channels: Make channel introductions public.

* guix/channels.scm (<channel-introduction>): Rename constructor to
'%make-channel-introduction'.
(make-channel-introduction): New procedure.
* tests/channels.scm ("authenticate-channel, wrong first commit signer")
("authenticate-channel, .guix-authorizations"): Use
'make-channel-introduction' without '@@' and without third argument.
* doc/guix.texi (Channels)[Channel Authentication, Specifying Channel
Authorizations]: New subsections.
This commit is contained in:
Ludovic Courtès 2020-06-25 00:08:05 +02:00
parent 6577682a6c
commit 8b7d982e6a
No known key found for this signature in database
GPG Key ID: 090B11993D9AEBB5
3 changed files with 125 additions and 11 deletions

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@ -3975,8 +3975,47 @@ deploys Guix itself from the official GNU@tie{}Guix repository. This can be
customized by defining @dfn{channels} in the
@file{~/.config/guix/channels.scm} file. A channel specifies a URL and branch
of a Git repository to be deployed, and @command{guix pull} can be instructed
to pull from one or more channels. In other words, channels can be used to
@emph{customize} and to @emph{extend} Guix, as we will see below.
to pull from one or more channels. In other words, channels can be used
to @emph{customize} and to @emph{extend} Guix, as we will see below.
Before that, some security considerations.
@subsection Channel Authentication
@cindex authentication, of channel code
The @command{guix pull} and @command{guix time-machine} commands
@dfn{authenticate} the code retrieved from channels: they make sure each
commit that is fetched is signed by an authorized developer. The goal
is to protect from unauthorized modifications to the channel that would
lead users to run malicious code.
As a user, you must provide a @dfn{channel introduction} in your
channels file so that Guix knows how to authenticate its first commit.
A channel specification, including its introduction, looks something
along these lines:
@lisp
(channel
(name 'my-channel)
(url "https://example.org/my-channel.git")
(introduction
(make-channel-introduction
"6f0d8cc0d88abb59c324b2990bfee2876016bb86"
(openpgp-fingerprint
"CABB A931 C0FF EEC6 900D 0CFB 090B 1199 3D9A EBB5"))))
@end lisp
The specification above shows the name and URL of the channel. The call
to @code{make-channel-introduction} above specifies that authentication
of this channel starts at commit @code{6f0d8cc@dots{}}, which is signed
by the OpenPGP key with fingerprint @code{CABB A931@dots{}}.
For the main channel, called @code{guix}, you automatically get that
information from your Guix installation. For other channels, include
the channel introduction provided by the channel authors in your
@file{channels.scm} file. Make sure you retrieve the channel
introduction from a trusted source since that is the root of your trust.
If you're curious about the authentication mechanics, read on!
@subsection Using a Custom Guix Channel
@ -4150,6 +4189,75 @@ add a meta-data file @file{.guix-channel} that contains:
(directory "guix"))
@end lisp
@cindex channel authorizations
@subsection Specifying Channel Authorizations
As we saw above, Guix ensures the source code it pulls from channels
comes from authorized developers. As a channel author, you need to
specify the list of authorized developers in the
@file{.guix-authorizations} file in the channel's Git repository. The
authentication rule is simple: each commit must be signed by a key
listed in the @file{.guix-authorizations} file of its parent
commit(s)@footnote{Git commits form a @dfn{directed acyclic graph}
(DAG). Each commit can have zero or more parents; ``regular'' commits
have one parent and merge commits have two parent commits. Read
@uref{https://eagain.net/articles/git-for-computer-scientists/, @i{Git
for Computer Scientists}} for a great overview.} The
@file{.guix-authorizations} file looks like this:
@lisp
;; Example '.guix-authorizations' file.
(authorizations
(version 0) ;current file format version
(("AD17 A21E F8AE D8F1 CC02 DBD9 F8AE D8F1 765C 61E3"
(name "alice"))
("2A39 3FFF 68F4 EF7A 3D29 12AF 68F4 EF7A 22FB B2D5"
(name "bob"))
("CABB A931 C0FF EEC6 900D 0CFB 090B 1199 3D9A EBB5"
(name "charlie"))))
@end lisp
Each fingerprint is followed by optional key/value pairs, as in the
example above. Currently these key/value pairs are ignored.
This authentication rule creates a chicken-and-egg issue: how do we
authenticate the first commit? Related to that: how do we deal with
channels whose repository history contains unsigned commits and lack
@file{.guix-authorizations}? And how do we fork existing channels?
@cindex channel introduction
Channel introductions answer these questions by describing the first
commit of a channel that should be authenticated. The first time a
channel is fetched with @command{guix pull} or @command{guix
time-machine}, the command looks up the introductory commit and verifies
that it is signed by the specified OpenPGP key. From then on, it
authenticates commits according to the rule above.
To summarize, as the author of a channel, there are two things you have
to do to allow users to authenticate your code:
@enumerate
@item
Introduce an initial @file{.guix-authorizations} in the channel's
repository. Do that in a signed commit (@pxref{Commit Access}, for
information on how to sign Git commits.)
@item
Advertise the channel introduction, for instance on your channel's web
page. The channel introduction, as we saw above, is the commit/key
pair---i.e., the commit that introduced @file{.guix-authorizations}, and
the fingerprint of the OpenPGP used to sign it.
@end enumerate
Publishing a signed channel requires discipline: any mistake, such as an
unsigned commit or a commit signed by an unauthorized key, will prevent
users from pulling from your channel---well, that's the whole point of
authentication! Pay attention to merges in particular: merge commits
are considered authentic if and only if they are signed by a key present
in the @file{.guix-authorizations} file of @emph{both} branches.
@cindex primary URL, channels
@subsection Primary URL

