Enter invisible passwords using this Python module

Give your password an extra layer of security with GPG and the Python getpass module.
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Password

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Passwords are particularly problematic for programmers. You're not supposed to store them without encrypting them, and you're not supposed to reveal what's been typed when your user enters one. This became particularly important to me when I decided I wanted to boost security on my laptop. I encrypt my home directory—but once I log in, any password stored as plain text in a configuration file is potentially exposed to prying eyes.

Specifically, I use an application called Mutt as my email client. It lets me read and compose emails in my Linux terminal, but normally it expects a password in its configuration file. I restricted permissions on my Mutt config file so that only I can see it, but I'm the only user of my laptop, so I'm not really concerned about authenticated users inadvertently looking at my configs. Instead, I wanted to protect myself from absent-mindedly posting my config online, either for bragging rights or version control, with my password exposed. In addition, although I have no expectations of unwelcome guests on my system, I did want to ensure that an intruder couldn't obtain my password just by running cat on my config.

Python GnuPG

The Python module python-gnupg is a Python wrapper for the gpg application. The module's name is python-gnupg, which you must not confuse with a module called gnupg.

GnuPG (GPG) is the default encryption system for Linux, and I've been using it since 2009 or so. I feel comfortable with it and have a high level of trust in its security.

I decided that the best way to get my password into Mutt was to store my password inside an encrypted GPG file, create a prompt for my GPG password to unlock the encrypted file, and hand the password over to Mutt (actually to the offlineimap command, which I use to synchronize my laptop with the email server).

Getting user input with Python is pretty easy. You make a call to input, and whatever the user types is stored as a variable:

print("Enter password: ")
myinput = input()

print("You entered: ", myinput)

My problem was when I typed a password into the terminal in response to my password prompt, everything I typed was visible to anyone looking over my shoulder or scrolling through my terminal history:

$ ./test.py
Enter password: my-Complex-Passphrase

Invisible password entry with getpass

As is often the case, there's a Python module that's already solved my problem. The module is getpass4, and from the user's perspective, it behaves exactly like input except without displaying what the user is typing.

You can install both modules with pip:

$ python -m pip install --user \
python-gnupg getpass4

Here's my Python script to create a password prompt:

#!/usr/bin/env python
# by Seth Kenlon
# GPLv3

# install deps:
# python3 -m pip install --user python-gnupg getpass4

import gnupg
import getpass
from pathlib import Path

def get_api_pass():
    homedir = str(Path.home())
    gpg = gnupg.GPG(gnupghome=os.path.join(homedir,".gnupg"), use_agent=True)
    passwd = getpass.getpass(prompt="Enter your GnuPG password: ", stream=None)

    with open(os.path.join(homedir,'.mutt','pass.gpg'), 'rb') as f:
        apipass = (gpg.decrypt_file(f, passphrase=passwd))

    f.close()

    return str(apipass)
    
if __name__ == "__main__":
    apipass = get_api_pass()
    print(apipass)

Save the file as password_prompt.py if you want to try it out. If you're using offlineimap and want to use this solution for your own password entry, then save it to some location you can point offlineimap to in your .offlineimaprc file (I use ~/.mutt/password_prompt.py).

Testing the password prompt

To see the script in action, you first must create an encrypted file (I'll assume that you already have GPG set up):

$ echo "hello world" > pass
$ gpg --encrypt pass
$ mv pass.gpg ~/.mutt/pass.gpg
$ rm pass

Now run the Python script:

$ python ~/.mutt/password_prompt.py
Enter your GPG password:
hello world

Nothing displays as you type, but as long as you enter your GPG passphrase correctly, you will see the test message.

Integrating the password prompt with offlineimap

I needed to integrate my new prompt with the offlineimap command. I chose Python for this script because I knew that offlineimap can make calls to Python applications. If you're an offlineimap user, you'll appreciate that the only "integration" required is changing two lines in your .offlineimaprc file.

First, add a line referencing the Python file:

pythonfile = ~/.mutt/password_prompt.py

And then replace the remotepasseval line in .offlineimaprc with a call to the get_api_pass() function in password_prompt.py:

remotepasseval = get_api_pass()

No more passwords in your config file!

Security matters

It sometimes feels almost paranoid to think about security minutiae on your personal computer. Does your SSH config really need to be restricted to 600? Does it really matter that your email password is in an inconsequential config file buried within a hidden folder called, of all things, .mutt? Probably not.

And yet knowing that I don't have sensitive data quietly hidden away in my config files makes it a lot easier for me to commit files to public Git repositories, to copy and paste snippets into support forums, and to share my knowledge in the form of actual, known-good configuration files. For that alone, improved security has made my life easier. And with so many great Python modules available to help, it's easy to implement.

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Seth Kenlon
Seth Kenlon is a UNIX geek, free culture advocate, independent multimedia artist, and D&D nerd. He has worked in the film and computing industry, often at the same time.

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