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STENC(1) General Commands Manual STENC(1)

stenc - SCSI Tape Hardware Encryption Manager

stenc -g length -k file [-kd description]
stenc -f device [--detail]
stenc -f device -e on|mixed|rawread [-a index] [-k file] [--ckod] [--protect | --unprotect]
stenc -f device -e off [-a index] [--ckod] [--protect | --unprotect]
stenc --version

Linux, AIX

Allows you to manage hardware encryption on SSP enabled tape devices (LTO4, LTO5, etc).

Generates a key file of length (in bits) containing a random hexadecimal key. After entering this option, you will be required to press random keys followed by the enter key. This will seed the random number generator so that your key is more secure. Specify the file to save the key into with the -k option (you will need write permissions to that file location). Lastly you can enter an optional key description using the -kd flag (see KEY DESCRIPTORS). This key file can then be used with the -k option. You should not generate a key file over an unsecured remote session. Typically, key files should be set to 256 bits (32 hexadecimal bytes), however your device may only support 128 bits.

Specifies the device to use (i.e. /dev/nst0, /dev/rmt0.1, /dev/sg0). Use the lsscsi command to determine the appropriate device to use. You should always use a device name that does not rewind (i.e. use /dev/nst0 instead of /dev/st0, /dev/rmt0.1 instead of /dev/rmt0). Use commands like 'cat /proc/scsi/scsi', 'lsscsi', and 'lsdev' to determine the proper device to use. On some distros, a /dev/sg device must be used instead of a /dev/st device.

If this is the only option specified, the status of the device will be displayed. To retrieve more detailed status information, add --detail. If you are root and the status command fails, either the device is incorrect (try another link to the device: /dev/rmt0.1, /dev/nst0, /dev/tape, etc.), a tape may not be in the drive, you may be using the wrong algorithm for the tape drive (see the -a option), or the device does not support SCSI Security Protocol. stenc may read up to 100 blocks of the tape, starting at the current position, in order to determine if the volume has been encrypted. For this reason, you should not run the status command while another process is accessing the drive. If the device returns Unable to determine for the volume encryption status, you may need to move to a section of the tape that contains data (i.e. mt -f <device> fsr <count>) or rewind the tape in order for stenc to output the volume status.

Sets the encryption mode for the device specified with -f option. Successful operations of this type will create an audit entry in the /var/log/stenc file. If off is not specified and the -k option is not specified, the program will require the user to enter a hexadecimal key (see KEY INPUT SYNTAX) and an optional key description (see KEY DESCRIPTORS).

on - The drive will encrypt all data sent to it and will only output data it is able to decrypt, ignoring unencrypted data on the drive.

mixed - The drive will encrypt all data sent to it and will output both encrypted data and unencrypted data, providing the drive is able to do so.

rawread - The drive will encrypt all data sent to it and will output unencrypted data and raw encrypted data. You will probably need to have specified --unprotect when the data was written in order to read it with this option. Some drives do not support this option. See the --protect option.

off - The drive will neither encrypt data sent to it, or decrypt encrypted data found on the drive. If this command fails you may have switch your algorithm or specify a different default key size when you configure the program

WARNING: The SCSI device will revert all encryption settings if the tape device is power cycled (if the tape drive is extenal, it may keep the settings even if the system is rebooted). You can modify you local startup script (/etc/rc.local, /etc/rc, etc.) to set encryption at reboot if need be. If you do this, you will need to use the -k option to prevent the system from waiting on the local console user to enter the encryption key.

Only valid when setting encryption (see the -e option). Specifies the algorithm index to use for the device (defaults to 0, which can be changed using the --with-default-algorithm configure option). Setting encryption on/off may fail on some devices if this is not the correct algorithm for the drive (i.e. HP drives use an algorithm index of 1).

Only valid when setting encryption (see the -e option). Instructs the drive to clear its encryption keys when the volume is unmounted instead of keeping it until the drive is power cycled. Some devices may not support this option.

Only valid when setting encryption (see the -e option). Instructs the drive to protect or unprotect any encrypted data from being raw read. See the -e rawread option. Some devices may not support these options.

Only valid when turning encryption on (see the -e option) or generating a new key (see the -g option). When turning encryption on, this specifies the location of a key file previously generated with the -g option. When generating a new key with the -g option, this specifies the key file that the new key will be saved into. Key files should be owned by root ('chown root') and only readable by root ('chmod 600'). stenc automatically chmods key files generated with the -g option.

000102030405060708090a0b0c0d0e0f

000102030405060708090a0b0c0d0e0f000102030405060708090a0b0c0d0e0f

Generate a random 256 bit key file with the description "September Tape Key" and save it into /etc/tape.key
Turns on encryption on /dev/st0 using the key contained in /etc/stenc.key
Asks user to input a key in hexadecimal format and then turns on encryption for /dev/st0 using that key
Turns off encryption for /dev/st0
Outputs the detailed encryption status of /dev/st0
Lists the last few key change audit entries

Each time a key is changed using this program, a corresponding entry will be entered into the /var/log/stenc file. These entries will have an Key Instance Counter corresponding to the counter listed in the device status (see the -f option). Each time the key is set, a checksum of that key (or a key description) is also listed in this file. This allows you to know when keys were changed and if the key you are using is the same as a prior key. If an unauthorized party would compromise this log file, your key security would be decreased if checksums were present in the log. To prevent this, you should use key descriptors instead of checksums (see KEY DESCRIPTORS).

Key descriptors are set when using the -g option or the -e option. They will be displayed when retrieving the drive status (see the -f option). These descriptors will be written to the volume, so they should NEVER contain information that would reduce the security of the key (i.e. a checksum, bitlength, algorithm, a portion of the key). If stenc detects that the volume is encrypted but it cannot decrypt the data, the key descriptor on the volume will be displayed as part of the device status. This can be useful for determining which key goes to which volume.

Written by John Coleman and Samuel Martinez Jr. of SunWest Educational Credit Union.

Report stenc bugs to jcoleman1981@live.com.

Visit http://sourceforge.net/projects/stenc/ for more information.

Copyright 2012 contributing authors. License GPLv2: GNU GPL version 2 <http://gnu.org/licenses/gpl.html>. This is free software: you are free to change and redistribute it. There is NO WARRANTY, to the extent permitted by law.

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lsscsi(8)