This is an example of integrating crypt-demo
into very basic
Swift/SwiftUI app under Xcode.
The aim is to have a Git software repository that contains a tiny file that needs encrypting.
Furthermore the project should be immediately buildable/runnable —
regardless of whether the user has access to the required encryption key.
This "graceful degradation" is a feature of git-crypt
: you can make an app that builds correctly in both states.
But this graceful degration also requires that the app's code does its part of the work at runtime:
if you don't have access to the key, some of the app's functionality needs to be automatically disabled or
degraded in whatever way is appropriate for the app. After all, with the key, the app runs as intended.
But without the key something that it would normally need is simply missing, and the app needs to deal with this.
The target requirements are listed here. We will come back to how each is achieved in a later section. The requirements/assumptions:
- The app needs to contain a
Secret
(e.g., a file containing an API key) that needs to be protected. Anyone with the source code can create and insert their ownSecret
, but they shall not be able to access theSecret
owned by the original code author. - The app's code is archived in a public repository that contains an encrypted copy of the file with the
Secret
. - This implies that there is another secret needed so that the app can decrypt the
Secret
. To avoid confusion, we will call that other, second secret theKey
. - The
Key
is not shared in the repository (otherwise we would be heading towards even more secrets). ThisKey
might be project specific or be reused across a few other projects. TheKey
might be shared via a private communication channel with other project collaborators. - For anyone with access to the
Key
, the app builds and runs as-is, with full functionality because access to theKey
gives access to theSecret
. This allows the app to be built from the local file system to create a fully functioning app. - But anyone without access to the
Key
, the app builds and runs as-is, but with reduced functionality. What "reduced functionality" could looks like is entirely up to the app.
- A server's API provides sample weather information. But some kind of registration key gives the app more accurate or more recent information.
- A server's free API provides map data, but at a limited request frequency. A personal license of some sort gives you access to a higher request frequency.
- A server hosts certain data files that are only accessible if you have some passcode. With the passcode, the app gets some extra functionality.
- A WordPress website hosts a password-protected page. The password protection can be fetched without user help by passing a secret code (which may differ from the password) as a parameter at the end of the URL. There is a plug-in for this: Post Password Token.
-
Protecting the
Secret
is essential if your repository is public. But it also can act as a safety net when the repository is private: if somebody gets access to the private repo,Secret
is still safe. -
The demo happens to use Swift, SwiftUI, and Xcode. The approach can be applied to other languages.
-
The demo happens to mention GitHub. The principle should work with other Git providers like GitLabs and BitBucket.
-
If a user with access to the
Key
generates a binary version of the app for distribution,Secret
is available somewhere in unencrypted form within the app bundle. So, if you distribute that app,Secret
can be extracted by someone with enough skills and determination. So this approach assumes either controlled distribution of the fully functional version, obfuscation of the code, or that the risk is acceptable. This limitation is unavoidable because the fully functional app itself by definition needs access to an unencrypted form of theSecret
. Example: to get an API to provide certain functionality. So even if you obfuscateSecret
within the app, there is at least a moment whereSecret
can be accessed in a debugger or, simpler, by snooping network traffic. -
There are undoubtedly alternative approaches that can meet these requirements. For example
- GitHub has a feature to store Secrets that are accessible only to contributors via Actions.
In that approach
Secret
is not an integral part of the source code, but is also not subject to version-control. - You might consider using
.gitignore
to simply keepSecret
out of the repository. But this does not meet all the requirements. In particular, you will get a compile-time error if an expected file is missing during the build.
- GitHub has a feature to store Secrets that are accessible only to contributors via Actions.
In that approach
- the app needs to contain a
Secret
stored in a file within the app bundle.
This demo app contains a pair of text files named Unsecret.txt
and Secret.txt
.
Unsecret.txt
contains "Contents of file Unsecret.txt" and is not encrypted.
Secret.txt
would contain something worth protecting (here it contains the string "Contents of file Secret.txt").
The app displays "Contents of file Secret.txt" if it can, but otherwise degrades to displaying "Contents of file Unsecret.txt". 😞
- the app's code repository on GitHub includes an encrypted copy of
Secret.txt
.