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@ -69,7 +69,9 @@
channel-location
channel-introduction?
;; <channel-introduction> accessors purposefully omitted for now.
make-channel-introduction
channel-introduction-first-signed-commit
channel-introduction-first-commit-signer
openpgp-fingerprint->bytevector
openpgp-fingerprint
@ -130,13 +132,19 @@
;; commit so that only them may emit this introduction. Introductions are
;; used to bootstrap trust in a channel.
(define-record-type <channel-introduction>
(make-channel-introduction first-signed-commit first-commit-signer
signature)
(%make-channel-introduction first-signed-commit first-commit-signer
signature)
channel-introduction?
(first-signed-commit channel-introduction-first-signed-commit) ;hex string
(first-commit-signer channel-introduction-first-commit-signer) ;bytevector
(signature channel-introduction-signature)) ;string
(define (make-channel-introduction commit signer)
"Return a new channel introduction: COMMIT is the introductory where
authentication starts, and SIGNER is the OpenPGP fingerprint (a bytevector) of
the signer of that commit."
(%make-channel-introduction commit signer #f))
(define (openpgp-fingerprint->bytevector str)
"Convert STR, an OpenPGP fingerprint (hexadecimal string with whitespace),
to the corresponding bytevector."

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@ -451,12 +451,11 @@
(with-repository directory repository
(let* ((commit1 (find-commit repository "first"))
(commit2 (find-commit repository "second"))
(intro ((@@ (guix channels) make-channel-introduction)
(intro (make-channel-introduction
(commit-id-string commit1)
(openpgp-public-key-fingerprint
(read-openpgp-packet
%ed25519bis-public-key-file)) ;different key
#f)) ;no signature
%ed25519bis-public-key-file)))) ;different key
(channel (channel (name 'example)
(url (string-append "file://" directory))
(introduction intro))))
@ -507,12 +506,11 @@
(let* ((commit1 (find-commit repository "first"))
(commit2 (find-commit repository "second"))
(commit3 (find-commit repository "third"))
(intro ((@@ (guix channels) make-channel-introduction)
(intro (make-channel-introduction
(commit-id-string commit1)
(openpgp-public-key-fingerprint
(read-openpgp-packet
%ed25519-public-key-file))
#f)) ;no signature
%ed25519-public-key-file))))
(channel (channel (name 'example)
(url (string-append "file://" directory))
(introduction intro))))