After Slice 4's router split, the capture prompt's Save button was silently failing on every site: content/capture.ts called four handlers (get_settings, get_item, update_item, add_item) that are all in POPUP_ONLY_TYPES, so the router rejected each with unauthorized_sender. Fix in two parts: Part A — get_settings: content scripts already have storage permission via the manifest, so read relicarioSettings directly from chrome.storage.local instead of round-tripping through the SW. Part B — new content-callable 'capture_save_login' message that consolidates what was previously three separate popup-only calls (get_item + update_item or add_item) into one SW-side operation. Content scripts no longer need to distinguish add vs update — the SW does that itself from the manifest. Security model (all enforced SW-side, never trusting content): - Origin is derived from sender.tab.url by the router. The payload contains only username + password; there is no way for content to influence which host the new/updated item binds to. - Update path re-verifies the existing item's core.url hostname matches senderHost before mutating. If the manifest icon_hint ever drifts from core.url, we return origin_mismatch rather than silently binding a password to the wrong origin. - Update mutates ONLY the password field + modified timestamp — never title, url, or any other core field. - Add path creates a new Login item whose title is senderHost and whose url is the sender's origin. Five new router tests cover: content-accept, popup-reject, update path rotates only the password, add path creates bound item, and origin_mismatch when the stored item's host disagrees with senderHost. Tests: 47 -> 52. Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.7 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
relicario
A git-backed, self-hostable password manager where decryption requires two independent factors: a passphrase you memorize and a reference JPEG that carries a hidden secret. Compromise of either factor alone is insufficient.
The server only ever sees opaque ciphertext. There is nothing else going on. This README is the security proof.
How it works
Your passphrase (something you know)
+
Your reference photo (something you have)
|
v
[ Argon2id KDF ] --> master_key --> [ XChaCha20-Poly1305 ] --> encrypted vault
^ |
| v
Never leaves Stored in git
your device (opaque ciphertext)
At vault creation, relicario embeds a random 256-bit secret into a carrier JPEG using DCT steganography. This photo becomes your reference image — a second factor that lives on your devices (and optionally as a "dead drop" on social media, since it survives JPEG re-encoding and mild cropping).
To unlock the vault, you provide your passphrase and point the client at the reference image. The client extracts the hidden secret, concatenates it with your passphrase, and runs Argon2id to derive the master key. Everything else follows from there.
Security model
What the server sees
A git repository containing:
manifest.enc— opaque binary blobentries/*.enc— more opaque binary blobs.relicario/salt— a random 32-byte value (not secret).relicario/params.json— Argon2id parameters (not secret).relicario/devices.json— authorized device public keys
That's it. No plaintext. No metadata about what's inside. No keys, no passphrases, no reference images.
What an attacker needs
| Scenario | Has | Needs | Result |
|---|---|---|---|
| Server breach | Encrypted vault + salt | Passphrase AND image secret | 256+ bits of entropy. Infeasible. |
| Server breach + stolen image | Vault + image secret | Passphrase | Passphrase entropy through Argon2id. 4 diceware words = ~7 million years. |
| Shoulder-surfed passphrase | Passphrase | Image secret | 256 bits. Infeasible. |
| Stolen device | Image + vault | Passphrase | Argon2id brute-force. Strong passphrase = safe. |
No single point of failure. The two-factor design means the passphrase alone can't decrypt the vault, and the image alone can't decrypt the vault.
Compared to
| Server breach entropy | KDF factors | |
|---|---|---|
| LastPass | ~40-60 bits (master password only) | 1 |
| Bitwarden | ~40-60 bits (master password only) | 1 |
| 1Password | password + 128-bit Secret Key | 2 |
| relicario | password + 256-bit image secret | 2 |
What we don't protect against
- A compromised device with active malware. No software password manager can.
- Weak passphrases with a stolen reference image. Use 4+ diceware words.
- Rubber-hose cryptanalysis.