The encryption is handled by git-crypt
, which is configured via an entry in .gitattributes
that reads
Secret.txt filter=git-crypt diff=git-crypt
. If git-crypt is present and is can handle the encryption/decryption,
this causes Secret.txt
to be encrypted when the file is staged for git.
And it gets automatically decrypted when it is pulled from a remote repo.
If git-crypt is not present or cannot handle the encryption/decryption, the app bundle will contain an encrypted file which the app cannot use. It detects that it is unusable and goes on to some fallback behavior.
- This implies that there is a second secret. Let's call that the
Key
.
git-crypt
, after initialisation in your project directory, can be asked to export the key via $ git-crypt export-key <path>
.
If you choose $ git-crypt export-key ../git-crypt-key
, Key
can be shared across multiple projects in a parent directory.
And you won't lose the key if you delete your project directory and reinstall the app's code from the GitHub repository.
- The
Key
is not shared via the repository.
If your Key
is stored in or below your project directory, you need to prevent uploading to the repository by
listing it in the Git .gitignore
file.
If Key
is stored in a parent directory, you might want to list it anyway, for safety.
- with access to the
Key
, the app builds and runs with full functionality
This is a matter of detecting that the file Secret.txt
is not encrypted in your local file system and app bundle,
and using this to do whatever your app needs Secret
for.
The detection can rely on the fact that a file encrypted by git-crypt
starts with a fixed 10-byte sequence
(GITCRYPT with a leading and trailing zero byte).
The Swift demo app detects this simply by catching if the function call String(contentsOfFile: filepath)
throws an error.
- without access to
Key
, the app builds and runs with reduced functionality
The app needs to implement this custom logic. In this demo it involves using Unsecret.txt
when Secret.txt
is unusable.
Again, the fact that Secret
is encrypted is detected here by catching an exception thrown while converting
the file content to a Swift String.
To get a local copy up and running, use GitHub’s Open with Xcode
feature, compile and run on a simulator or
physical device (iPhone, iPad or Mac). Your local copy of the code will, by default, contain an encrypted version
of Secret.txt
. And the app bundle (presuming that Secret.txt
is in your target) contain this Secret.text
file.
When Secret.txt
is encrypted, the app automatically uses Unsecret.txt
instead.
Setting up something similar from scratch is a bit cumbersome.
Arguably because usage of both .gitignore
and git-crypt
are relatively error-prone.
The complication lies in the fact that it is very easy to make a mistake, resulting in the uploading of an
unencrypted version of Secret.txt
. And Git makes it extremely difficult to remove all older versions
of a specific file: Git just don't want you to deal with files, it deals with commits
instead. So Git works hard
to make things miserable for anyone who even thinks about (from Git's perspective) corrupting Git's archive of past
commits.
Another complication is that .gitignore
needs to be set before you create the sensitive file.
You can't set .gitignore
and then replace a dummy version of Secret.txt
by the real thing:
if you do that, Git ignores that .gitignore
rule and happily keeps pushing your key to the remote repo.
So, as general advice:
- Use a dummy secret until everything is set up.
Then prove to yourself whether that
Secret.txt
is indeed encrypted if you clone the repository without using the key. Then, after enabling encryption, check that you can decrypt the dummy secret using your key. Thenlock
the repo again (you will regret it if you don't). Only insert your realSecret
into theSecret.txt
file once you have proven that all this works. If you add your secret earlier while setting all this up, it is almost certain thatSecret
will end up unencrypted in your GitHub repository within some older commit, where it can be read by bots designed specifically for this kind of task. - Use the Git command line a lot. Its use can coexist with using the GUI for source management in Xcode:
- Use
git status
(on the command line). Use it a lot to detect general Git issues. - Use
git-crypt status
(on the command line) even more when making changes to encryption setting or encrypted content. It can actually warn you about leaking unencrypted versions of the file you intended to only publish in encrypted form.
- Use
Normally having access to working source code should be enough to get you going, right? Unfortunately, this setup process involves some initialisation via the command line and some files that are often done outside the source code.
So setting up your own project (in XCode) that uses git-crypt
can be done as follows.
