid/fd/$thePipeFd with user permissions [0].

      Additionally command line parameters are always readable /proc/$YOUR_PROCESS_PID/cmdline [1]

      There are workarounds but it's fragile. You may accept the risks and in that case it can work for you but I wouldn't recommend it for "general security". Seems it wouldn't be considered secure if everyone did it this way, therefore is it security through obscurity?

      [0] https://unix.stackexchange.com/questions/156859/is-the-data-...

      [1] https://stackoverflow.com/questions/3830823/hiding-secret-fr...

    • Tajnymag 2 days ago

      I guess the kernel is stopping that. I don't think permission wise you'd have the privileges to read someone else's stdin/out.

  • pvtmert 2 days ago

    Interesting approach. I like Docker/Kubernetes way of secret mounts where you can limit user/group permissions too.

    Meanwhile, I was an avid user of the echo secret | ssh consume approach, specifically for the kerberos authentication.

    In my workflow, I saved the kerberos password to the macOS keychain, where kinit --use-keychain authenticated me seamlessly. However this wasn't the case for remote machines.

    Therefore, I have implemented a quick script that is essentially

        security find-generic-password -a "kerberos" -s "kerberos-password" -w | ssh user@host kinit user@REALM
    
    Which served me really good for the last 4~years.
  • blibble 2 days ago

    linux has a key api that works pretty well

    man keyctl

  • Spivak a day ago

    For your actual production systems you might consider systemd-creds along with the LoadCredential= and LoadCredentialEncrypted= directives which do the* right thing. Nothing is exposed and credentials are placed in non-swappable memory. You can even have your credentials encrypted at rest with your system's TPM.

    * Well, one of the correct ways of doing this.

  • stale-labs 2 days ago

    [flagged]

    • reliefcrew 2 days ago

      > The main practical win is that cmd args show up in `ps aux` for anyone on the system to see, whereas stdin keeps it off that list.

      For those interested, re-mounting /proc with hidepid can prevent this:

          `mount -o remount,rw,hidepid=2 /proc`