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The guix pull
and guix time-machine
commands
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 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:
(channel
(name 'some-channel)
(url "https://example.org/some-channel.git")
(introduction
(make-channel-introduction
"6f0d8cc0d88abb59c324b2990bfee2876016bb86"
(openpgp-fingerprint
"CABB A931 C0FF EEC6 900D 0CFB 090B 1199 3D9A EBB5"))))
The specification above shows the name and URL of the channel. The call to
make-channel-introduction
above specifies that authentication of this
channel starts at commit 6f0d8cc…
, which is signed by the
OpenPGP key with fingerprint CABB A931…
.
For the main channel, called guix
, you automatically get that
information from your Guix installation. For other channels, include the
channel introduction provided by the channel authors in your
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!