Remember that the order of the steps is critical in some places (otherwise you end up with an unencrypted copy of
Secret.txt
in the repository or end up publishing your encryption key!):
-
Create an new project in XCode.
Xcode has integrated Git support since 2011, so there is no need to install Git. You could have XCode enable source management for this project by checking the option
Source control: ☑︎ Create Git repository on my Mac
. But let's do that manually in a moment, so let's uncheck the checkbox.In about 10 steps, you will need to have an account at GitHub (or a similar service). This requires the setup of your authentication with GitHub, and linking Xcode to that GitHub account. This can be found in Apple's source control documentation.
-
At this point, your source files are not version managed yet.
You can confirm this by running the command line
git status
from a MacOS Terminal or command line window. This reportsnot a git repository
because there is no.git
subdirectory in your project's root directory. -
Enable Git source control
Run
git init
from the Terminal while you are in the root directory of your repository. The repo's root directory is the one that contains (at this point) two subdirectories respectively namedGitCryptDemo
andGitCryptDemo.xcodeproj
. The project root directory is also calledGitCryptDemo
, and will serve to contain everything as the project project grows. Run 'git status` again to confirm that it worked.Actually we need to do a bit more to reach the same point as the checkbox in XCode that we skipped: run
git add .
(including the period) to put the current contents of the project directory and its subdirectories under source control. Rungit status
again to see what files are now being monitored. These files are being watched, but haven't been stored in the local git repository get (they haven't been "committed"). We will commit these files and more later. -
Install the Homebrew package manager
You can check if Homebrew is already installed by typing
which brew
in the Terminal. You can find Homebrew via GitHub or via https://brew.sh. Homebrew provides an easy way to installgit-crypt
. -
Install git-crypt
This involves typing
brew install git-crypt
in the Terminal window. At the time of this writing, the latest Homebrew version was 0.7.0.Run
git-crypt status
to see that the installation was successful. It will tell you that none of files being monitored by Git are encrypted so far. -
Create a basic .gitignore file
Safety first...
Before generating keys, let's make sure encryption keys never end up in Git or on GitHub. We need to add 2 lines to a
.gitignore
text file in your project root directory. If the file already exists, use an editor or the editor in Xcode. If you need to create the file you could use the following sequence of commandscat >.gitignore
, followed by.git/git-crypt/keys/**
, and../git-crypt-key
and finally Control-C. This copies two lines of text into the file.gitignore
. The first line covers the default location ofgit-crypt
key files. For examplemyproject/.git/git-crypt/keys/default
. The second line covers a name and path where the key might be placed to get it above themyproject
directory, where it can be used by multiple projects. Usecat .gitignore
to check the result.If you run
git status
again now, you will find that the new.gitignore
file is not being tracked. Git itself wants you to add this file, but we will do that later.Incidentally, if you create files via Xcode's
New file...
menu command, they become part of the Xcode project. Which will, in turn, allow Xcode to automatically performgit add
for these project files when you commit all changes in the project to Git. The setting for this isSource control: ☑︎ Add and remove files automatically
-
Creating a workable .gitignore file
Actually it is good practice to extend
.gitignore
by a set of standard files used internally by MacOS, XCode and Swift. You can generate those lines using the gitignore.io or Toptal online .gitignore generator service. Most of those lines are for older versions of Xcode, but it avoids cases where Git is trying to track Xcode files that save the state of the Xcode user interface. Which in turn prevents Git from thinking something needs saving, while you were sure that you didn't modify anything: you didn't change the code, but Xcode update a state file somewhere. -
Enable
git-crypt
Run
git-crypt init
to generate a new key, andgit-crypt export-key ../git-crypt-key
to save it in the parent directory.You can use any file name instead of
git-crypt-key
. We gave it a generic name here because it might be used in other projects as well.Use
cat ../git-crypt-key
to view the file. It is not really a valid text file, but does contain a text stringGITCRYPTKEY
. -
Configure what to encrypt
An extra file called
.gitattributes
in your project directory will tell git-crypt what to encrypt. Again, you might want to use an editor, especially if the file already exists. Alternatively we can create it from a Terminal window usingcat >.gitattributes
, followed bySecret.txt filter=git-crypt diff=git-crypt
and Control-C. This tells Git to use git-crypt to encrypt and decrypt files, and to detect changes in encrypted files (diff
). -
Fix the path to Homebrew on MacOS
For newer MacOS with Apple Silicon (M1 and M2 series, etc) use
echo $PATH
to check that your path contains /opt/homebrew/bin. This is relevant because homebrew changed this path with the introduction of the new M-series.Because I still had problems here, I recommend that, you edit the (existing)
.git/config
file to contain absolute path names (I suspect thatfilter
anddiff
somehow bypass the path):
[filter "git-crypt"]
smudge = \"/opt/homebrew/bin/git-crypt\" smudge
clean = \"/opt/homebrew/bin/git-crypt\" clean
required = true
[diff "git-crypt"]
textconv = \"/opt/homebrew/bin/git-crypt\" diff
There must be a better way that solves this for all git-crypt
projects on MacOS,
but this will fix the problem for one individual project.
