From 76aed6ef732de38d82245b3d674f70bab30221e5 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Owen Jacobson Date: Fri, 3 Jul 2015 22:31:49 -0400 Subject: Fuck it, serve the files directly. --- .html/git/detached-sigs.html | 359 +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ 1 file changed, 359 insertions(+) create mode 100644 .html/git/detached-sigs.html (limited to '.html/git/detached-sigs.html') diff --git a/.html/git/detached-sigs.html b/.html/git/detached-sigs.html new file mode 100644 index 0000000..a3e439d --- /dev/null +++ b/.html/git/detached-sigs.html @@ -0,0 +1,359 @@ + + + + + The Codex » + Notes Towards Detached Signatures in Git + + + + + + + + +
+ + + + + +
+

Notes Towards Detached Signatures in Git

+

Git supports a limited form of object authentication: specific object +categories in Git's internal model can have GPG signatures +embedded in them, allowing the authorship of the objects to be verified using +GPG's underlying trust model. Tag signatures can be used to +verify the authenticity and integrity of the snapshot associated with a +tag, and the authenticity of the tag itself, filling a niche broadly similar +to code signing in binary distribution systems. Commit signatures can be used +to verify the authenticity of the snapshot associated with the commit, and +the authorship of the commit itself. (Conventionally, commit signatures are +assumed to also authenticate either the entire line of history leading to a +commit, or the diff between the commit and its first parent, or both.)

+

Git's existing system has some tradeoffs.

+
    +
  • +

    Signatures are embedded within the objects they sign. The signature is part + of the object's identity; since Git is content-addressed, this means that + an object can neither be retroactively signed nor retroactively stripped of + its signature without modifying the object's identity. Git's distributed + model means that these sorts of identity changes are both complicated and + easily detected.

    +
  • +
  • +

    Commit signatures are second-class citizens. They're a relatively recent + addition to the Git suite, and both the implementation and the social + conventions around them continue to evolve.

    +
  • +
  • +

    Only some objects can be signed. While Git has relatively weak rules about + workflow, the signature system assumes you're using one of Git's more + widespread workflows by limiting your options to at most one signature, and + by restricting signatures to tags and commits (leaving out blobs, trees, + and refs).

    +
  • +
+

I believe it would be useful from an authentication standpoint to add +"detached" signatures to Git, to allow users to make these tradeoffs +differently if desired. These signatures would be stored as separate (blob) +objects in a dedicated refs namespace, supporting retroactive signatures, +multiple signatures for a given object, "policy" signatures, and +authentication of arbitrary objects.

+

The following notes are partially guided by Git's one existing "detached +metadata" facility, git notes. Similarities are intentional; divergences +will be noted where appropriate. Detached signatures are meant to +interoperate with existing Git workflow as much as possible: in particular, +they can be fetched and pushed like any other bit of Git metadata.

+

A detached signature cryptographically binds three facts together into an +assertion whose authenticity can be checked by anyone with access to the +signatory's keys:

+
    +
  1. An object (in the Git sense; a commit, tag, tree, or blob),
  2. +
  3. A policy label, and
  4. +
  5. A signatory (a person or agent making the assertion).
  6. +
+

These assertions can be published separately from or in tandem with the +objects they apply to.

+

Policies

+

Taking a hint from Monotone, every signature includes a "policy" identifying +how the signature is meant to be interpreted. Policies are arbitrary strings; +their meaning is entirely defined by tooling and convention, not by this +draft.

+

This draft uses a single policy, author, for its examples. A signature +under the author policy implies that the signatory had a hand in the +authorship of the designated object. (This is compatible with existing +interpretations of signed tags and commits.) (Authorship under this model is +strictly self-attested: you can claim authorship of anything, and you cannot +assert anyone else's authorship.)

+

The Monotone documentation suggests a number of other useful policies related +to testing and release status, automated build results, and numerous other +factors. Use your imagination.

+

What's In A Signature

+

Detached signatures cover the disk representation of an object, as given by

+
git cat-file <TYPE> <SHA1>
+
+

For most of Git's object types, this means that the signed content is plain +text. For tree objects, the signed content is the awful binary +representation of the tree, not the pretty representation given by git +ls-tree or git show.

