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- .\" Man page generated from reStructuredText.
- .
- .TH "SYNCTHING-SECURITY" "7" "Sep 17, 2018" "v0.14" "Syncthing"
- .SH NAME
- syncthing-security \- Security Principles
- .
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- .sp
- Security is one of the primary project goals. This means that it should not be
- possible for an attacker to join a cluster uninvited, and it should not be
- possible to extract private information from intercepted traffic. Currently this
- is implemented as follows.
- .sp
- All device to device traffic is protected by TLS. To prevent uninvited devices
- from joining a cluster, the certificate fingerprint of each device is compared
- to a preset list of acceptable devices at connection establishment. The
- fingerprint is computed as the SHA\-256 hash of the certificate and displayed
- in BASE32 encoding to form a reasonably compact and convenient string.
- .sp
- Incoming requests for file data are verified to the extent that the requested
- file name must exist in the local index and the global model.
- .sp
- For information about ensuring you are running the code you think you are and
- for reporting security vulnerabilities, please see the official \fI\%security page\fP <\fBhttps://syncthing.net/security.html\fP>\&.
- .SH INFORMATION LEAKAGE
- .SS Global Discovery
- .sp
- When global discovery is enabled, Syncthing sends an announcement every 30
- minutes to the global discovery servers so that they can keep a mapping
- between your device ID and external IP. The announcement contain the device
- ID and listening port(s). Also, when connecting to other devices that have
- not been seen on the local network, a query is sent to the global discovery
- servers containing the device ID of the requested device. The connection to
- the discovery server is encrypted using TLS and the discovery server
- certificate is verified, so the contents of the query should be considered
- private between the device and the discovery server. The discovery servers
- are currently hosted by \fI\%@calmh\fP <\fBhttps://github.com/calmh\fP>\&. Global discovery defaults to \fBon\fP\&.
- .sp
- When turned off, devices with dynamic addresses not on the local network cannot
- be found and connected to.
- .sp
- An eavesdropper on the Internet can deduce which machines are running
- Syncthing with global discovery enabled, and what their device IDs are.
- .sp
- The operator of the discovery server can map arbitrary device addresses to
- IP addresses, and deduce which devices are connected to each other.
- .sp
- If a different global discovery server is configured, no data is sent to the
- default global discovery servers.
- .SS Local Discovery
- .sp
- When local discovery is enabled, Syncthing sends broadcast (IPv4) and multicast
- (IPv6) packets to the local network every 30 seconds. The packets contain the
- device ID and listening port. Local discovery defaults to \fBon\fP\&.
- .sp
- An eavesdropper on the local network can deduce which machines are running
- Syncthing with local discovery enabled, and what their device IDs are.
- .sp
- When turned off, devices with dynamic addresses on the local network cannot be
- found and connected to.
- .SS Upgrade Checks
- .sp
- When automatic upgrades are enabled, Syncthing checks for a new version at
- startup and then once every twelve hours. This is by an HTTPS request to the
- download site for releases, currently hosted by \fI\%@calmh\fP <\fBhttps://github.com/calmh\fP>\&.
- Automatic upgrades default to \fBon\fP (unless Syncthing was compiled with
- upgrades disabled).
- .sp
- Even when automatic upgrades are disabled in the configuration, an upgrade check
- as above is done when the GUI is loaded, in order to show the “Upgrade to …”
- button when necessary. This can be disabled only by compiling Syncthing with
- upgrades disabled.
- .sp
- The actual download, should an upgrade be available, is done from
- \fBGitHub\fP, thus exposing the user to them.
- .sp
- The upgrade check (or download) requests \fIdo not\fP contain any identifiable
- information about the user or device.
- .SS Usage Reporting
- .sp
- When usage reporting is enabled, Syncthing reports usage data at startup and
- then every 24 hours. The report is sent as an HTTPS POST to the usage reporting
- server, currently hosted by \fI\%@calmh\fP <\fBhttps://github.com/calmh\fP>\&. The contents of the usage report can
- be seen behind the “Preview” link in settings. Usage reporting defaults to
- \fBoff\fP but the GUI will ask once about enabling it, shortly after the first
- install.
- .sp
- The reported data is protected from eavesdroppers, but the connection to the
- usage reporting server itself may expose the client as running Syncthing.
- .SS Sync Connections (BEP)
- .sp
- Sync connections are attempted to all configured devices, when the address is
- possible to resolve. The sync connection is based on TLS 1.2. The TLS
- certificates are sent in clear text (as in HTTPS etc), meaning that the
- certificate Common Name (by default \fBsyncthing\fP) is visible.
- .sp
- An eavesdropper can deduce that this is a Syncthing connection and calculate the
- device IDs involved based on the hashes of the sent certificates.
- .sp
- Likewise, if the sync port (default 22000) is accessible from the internet, a
- port scanner may discover it, attempt a TLS negotiation and thus obtain the
- device certificate. This provides the same information as in the eavesdropper
- case.
- .SS Relay Connections
- .sp
- When relaying is enabled, Syncthing will look up the pool of public relays
- and establish a connection to one of them (the best, based on an internal
- heuristic). The selected relay server will learn the connecting device’s
- device ID. Relay servers can be run by \fBanyone in the general public\fP\&.
- Relaying defaults to \fBon\fP\&. Syncthing can be configured to disable
- relaying, or only use specific relays.
- .sp
- If a relay connections is required between two devices, the relay will learn
- the other device’s device ID as well.
- .sp
- Any data exchanged between the two devices is encrypted as usual and not
- subject to inspection by the relay.
- .SS Web GUI
- .sp
- If the web GUI is accessible, it exposes the device as running Syncthing. The
- web GUI defaults to being reachable from the \fBlocal host only\fP\&.
- .SH IN SHORT
- .sp
- Parties doing surveillance on your network (whether that be corporate IT, the
- NSA or someone else) will be able to see that you use Syncthing, and your device
- IDs \fI\%are OK to share anyway\fP <\fBhttps://docs.syncthing.net/users/faq.html#should-i-keep-my-device-ids-secret\fP>,
- but the actual transmitted data is protected as well as we can. Knowing your
- device ID can expose your IP address, using global discovery.
- .SH PROTECTING YOUR SYNCTHING KEYS AND IDENTITY
- .sp
- Anyone who can access the Syncthing TLS keys and config file on your device can
- impersonate your device, connect to your peers, and then have access to your
- synced files. Here are some general principles to protect your files:
- .INDENT 0.0
- .IP 1. 3
- If a device of yours is lost, make sure to revoke its access from your other
- devices.
- .IP 2. 3
- If you’re syncing confidential data on an encrypted disk to guard against
- device theft, put the Syncthing config folder on the same encrypted disk to
- avoid leaking keys and metadata. Or, use whole disk encryption.
- .UNINDENT
- .SH AUTHOR
- The Syncthing Authors
- .SH COPYRIGHT
- 2014-2018, The Syncthing Authors
- .\" Generated by docutils manpage writer.
- .
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