A one-time reverse mount which is then optimised for forward mounts #871
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jpluscplusm
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Hi folks 👋
I have a large, static dataset that I'd like to store on a cloud provider. I'm going to use deterministic filenames both to avoid
diriv
files, and also so that I can move files across directories (behind the scenes) without downloading and re-encrypting them, as & when I reorganise the data. So far, so good.My dataset is currently unencrypted. I would like to use reverse mode to give my tooling a view of the encrypted corpus that it can upload. This will avoid me having to duplicate the dataset locally, first, and avoid me needing to copy it into a forward-mode mount and temporarily using double the disk space.
However, the dataset will be 100% read-only after it's created - so here's my problem: by doing a standard
-reverse
mount, I believe that I'll be immutably baking AES-SIV into the decryption process. And here's mygocryptfs -speed
output:AES-SIV appears to be more than an order of magnitude slower than AES-GCM, which is the option that I would select if I were creating a filesystem for forward mounting.
Thanks, all! :-D
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