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#!/bin/sh | |
set -ue | |
[ "$#" -lt 2 ] && { echo "Syntax: $0 <filename> <key>"; exit 1; } | |
filename="$1" | |
key="$2" | |
# Compose the key by repeating the user input until we have 32 characters (64 hex digits) | |
openssl_key="" | |
while [ "$(printf '%s' "${openssl_key}" | wc -m)" -lt 64 ]; do | |
openssl_key=${openssl_key}$(printf '%s' "${key}" | od -An -tx1 | tr -d '\ \n') | |
done | |
openssl_key=$(printf '%s' "${openssl_key}" | cut -c1-64) | |
# Determine if the cleartext has been compressed | |
compressed="$(dd if="${filename}" bs=1 skip=9 count=1 2>/dev/null | od -An -tx1 | tr -d '\ \n')" | |
[ "${compressed}" -ne 0 ] && echo "Compressed, use bzip2 to decompress" >&2 | |
# Decipher the header | |
header="$(dd if="${filename}" bs=1 skip=16 count=64 2>/dev/null | \ | |
openssl aes-256-ecb -d -K "${openssl_key}" -nopad | od -An -tx1 | tr -d '\ \n')" | |
# Extract key and iv from the header | |
ckey="$(printf '%s' "${header}" | cut -c17-80)" | |
salt="$(printf '%s' "${header}" | cut -c81-112)" | |
# Decipher the file | |
dd if="${filename}" bs=1 skip=80 2>/dev/null | openssl aes-256-cbc -d -K "${ckey}" -iv "${salt}" |
Hey @mnylen, sorry for the delayed reply.
There are some magic numbers at the very beginning of the encrypted files. This is what I know:
# Magic - Version 1
5f 5f 51 43 53 5f 5f
# Magic - Version 2 - Compressed
4b ca 94 72 5e 83 1c 31 01 01
# Magic - Version 2 - Not Compressed
4b ca 94 72 5e 83 1c 31 01 00
In this quick script I don't check the header, but I guess it would be a nice thing to do!
Not working for me on Mac OS 11.4 (libressl v2.8) . Source file was encrypted on a 2021 NAS Model QTS 4.5.4.1741 with HBS 3 (V17.1.0719)
Have manually checked the source file, it is Magic - Version 2
And that is the error:
bad decrypt
4692311724:error:06FFF064:digital envelope routines:CRYPTO_internal:bad decrypt:/System/Volumes/Data/SWE/macOS/BuildRoots/e90674e518/Library/Caches/com.apple.xbs/Sources/libressl/libressl-56.60.2/libressl-2.8/crypto/evp/evp_enc.c:521
@ceelian, sorry to hear that.
I have the same versions installed on my NAS, but I am using Big Sur. I don't think it should make a difference.
Typically, I get that error when the password is incorrect.
Can you please summarize the configuration settings of your sync job?
I have client-side encryption enabled in the Policy "tab" and no compression in Advanced settings, under "Methods".
Thanks
@dguerri thx for the quick answer and thx for the script 🙏..
That's very interesting because I am also using Big Sur (11.4 is Big Sur). I also checked the passphrase multiple times, and it works in a restore job but not with the script. I will have a look at the configuration of the backup job later today when I have access to the NAS and get back to you then.
I mean 11.5, yes Big Sur.
Since you mentioned passphrase, I am thinking that there could be a problem with the creation of openssl_key
here.
Is your passphrase longer than 32 characters, by any chance?
Okay, so there is one minor version difference in the OS but as you said that shouldn't make the difference. I checked the settings and I deactivated QDedup. Maybe this is what you meant with compression because I couldn't find any other compression option? Password is for testing just 123456 so it is not exceeding 32 char limit.
I copied your script in a decrypt.sh and did the following with a hello_world.txt with the Content "Hello World!" which is encrypted with 123456 passphrase.
cat hello_world.txt | base64
SGVsbG8gV29ybGQh
# Then Qnap does the Backup with encryption Job
./decrypt.sh hello_world.txt 123456
bad decrypt
4651892396:error:06FFF064:digital envelope routines:CRYPTO_internal:bad decrypt:/System/Volumes/Data/SWE/macOS/BuildRoots/e90674e518/Library/Caches/com.apple.xbs/Sources/libressl/libressl-56.60.2/libressl-2.8/crypto/evp/evp_enc.c:521:
# the encrypted file
cat hello_world.txt
Kʔr^?1?W?7?b?s??z[)H)Cޠ??????{????}?m?~=??????}{u?A?1V???t??0Sż(?????>g?????
# the encrypted file content base64 encoded
cat hello_world.txt | base64
S8qUcl6DHDEBAAAAAAAAANJX8jemYtdz9MF6WylIKUPeoBOCngSQHT/C2nsF5avdyfN9wG3hfj2AhoG3jsl9e3WuQe8xVpm36nTv9DBTxbwo//YEv6EDnj5npIqrlsMK
I added the base64 stream of the binary encrypted files and also of the source file so to make sure it is reproducable on a binary accurate level on other machines.
Thanks for any hints.
It's very hard to tell what's going on...
I need to do some testing. One thing that looks different is that I am doing a sync job, with encryption, while you are doing a backup.
The "external" header seems to match. But there is an additional header, from which I extract key and iv, which may be different...
Will look into it later :)
@ceelian do you mind trying https://github.com/alexkazik/qnap-decrypt ?
I did some testing.
I think that the encryption key used by QNAP HSB Backup is derived from the user password with a different algorithm.
From Sync jobs, the password used to decrypt the header is a 64 bytes long concatenation of the user password.
Maybe the backup job concatenates something to the user password... but honestly is hard to tell!
@dguerry thank you, I was 2 weeks AFK. Will try soon and let you know. Thank you a lot for the investigations.
Hi! I found this through QNAP forums. There you mentioned that this only works with version 2 of the algorithm. Do you have any idea how to check which version the file is using? (I would imagine I'm using the latest version, as I just setup my brand-new QNAP NAS).
I'm getting the "Compressed, use bzip2 to decompress" message, but bzip2 says the file is not a bzip2 file. It still proceeds to trying to decrypt the file, but fails with "bad decrypt" error message. It might be a M1 issue - I'm running this on a M1 MBP with Big Sur installed.