Versions:

  • 1.8.6
  • 1.8.5
  • 1.8.4
  • 1.8.3
  • 1.8.2
  • 1.8.1
  • 1.7.2
  • 1.7.1
  • 1.7.0
  • 1.6.0
  • 1.5.1
  • 1.5.0
  • 1.4.8
  • 1.4.7
  • 1.4.6
  • 1.4.5
  • 1.4.4
  • 1.4.3
  • 1.4.2
  • 1.4.1
  • 1.4.0
  • 1.3.9
  • 1.3.8
  • 1.3.7
  • 1.3.6
  • 1.3.5
  • 1.3.4
  • 1.3.3

SiriKali 1.8.6, published by Francis Banyikwa, is a Qt/C++ graphical front end that unifies management of seven encrypted filesystem tools—sshfs, ecryptfs-simple, cryfs, gocryptfs, securefs, fscrypt and encfs—under one desktop interface. Designed for users who need on-the-fly creation, mounting and unmounting of secure volumes, the program translates each backend’s command-line syntax into an intuitive wizard-driven workflow, letting administrators create encrypted directories, set password policies, choose cipher suites and store mount preferences without memorizing tool-specific flags. Typical deployments include protecting cloud-synced folders with gocryptfs for file-name and content encryption, mounting remote sshfs shares over existing encrypted channels, layering cryfs on portable USB drives to obfuscate directory structure, or leveraging fscrypt on ext4 home partitions for policy-based user key management. The application exposes per-volume status indicators, password change dialogs and automated mount-on-login entries, while a system-tray monitor watches for stale mounts and prompts for re-authentication when keys expire. Across 28 released versions the codebase has tracked upstream cryptographic improvements, added support for KDE and GNOME keyrings, and introduced batch operations for importing multiple EncFS or gocryptfs containers at once. The software is available for free on get.nero.com, with downloads provided via trusted Windows package sources (e.g. winget), always delivering the latest version, and supporting batch installation of multiple applications.

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