File-oriented privacy & integrity management tools
Project description
pyFileSec provides robust yet easy-to-use tools for working with files that may contain sensitive information. The aim is to achieve an “industry standard” level of privacy (AES256), capable of protecting confidential information from inspection or accidental disclosure. Integrity assurance may be useful in archival and provenance applications.
The motivation for developing pyFileSec is to better secure research data obtained from human subjects, e.g., in combination with PsychoPy or the Open Science Framework. The hope is that pyFileSec will be more widely useful. Command-line usage will make it accessible from non-python programs, such as EPrime via the Shell() command.
Several excellent Python packages are available for encryption. However, file security requires far more than just encryption. The main and potentially unique contribution of pyFileSec is that it aspires to provide secure file- management with a low barrier to entry. These considerations motivate many of the design choices.
The main functions provided include encryption: encrypt(), decrypt(), rotate(); and verification: sign(), verify(). It is also easy to obscure file length: pad(), securely remove files from disk: destroy(), combine a set of files into a single archive file prior to encryption: archive(), and display the meta-data associated with an encrypted file. Large files (8G) and command-line / shell-script usage are also supported.
Public-key (asymmetric) encryption is used for security and flexibility, currently relying on calls to OpenSSL for all cryptography (RSA + AES256 – an approach that is well-known and widely regarded). The aim is to provide an easily extensible framework for adding other encryption backends (e.g., PyCrypto or GPG, should they be desired), without requiring changes to the API.
The integrated test-suite passes on Mac OS X (10.8) and Linux (CentOS 6.4, Debian squeeze, and Ubuntu 12.04). Most tests pass on Windows 7 (except filenames with unicode, and file permissions). Tested using 9 versions of OpenSSL, including a compiled development release. Python 3.x support looks easy (2to3 passes now).
Milestones:
0.2.0 Documentation, command-line support. Move to beta status.
0.3.0 Windows file-permissions, Python 3, and alternative encryption backend
Contributors
Jeremy R. Gray - package author (GPG key D934B0D7)
Thanks to
Michael Stone - awesome code review
Sol Simpson - Windows compatibility
Project details
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