+

Detached signatures include the "policy" identifier in the signed content, to +prevent others from tampering with policy choices via refs hackery. (This +will make more sense momentarily.) The policy identifier is prepended to the +signed content, terminated by a zero byte (as with Git's own type +identifiers, but without a length field as length checks are performed by +signing and again when the signature is stored in Git).

+

To generate the complete signable version of an object, use something +equivalent to the following shell snippet:

+
# generate-signable POLICY TYPE SHA1
+function generate-signable() {
+    echo -n "$1"
+    SOMETHING OUTPUTTING A NUL HERE
+    git cat-file "$2" "$3"
+}
+
+

(In the process of writing this, I discovered how hard it is to get Unix's +C-derived shell tools to emit a zero byte.)

+

Signature Storage and Naming

+

We assume that a userid will sign an object at most once.

+

Each signature is stored in an independent blob object in the repository it +applies to. The signature object (described above) is stored in Git, and its +hash recorded in refs/signatures/<POLICY>/<SUBJECT SHA1>/<SIGNER KEY +FINGERPRINT>.

+
# sign POLICY TYPE SHA1 FINGERPRINT
+function sign() {
+    local SIG_HASH=$(
+        generate-signable "$@" |
+        gpg --batch --no-tty --sign -u "$4" |
+        git hash-object --stdin -w -t blob
+    )
+    git update-ref "refs/signatures/$1/$3/$4"
+}
+
+

Stored signatures always use the complete fingerprint to identify keys, to +minimize the risk of colliding key IDs while avoiding the need to store full +keys in the refs naming hierarchy.

+

The policy name can be reliably extracted from the ref, as the trailing part +has a fixed length (in both path segments and bytes) and each ref begins with +a fixed, constant prefix refs/signatures/.

+

Signature Verification

+

Given a signature ref as described above, we can verify and authenticate the +signature and bind it to the associated object and policy by performing the +following check:

+
    +
  1. Pick apart the ref into policy, SHA1, and key fingerprint parts.
  2. +
  3. Reconstruct the signed body as above, using the policy name extracted from + the ref.
  4. +
  5. Retrieve the signature from the ref and combine it with the object itself.
  6. +
  7. Verify that the policy in the stored signature matches the policy in the + ref.
  8. +
  9. +

    Verify the signature with GPG:

    +
    # verify-gpg POLICY TYPE SHA1 FINGERPRINT
    +verify-gpg() {
    +    {
    +        git cat-file "$2" "$3"
    +        git cat-file "refs/signatures/$1/$3/$4"
    +    } | gpg --batch --no-tty --verify
    +}
    +
    +
  10. +
  11. +

    Verify the key fingerprint of the signing key matches the key fingerprint + in the ref itself.

    +
  12. +
+

The specific rules for verifying the signature in GPG are left up to the user +to define; for example, some sites may want to auto-retrieve keys and use a +web of trust from some known roots to determine which keys are trusted, while +others may wish to maintain a specific, known keyring containing all signing +keys for each policy, and skip the web of trust entirely. This can be +accomplished via git-config, given some work, and via gpg.conf.

+

Distributing Signatures

+

Since each signature is stored in a separate ref, and since signatures are +not expected to be amended once published, the following refspec can be +used with git fetch and git push to distribute signatures:

+
refs/signatures/*:refs/signatures/*
+
+

Note the lack of a + decoration; we explicitly do not want to auto-replace +modified signatures, normally; explicit user action should be required.

+

Workflow Notes

+

There are two verification workflows for signatures: "static" verification, +where the repository itself already contains all the refs and objects needed +for signature verification, and "pre-receive" verification, where an object +and its associated signature may be being uploaded at the same time.

+

It is impractical to verify signatures on the fly from an update hook. +Only pre-receive hooks can usefully accept or reject ref changes depending +on whether the push contains a signature for the pushed objects. (Git does +not provide a good mechanism for ensuring that signature objects are pushed +before their subjects.) Correctly verifying object signatures during +pre-receive regardless of ref order is far too complicated to summarize +here.

+

Attacks

+

Lies of Omission

+

It's trivial to hide signatures by deleting the signature refs. Similarly, +anyone with access to a repository can delete any or all detached signatures +from it without otherwise invalidating the signed objects.