-
Create Secret.txt and Unsecret.txt
In your repository's root directory, create
Unsecret.txt
usingcat >Unsecret.txt
, followed byContents of file Unsecret.txt
and closed by Control-C. This text will not be encrypted.For
Secret.txt
, it is best to fill it withTemp secret
instead of an actual secret. This is because of the pretty real risk that the file ends up in the repository in unencrypted form, where it can be very hard to remove.Just "overwriting" an unencrypted by an encrypted file with the same file name won't really work because the older version stays visible in the repository - for anyone with a script that scans for such misplaced secrets. Such scripts and people do exist.
-
Is Git tracking all the required files?
With
git status
you can see all files that still need to be committed. That includesSecret.txt
,Unsecret.txt
,.gitignore
and.gitattributes
. This is because they were made aftergit add .
.You can add all 4 files now with a new
git add .
command. Remember thatSecret.txt
will be checked into the repository - but hopefully only in encrypted form. -
But will we encrypt the right files?
Now run
git-crypt status
to check git-crypt's plans for all our files. It should showencrypted: Secret.txt
andnot encrypted: Unsecret.txt
. But...With
cat Secret.txt
you will discover that the file is still unencrypted in your local directory. So "encrypted" here should be interpreted as a promise what will happen when the file gets copied ("committed") into a (local or remote) Git repository. -
How about finally encrypting something?
We first need to commit these 16 or so files to the local git repository (in
.git
). So usegit commit -m "Initial commit"
with -m for the message or documentation of what this commit is.git status
will now show that all those files are "staged" in your local repo copy.Back in XCode, you can use
File
|Add files to "GitCryptDemo.xcodeproj"...
to add the four new files (Secret.txt
,Unsecret.txt
,.gitignore
and.gitattributes
) so they show up in the Xcode project as well. XCode shows that all source files have been committed. Only GitCryptDemo itself may show an M (for Modified) in the Project Navigator. If you really want to know what that is,git status
may show a file likeGitCryptDemo.xcodeproj/project.pbxproj
which is again internal bookkeeping used by Xcode. We could ignore it (here is an alternative).At this point you might actually want to build and run the default app. On a Mac it will show a very small, easy to overlook window. But you can also run the code on an iOS device where it is shown full screen.
It displays "Contents of file Unsecret.txt" with a lower-case "w". ???? That text is neither of the 2 text files, because we are not using them yet.
At this point, we have actually encrypted something (going by
git-crypt status
and the fact that we have done a commit. But it is not really convincing yet. -
Pushing the commit to GitHub
In Xcode's Source Code Navigator, go to the Repositories tab. There, right-click the topmost item in the tree. This gives a menu where you should execute the option
New "GitCryptDemo" Remote...
