ClearSkies is a sync program similar to DropBox, except it does not require a monthly fee. Instead, you set up shares between two or more computers and the sharing happens amongst them directly.
ClearSkies is inspired by BitTorrent Sync, but it has an open protocol that can be audited for security.
The protocol is layered in such a way that other applications can take advantage of it for purposes other than file sync.
The ClearSkies protocol has been documented and is in a draft state. It can be
found in the protocol/
directory.
protocol/core.md
is a good starting place.
The protocol features:
- Simple-to-share access codes
- Read-write sync
- Read-only sharing
- Encrypted connections
- Shallow copy (do not sync certain files from peer)
- Subtree copy (only sync certain directories from peer)
- Streaming support
- Rsync file transfer (extension)
- Gzip compression (extension)
- Encrypted backup sharing to an untrusted peer (future extension)
- Media streaming (future extension)
- Photo thumbnails (future extension)
The protocol is designed to be a common base for other sync programs, so that they can interoperate with each other. For example, a hypothetical wifi-enabled MIDI piano could speak the protocol and thereby sync its saved files to the owner's computer or tablet, without the piano manufacturer needing to write any PC or tablet software.
We are focusing our effort on making a C++ implementation, clearskies_core. The C++ library will be portable to a wide variety of operating systems, including Windows, Android and iOS.
The C++ daemon is being built for Android in this repository.
There is a proof-of-concept of the protocol that is written in ruby. It is currently out-of-date in relation to the latest protocol changes.
There is a python control library and also a Desktop GUI.
Debian/Ubuntu packages of the ruby proof-of-concept are also available.
The software does not attempt to provide anonymity. Access code sharing is designed to reduce the impact of surveillance by using one-time codes by default, and using perfect forward secrecy on the wire.
Setup of a share is vulnerable to an active man-in-the-middle attack if the channel used to send the access code is insecure.
For example, if Bob sends Alice an access code over SMS, Eve can try to connect to Bob before Alice does. Alice will not be able to connect to the share. Eve can even create another share and issue the same access code to fool Alice into thinking she has connected to Bob.
It is believed that security-conscious users will automatically avoid this problem by sharing the access codes over secure channels.
If you are a professional cryptographer with interest in this project, any feedback on the protocol is very welcome.
A major area that needs work is creating GUIs for each platform, such as GTK,
Cocoa, QT, Android, iOS, browser-based, and a Windows program. GUIs do not
need to be written in any particular language, since they can control the
daemon using a simple JSON protocol, which is documented in
protocol/control.md
.
Issues and pull requests are welcome.
The project mailing list is on google groups. (It is possible to participate via email if you do not have a google account.)