Am Donnerstag, dem 03.02.2022 um 13:08 -0500 schrieb Zacchaeus Scheffer: > I finally migrated my home configuration to guix home. However, it > seems guix home creates all symlinks with 777 permissions. This causes > problems with openssh as it will not recognize my > ~/.ssh/authorized_keys. It seems the directories have reasonable > permissions (maybe because they already existed?), but it seems like > someone could in theory edit the symlinks in-place (though I wasn't > able to figure that out). Instead of using symllinks for ~/.ssh/authorized_keys, you could try to write a home-activation-service, which
1. creates ~/.ssh with chmod 700 1a. if it already existed, enforces chmod 700 anyways 2. creates authorized_keys with chmod 600 if it doesn't exist 3. writes the authorized keys. I would strongly advise against that however. While user homes are by default 700 in Guix, the store is world readable and so are your authorized keys if you put them there. A malicious user can't necessarily change them, but they can spy on you. Guix currently has no way of securely storing your data in the store (in a cryptographic sense). This is exacerbated by the fact that such files aren't well-encrypted by default -- user read-only is "good enough" in many cases, e.g. gnome-keyring does encrypt passwords, but stores metadata in plain. Emacs plstores and Recfiles likewise support partial encryption based on GPG. This issue has been known since June 2020 [1]. While there would in theory exist solutions that can work for (guix home) but not (guix system), I can not yet make any statements regarding their quality. Indeed, storing secrets with Guix is an open issue, that will likely be given some attention during the upcoming Guix Days. Cheers [1] https://lists.gnu.org/archive/html/guix-devel/2020-06/msg00091.html