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papersave

Backup small important files to paper.

See directory and result.

WARNING

This piece of software is a proof of concept. Its design is subject to change in the future.

The code is not yet bullet-proof and needs some improvements.

Use with caution.

Any suggestions are welcome.

Requirements

Make sure xelatex is installed (on MacOS you can use MacTeX) is following packages:

  • fontspec
  • calc
  • geometry
  • graphicx
  • fancyhdr
  • lastpage
  • xstring
  • libertine

All those packages should come with standard LiveTeX packaging.

Additionnal fonts come from https://github.com/be5invis/Iosevka and are provided by papersave.

Motivation

David Shaw wrote paperkey to backup his GPG keys and Aleksa Sarai paperback. Papersave is a mix of those with additional features:

  • Can backup arbitrary files. However do not backup large files; its primary goal was to backup ssh keys (files smaller than 10k).
  • Content agnostic: data is compressed and base64 encoded.
  • Suitable for QR-Code, OCR or manual typing.
  • Can encrypt the data using a AES-256-CBC (suitable for gpg) cipher to allow restoration over untrusted networks (especially for online QR-Code scanners).
  • Secret can be split into several shares using Shamir Shared Secret.
  • Only uses standard tool-chains to restore data: gpg, gzip, base64 (except if Shamir shared secret is used).
  • Uses SHA256 checksums and CRC32 for data integrity.

Typical use case

I use KeePassXC to store all my passwords. It encrypts everything using strong and modern cryptography. An additional key file can be used to increase the password security.

With this strong security setting the password database can be backed up to an untrusted location (choice is yours) as long as the additional key file is NOT stored to that location too.

You can create an archive with the additional key (and the database password if you do not trust your memory) and output papersave generated content to a safe place.

Be careful though since with single sheet of paper anyone can access all your passwords. Store this sheet of paper in a safe-deposit box. Don't do stupid things such as archiving it in a pile of papers on your desk.

Warning: Do not use a photocopier to duplicate your data since some photocopiers may use pattern recognition alter the data and compromise your secrets. See this article and video (in German).

Build

to build the go source you first need to run:

go generate
go build

Usage

The following example shows how to backup the vagrant insecure ssh key.

To backup a file:

papersave create -e --show-password vagrant

To restore the base64 data from a scanned PDF:

convert vagrant.share-1.pdf vagrant.share-1.jpg
papersave decode --split-blocks vagrant.share-1*.jpg > vagrant.share-1.b64

Please note that block ordering is not garanted if several QRcodes are on the same image. The --split-blocks option helps you to reorder blocks. Sometimes only one QRcode is detected. To prevent such errors, using only one QRcode per file is highly recommended.

You can check your base64 generated file:

papersave check vagrant.share-1.b64

Make sure all checksums are correct. To help you with this you can check the Binary file base64 sha256 for the whole file, or you can check each blocks sha256 sums and you can check each line CRC32 integrity.

To convert the base64 data to your original file:

cat vagrant.share-1.b64 | base64 -D | gpg -d --batch --passphrase PASS | zcat

Or if you did not used encryption:

cat vagrant.share-1.b64 | base64 -D | zcat

Note on some systems -D is -d for the base64 decode option.

Shared secret

If you want to split your secrets in several shares you can do:

papersave create --shares 3 --thresholds 2 vagrant

This will require at least 2 shares of 3 to regenerate the file.

To regenerate the original file you need to combine the base64 files:

papersave combine --wrap vagrant.share-*.b64 > vagrant.b64

You can check the vagrant.b64 sha256 sum and compare it with the Binary le base64 sha256 from the paper backup.

Then extract the data:

cat vagrant.b64 | base64 -D | zcat

Manual typing

If for some reasons neither OCR nor QR-Code worked, you still can manually type the data. This is tedious and prone to errors.

To help you in this last-resort process the data is chunked into 8-line blocks. Each line is divided into 8 8-char blocks. On each line you can find its IEEE-CRC32. At the end of each 8-line block you will find its SHA256 checksum.

To compute a CRC32 you can run:

echo -n 'DATA' | gzip | tail -c 8 | hexdump -n 4 -e '"0x%.8x\n"'

You can also use papersave check command which removes all non-relevant characters and format the base64 file as it is on your paper backup.

Q&A

Do I need papersave to restore my data?

No if you don't use Shamir shared secret. Any data can be restored using a standard unix tool-chain. This includes base64, gpg (only if you encrypted the original file using a symmetric encryption, no need for a key), gzip and shasum (only for data integrity checking).

If you do use Shamir shared secret you will need papersave or combine all shares yourself. You will need shamir package from hashicorp vault.

Why do you print the encrypted password with the data?

Well this is a hard-copy of your sensitive data (such as access to your backup system) that you need in case of real trouble. You want to recover this data by all means. If you are using your phone to scan the QR-Code your data may be sent to untrusted people. Having your data encrypted prevents any tier from snooping at them. Having a printed password prevents you from having to memorize it with the risk of a failing memory.

Don't do stupid things with the hard-copy of your sensitive data. You should print it out and store the sheets of paper in a safe (or at least in a decent hiding place).

Why don't you use type-here-the-top-secure-encryption-algorithm?

Your data are meant to be recovered with a minimum of tools to install on your computer. This should not require fancy tool to read encrypted data. GPG is a standard tool with standard format. Nowadays AES-256-CBC is one of the most secure encryption algorithm provided by GPG out-of-the-box.

Why don't you just print the original file?

This method allows you to backup any file. If you do use some fancy encoding characters you still be able to recover them with plain ascii data.

Why using low redundancy QR-Code?

Adding redundancy increases QR-Code complexity and density. If you increase density you will need to use high resolution printer and scanner and may not be able to process the QR-Codes.

Each block contains 512 characters. This is a trade off between QR-Code density and number of QR-Code to process. It worked fine with a laser printer and a 600dpi scanner.

Why QR-Code?

OCR is not always resilient and if you don't want to manually type the data you need an other way to retrieve it. Nowadays QR-Code allows the maximum amount of data among all 2d codes.

Still High Capacity Color Barcode are claimed to store 3500 characters but requires color processing and are not a popular as QR-Codes.

Why 3 different QR-Code decoders?

Some of them are more efficient than the others. Best results are with zbar.

How long printed version will last?

This depends on your printer and paper. However this can be stored for decades.

Why another tool?

Both paperkey and paperback are solving their authors' problems. The original goal of this tool was to be able to retrieve my backups even if my secrets (ssh key and password) are lost.

Best way is to have a backup on a digital medium such as a USB key. But if your medium is unreadable you need an other way to retrieve your data. Enter papersave.

Why Go?

Because I wanted to learn a new language.

Why XeLaTeX?

Why not? the render is just beautiful.

Copyright

Copyright © 2019-2020 Sébastien Gross <seb•ɑƬ•chezwam•ɖɵʈ•org>.

See LICENSE.

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