Hey guys, I wanted to ask you how you manage your gpg keys? Having them in plaintext all the time on my hard drive feels unsecure.

I have my ssh keys in a password manager (KeePassXC) that only exposes them to the keyagend, when unlocked. Do you know if something like that exists for pgp too?

  • med@sh.itjust.works
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    8 hours ago

    I’d agree that a hardware solution would be best. Something designed specifically to do it. I’ve been eyeing up the biometric yubikey for a while.

    I do this for ssh keys, VPN certs and pgp keys. My solution is pretty budget, I generate the keys on a LUKS encrypted USB and run a script that loads them in to agents, and flushes them on sleep. The script unlocks and mounts the LUKS partition, adds the keys to agents, unmounts and locks the USB. The passwords I just remember for the unlock and load into memory, but they’re ripe for stuffing in to keepass-xc - I need to look at the secret service api and incorporate that in to the script to fetch the unlock passwords directly from keepass.

    I have symlinks in the default user directories to the USB’s mount points, like ~/.ssh/id_ed25519 -> /run/media/<user>/<mount>/id_ed25519. By default, when you run ssh-agent, it tries to add keys in the default places.

    The way it works for me is:

    • plug the USB in to the laptop after a restart or wake-up
    • run script
    • enter passwords for luks key, ssh-agent, gpg agent etc.
    • Unplug USB.

    I keep break-glass spares in a locked cabinet in my house and office, both with different recovery keys

    I do this because it’s my historical solution, and I haven’t evaluated the hardware options seriously yet.