Good News:
Linux home directory management is about to undergo major change:
With systemd 245 comes systemd-homed. Along with that, Linux admins will have to change the way they manage users and users' home directories.
[...] Prior to systemd every system and resource was managed by its own tool, which was clumsy and inefficient. Now? Controlling and managing systems on Linux is incredibly easy.
But one of the creators, Leannart Poettering, has always considered systemd to be incomplete. With the upcoming release of systemd 245, Poettering will take his system one step closer to completion. That step is by way of homed.
[...] let's take a look at the /home directory. This is a crucial directory in the Linux filesystem hierarchy, as it contains all user data and configurations. For some admins, this directory is so important, it is often placed on a separate partition or drive than the operating system. By doing this, user data is safe, even if the operating system were to implode.
However, the way /home is handled within the operating system makes migrating the /home directory not nearly as easy as it should be. Why? With the current iteration of systemd, user information (such as ID, full name, home directory, and shell) is stored in /etc/passwd and the password associated with that user is stored in /etc/shadow. The /etc/passwd file can be viewed by anyone, whereas /etc/shadow can only be viewed by those with admin or sudo privileges.
[...] Poettering has decided to make a drastic change. That change is homed. With homed, all information will be placed in a cryptographically signed JSON record for each user. That record will contain all user information such as username, group membership, and password hashes.
Each user home directory will be linked as LUKS-encrypted containers, with the encryption directly coupled to user login. Once systemd-homed detects a user has logged in, the associated home directory is decrypted. Once that user logs out, the home directory is automatically encrypted.
[...] Of course, such a major change doesn't come without its share of caveats. In the case of systemd-homed, that caveat comes by way of SSH. If a systemd-homed home directory is encrypted until a user successfully logs in, how will users be able to log in to a remote machine with SSH?
The big problem with that is the .ssh directory (where SSH stores known_hosts and authorized_keys) would be inaccessible while the user's home directory is encrypted. Of course Poettering knows of this shortcoming. To date, all of the work done with systemd-homed has been with the standard authentication process. You can be sure that Poettering will come up with a solution that takes SSH into consideration.
Older articles:
Will systemd be considered complete once the kernel and boot loader have been absorbed into systemd?
(Score: 2) by janrinok on Friday May 01 2020, @01:14PM (4 children)
I am not interested in knowing who people are or where they live. My interest starts and stops at our servers.
(Score: 2) by Arik on Friday May 01 2020, @01:45PM (2 children)
This sounds deliberately short-sighted.
/As long as it doesn't cause me any immediate difficulty, I'll just plod right on and not think about it./
I'm sure that way of doing things never came came back to bite anyone in the arse. </sarcasm>
If laughter is the best medicine, who are the best doctors?
(Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Friday May 01 2020, @04:16PM (1 child)
Oh that's right. I'm going to get right on writing my own C compiler, and git implementation, shell, and text editor. Thank god you spoke up.
(Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Friday May 01 2020, @05:42PM
Those are horrible examples you bring up. Those programs have been written by teams of competent developers. They also have a history of fixing important issues that get raised because they don't see bugs being pointed out as an attack on their egos. I trust those programs to be handled in a competent manner.
(Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Monday May 04 2020, @06:34PM
things were like this long before you were able to own a computer but nice try stupid shill