. This means you will be "pushing" the content of your local Git repository to a (just created) remote repository stored under your GitHub account.If you now navigate (e.g. in a browser) to your account in GitHub, you can inspect the committed contents of
Unsecret.txt
andSecret.txt
. And NOW GitHub will show an encrypted version of Secret.txt and an unencrypted version ofSecret.txt
and all other files. -
Completing the app
You can now update the Swift files in the new app to match those in the GitHub vdHamer/GitCryptDemo repository. That extends the app to use the content of either
Secret.txt
orUnsecret.txt
(when the app sees thatSecret.txt
is encrypted).So within the app you should see "Temp secret" displayed, because that is how we left the concent of
Secret.txt
in Step (11). Now you can edit it to say "Contents of file Secret.txt", and commit the change and push it to GitHub. You can do this entirely from theSource Control
menu in Xcode: the encryption is handled automatically. Essentially Xcode controls git which in turn controlsgit-crypt
. -
Some final testing
To test what all this looks like if you don't provide the encryption Key, you might want to create a new local repository from scratch named
GitCryptDemoClone
, but with the content of thevdHamer/GitCryptDemo
GitHub repository. A fast way to do this is to go to that repository, and click onCode
andOpen with Xcode
.Then confirm that the file
Secret.txt
is encrypted there by viewing it. You should also see that an app built from this repository now displays "Contents of file Secret.txt" (as in the fileUnsecret.txt
). Which confirms that the app decided that file was encrypted.
It took 17 steps to set up everything more or less from scratch. With multiple tricky points - unless you knew most of this already.
Admittedly, those steps included setting up a GitHub account, linking it to Xcode, installing Brew,
and installing git-crypt
using Brew. Which you don't need to do for every project.
And thus may have done years ago.
We obviously included various steps for checking and learning. These involved lots of command line commands in the Terminal window because Git tends to get messed up easily unless you really understand what every command will actually do.
For example, to give people a mental model of the Git world, there is (kind-of officially sanctioned) Visual Cheatsheet which represents a Git-based environment as 5 boxes between which you copy files and send/collect information:
- Stash (a closet to temporarily hide changes when the going gets rough; not used above)
- Workspace (the project's directory, used above)
- Index (bookkeeping files in the .git directory, implicitly used by Git in the above)
- the Local Repository (a full source controled archive stored in the .git directory,
commits
bring data there) - the Remote Repository (GitHub,
pushes
dump data there, but we used Xcode for anypushing
to handle the required authentication/authorization)
That 5-box diagram is already hard to understand, so it is animated to show all the main data flow in steps.
And, real world Git usage has more dimensions: you can have multiple branches
of changes before these are merged.
And you can have as many 'remote' repositories as you want, sometimes containing forked
rather than cloned
copies of the code.
Arguably Xcode and git-cryp
add one or more levels to the 5-box model: The Xcode Project
concept is a lot like the
(invisible) Git Index
concept. Both are a registration or directory system used to find and track code and its status.
You may thus have files in your directory/localWorkspace that the Xcode Project doesn't know or care about. And files in
your Project that Xcode was tracking, but which somehow vanished without Xcode getting notified.
In itself a classic example of an abstraction level that can by bypassed, leading to complexity.
And Xcode automates some of the interaction with Git, but the Xcode Source Control commands don't cover everything and often individual commands map to multiple (configurable in Preferences) Git commands. A developer once remarked (likely on StackOverflow, I couldn't find the literal quote):
If you want to get help with Git on the Internet, and try to explain your problem in terms of some kind of IDE or graphical shell around Git, you are likely to get no responses from the experts. Every IDE or graphical shell works differently. You will simply have to explain your problem at the generic Git command-line level.
Probably all this points to leaky abstractions. Git is considered a fast, trustworthy, scalable, standard, and possibly elegant solution for a way bigger problem than most people handle: world scale distributed collaboration. But it doesn't scale elegantly downward to handle normal problems using single a readily explainable model.
By analogy, e-mail protocols also deal with a world scale distributed system that synchronises data across servers and e-mail clients. There too, a single user can use multiple devices to send and view e-mails, sometimes across multiple accounts. But the e-mail protocols are designed based on a much more explainable high-level functional model ("it should arrive eventually", "if your device is offline, you can read what your laptop knows about, and prepare a response that will be sent later", "you see the same inbox across your devices, regardless of what you do"). In case of Git, it seems the command line user-level commands are the highest available high level model. So you have to express what you need to do in terms of these. Instead of being able to reason about what you are actually trying to do, you have to stoop to the level of these commands and try to figure out which set in which order will do what you hope to do.