+

Since signatures are mostly static, sites following the recommended no-force +policy for signature publication should only be affected if relatively recent +signatures are deleted. Older signatures should be available in one or more +of the repository users' loca repositories; once created, a signature can be +legitimately obtained from anywhere, not only from the original signatory.

+

The signature naming protocol is designed to resist most other forms of +assertion tampering, but straight-up omission is hard to prevent.

+

Unwarranted Certification

+

The policy system allows any signatory to assert any policy. While +centralized signature distribution points such as "release" repositories can +make meaningful decisions about which signatures they choose to accept, +publish, and propagate, there's no way to determine after the fact whether a +policy assertion was obtained from a legitimate source or a malicious one +with no grounds for asserting the policy.

+

For example, I could, right now, sign an all-tests-pass policy assertion +for the Linux kernel. While there's no chance on Earth that the LKML team +would propagate that assertion, if I can convince you to fetch signatures +from my repository, you will fetch my bogus assertion. If all-tests-pass is +a meaningful policy assertion for the Linux kernel, then you will have very +few options besides believing that I assert that all tests have passed.

+

Ambigiuous Policy

+

This is an ongoing problem with crypto policy systems and user interfaces +generally, but this design does nothing to ensure that policies are +interpreted uniformly by all participants in a repository. In particular, +there's no mechanism described for distributing either prose or programmatic +policy definitions and checks. All policy information is out of band.

+

Git already has ambiguity problems around commit signing: there are multiple +ways to interpret a signature on a commit:

+
    +
  1. +

    I assert that this snapshot and commit message were authored as described + in this commit's metadata. (In this interpretation, the signature's + authenticity guarantees do not transitively apply to parents.)

    +
  2. +
  3. +

    I assert that this snapshot and commit message were authored as described + in this commit's metadata, based on exactly the parent commits described. + (In this interpretation, the signature's authenticity guarantees do + transitively apply to parents. This is the interpretation favoured by XXX + LINK HERE XXX.)

    +
  4. +
  5. +

    I assert that this diff and commit message was authored as described in + this commit's metadata. (No assertions about the snapshot are made + whatsoever, and assertions about parentage are barely sensical at all. + This meshes with widespread, diff-oriented policies.)

    +
  6. +
+

Grafts and Replacements

+

Git permits post-hoc replacement of arbitrary objects via both the grafts +system (via an untracked, non-distributed file in .git, though some +repositories distribute graft lists for end-users to manually apply) and the +replacements system (via refs/replace/<SHA1>, which can optionally be +fetched or pushed). The interaction between these two systems and signature +verification needs to be very closely considered; I've not yet done so.

+

Cases of note:

+
    +
  • Neither signature nor subject replaced - the "normal" case
  • +
  • Signature not replaced, subject replaced (by graft, by replacement, by both)
  • +
  • Signature replaced, subject not replaced
  • +
  • Both signature and subject replaced
  • +
+

It's tempting to outright disable git replace during signing and +verification, but this will have surprising effects when signing a ref-ish +instead of a bare hash. Since this is the normal case, I think this merits +more thought. (I'm also not aware of a way to disable grafts without +modifying .git, and having the two replacement mechanisms treated +differently may be dangerous.)

+

No Signed Refs

+

I mentioned early in this draft that Git's existing signing system doesn't +support signing refs themselves; since refs are an important piece of Git's +workflow ecosystem, this may be a major omission. Unfortunately, this +proposal doesn't address that.

+

Possible Refinements

+
    +
  • Monotone's certificate system is key+value based, rather than label-based. + This might be useful; while small pools of related values can be asserted + using mutually exclusive policy labels (whose mutual exclusion is a matter + of local interpretation), larger pools of related values rapidly become + impractical under the proposed system.
  • +
+

For example, this proposal would be inappropriate for directly asserting + third-party authorship; the asserted author would have to appear in the + policy name itself, exposing the user to a potentially very large number of + similar policy labels.

+
    +
  • +

    Ref signing via a manifest (a tree constellation whose paths are ref names + and whose blobs sign the refs' values). Consider cribbing DNSSEC here for + things like lightweight absence assertions, too.

    +
  • +
  • +

    Describe how this should interact with commit-duplicating and + commit-rewriting workflows.

    +
  • +
+
+ + + +
+
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+ + + + + +
+ + \ No newline at end of file -- cgit v1.2.3