Quick start
# Build from source
cargo build --release
# Create a vault (pick any JPEG as the carrier)
relicario init --image vacation.jpg --output reference.jpg
# Add a credential
relicario add
# Retrieve it
relicario get github
# List everything
relicario list
# Sync with your git remote
relicario sync
# Generate a random password
relicario generate -l 32
Environment variable
Set RELICARIO_IMAGE=/path/to/reference.jpg to avoid being prompted for the image path on every command.
The reference image
The reference JPEG is generated once during relicario init. It looks like a normal photo — because it is one. The 256-bit secret is embedded in the DCT coefficients of the luminance channel using Quantization Index Modulation, with heavy redundancy and Reed-Solomon-style majority voting across multiple copies.
The embedding survives:
- JPEG recompression (tested down to quality 85)
- Up to ~10-15% cropping from any edge
- Social media re-encoding (Instagram, Discord, etc.)
This means your reference image can live on your Instagram, your personal website, or anywhere else. It's useless without your passphrase.
Architecture
relicario/
├── crates/
│ ├── relicario-core/ # Platform-agnostic library (no filesystem, no network)
│ │ ├── crypto.rs # Argon2id KDF + XChaCha20-Poly1305 AEAD
│ │ ├── imgsecret.rs # DCT steganography: embed/extract 256-bit secrets in JPEGs
│ │ ├── entry.rs # Entry, Manifest data model (serde)
│ │ └── vault.rs # Encrypt/decrypt entries and manifests
│ └── relicario-cli/ # CLI binary: filesystem, git, terminal I/O
└── docs/
└── superpowers/
└── specs/ # Design specification with full threat model
relicario-core takes bytes and returns bytes. It has no knowledge of filesystems, git, or networks. This makes it portable to WASM (browser extension), Android (JNI), and iOS (Swift bridge).
Crypto primitives
| Primitive | Purpose | Why this one |
|---|---|---|
| Argon2id (64 MiB, 3 iter, 4 parallel) | Key derivation from passphrase + image secret | Memory-hard, GPU-resistant, OWASP recommended |
| XChaCha20-Poly1305 | Authenticated encryption of vault entries | 192-bit nonce (no collision risk), fast in WASM/ARM without AES-NI |
| ed25519 | Device key signing | Per-device commit authorization, revocable without KDF rotation |
Encrypted file format
version (1 byte) | nonce (24 bytes) | ciphertext (variable) | auth tag (16 bytes)
Every write generates a fresh random nonce. The version byte allows future format changes.
Vault layout
my-vault.git/
├── manifest.enc # Encrypted entry index (names, URLs, timestamps)
├── entries/
│ ├── a1b2c3d4.enc # One encrypted entry per file
│ └── e5f6a7b8.enc
└── .relicario/
├── salt # 32-byte random salt (not secret)
├── params.json # KDF parameters
└── devices.json # Authorized device public keys
Entry IDs are random hex strings. Git history is preserved — every add/edit/delete is a commit. "When was this password last rotated?" is answered by git log.
Device management
Each device generates its own ed25519 keypair. The public key is stored in .relicario/devices.json (committed to the repo). Device keys are used for commit signing — they do NOT participate in vault decryption.
Revoking a device: remove its key from devices.json and commit. No passphrase or reference image rotation needed.
relicario device add --name laptop
relicario device list
relicario device revoke laptop
Building
Requires Rust stable (1.70+).
git clone ssh://git@git.adlee.work:2222/alee/relicario.git
cd relicario
cargo build --release
cargo test
The binary is at target/release/relicario.
Roadmap
- WASM build + Chrome browser extension (inline crypto, no native messaging)
- Secure notes (free-form encrypted text entries)
- Secure document storage (encrypted file attachments up to 5-10 MB)
relicario unlockdaemon (ssh-agent-style, holds master key for a TTL)- Android/iOS clients (Rust core compiles to ARM)
- Import from LastPass/Bitwarden/1Password
- Firefox/Safari extensions
License
MIT
Built by Aaron Lee. Design spec and threat model in docs/superpowers/specs/.