Software enclave for storage of sensitive information in memory.
--- This package attempts to reduce the likelihood of sensitive data being exposed when in memory. It aims to support all major operating systems and is written in pure Go. ## Features * Sensitive data is encrypted and authenticated in memory with XSalsa20Poly1305. The [scheme](https://spacetime.dev/encrypting-secrets-in-memory) used also [defends against cold-boot attacks](https://spacetime.dev/memory-retention-attacks). * Memory allocation bypasses the language runtime by [using system calls](https://github.com/awnumar/memcall) to query the kernel for resources directly. This avoids interference from the garbage-collector. * Buffers that store plaintext data are fortified with guard pages and canary values to detect spurious accesses and overflows. * Effort is taken to prevent sensitive data from touching the disk. This includes locking memory to prevent swapping and handling core dumps. * Kernel-level immutability is implemented so that attempted modification of protected regions results in an access violation. * Multiple endpoints provide session purging and safe termination capabilities as well as signal handling to prevent remnant data being left behind. * Side-channel attacks are mitigated against by making sure that the copying and comparison of data is done in constant-time. * Accidental memory leaks are mitigated against by harnessing the garbage-collector to automatically destroy containers that have become unreachable. Some features were inspired by [libsodium](https://github.com/jedisct1/libsodium), so credits to them. Full documentation and a complete overview of the API can be found [here](https://godoc.org/github.com/awnumar/memguard). Interesting and useful code samples can be found within the [examples](examples) subpackage. ## Installation ``` $ go get github.com/awnumar/memguard ``` API is experimental and may have unstable changes. You should pin a version. [[modules](https://github.com/golang/go/wiki/Modules)] ## Contributing * Submitting program samples to [`./examples`](examples). * Reporting bugs, vulnerabilities, and any difficulties in using the API. * Writing useful security and crypto libraries that utilise memguard. * Implementing kernel-specific/cpu-specific protections. * Submitting performance improvements. Issues are for reporting bugs and for discussion on proposals. Pull requests should be made against master.