Authenticate your Git checkouts!

You clone a Git repository, then pull from it. How can you tell its contents are “authentic”—i.e., coming from the “genuine” project you think you’re pulling from, written by the fine human beings you’ve been working with? With commit signatures and “verified” badges ✅ flourishing, you’d think this has long been solved—but nope!

Four years after Guix deployed its own tool to allow users to authenticate updates fetched with guix pull (which uses Git under the hood), the situation hasn’t changed all that much: the vast majority of developers using Git simply do not authenticate the code they pull. That’s pretty bad. It’s the modern-day equivalent of sharing unsigned tarballs and packages like we’d blissfully do in the past century.

The authentication mechanism Guix uses for channels is available to any Git user through the guix git authenticate command. This post is a guide for Git users who are not necessarily Guix users but are interested in using this command for their own repositories. Before looking into the command-line interface and how we improved it to make it more convenient, let’s dispel any misunderstandings or misconceptions.

Why you should care

When you run git pull, you’re fetching a bunch of commits from a server. If it’s over HTTPS, you’re authenticating the server itself, which is nice, but that does not tell you who the code actually comes from—the server might be compromised and an attacker pushed code to the repository. Not helpful. At all.

But hey, maybe you think you’re good because everyone on your project is signing commits and tags, and because you’re disciplined, you routinely run git log --show-signature and check those “Good signature” GPG messages. Maybe you even have those fancy “✅ verified” badges as found on GitLab and on GitHub.

Signing commits is part of the solution, but it’s not enough to authenticate a set of commits that you pull; all it shows is that, well, those commits are signed. Badges aren’t much better: the presence of a “verified” badge only shows that the commit is signed by the OpenPGP key currently registered for the corresponding GitLab/GitHub account. It’s another source of lock-in and makes the hosting platform a trusted third-party. Worse, there’s no notion of authorization (which keys are authorized), let alone tracking of the history of authorization changes (which keys were authorized at the time a given commit was made). Not helpful either.

Being able to ensure that when you run git pull, you’re getting code that genuinely comes from authorized developers of the project is basic security hygiene. Obviously it cannot protect against efforts to infiltrate a project to eventually get commit access and insert malicious code—the kind of multi-year plot that led to the xz backdoor—but if you don’t even protect against unauthorized commits, then all bets are off.

Authentication is something we naturally expect from apt update, pip, guix pull, and similar tools; why not treat git pull to the same standard?

Initial setup

The guix git authenticate command authenticates Git checkouts, unsurprisingly. It’s currently part of Guix because that’s where it was brought to life, but it can be used on any Git repository. This section focuses on how to use it; you can learn about the motivation, its design, and its implementation in the 2020 blog post, in the 2022 peer-reviewed academic paper entitled Building a Secure Software Supply Chain with GNU Guix, or in this 20mn presentation.

To support authentication of your repository with guix git authenticate, you need to follow these steps:

  1. Enable commit signing on your repo: git config commit.gpgSign true. (Git now supports other signing methods but here we need OpenPGP signatures.)

  2. Create a keyring branch containing all the OpenPGP keys of all the committers, along these lines:

    git checkout --orphan keyring
    git reset --hard
    gpg --export alice@example.org > alice.key
    gpg --export bob@example.org > bob.key
    …
    git add *.key
    git commit -m "Add committer keys."

    All the files must end in .key. You must never remove keys from that branch: keys of users who left the project are necessary to authenticate past commits.

  3. Back to the main branch, add a .guix-authorizations file, listing the OpenPGP keys of authorized committers—we’ll get back to its format below.

  4. Commit! This becomes the introductory commit from which authentication can proceed. The introduction of your repository is the ID of this commit and the OpenPGP fingerprint of the key used to sign it.

That’s it. From now on, anyone who clones the repository can authenticate it. The first time, run:

guix git authenticate COMMIT SIGNER

… where COMMIT is the commit ID of the introductory commit, and SIGNER is the OpenPGP fingerprint of the key used to sign that commit (make sure to enclose it in double quotes if there are spaces!). As a repo maintainer, you must advertise this introductory commit ID and fingerprint on a web page or in a README file so others know what to pass to guix git authenticate.

The commit and signer are now recorded on the first run in .git/config; next time, you can run it without any arguments:

guix git authenticate

The other new feature is that the first time you run it, the command installs pre-push and pre-merge hooks (unless preexisting hooks are found) such that your repository is automatically authenticated from there on every time you run git pull or git push.

guix git authenticate exits with a non-zero code and an error message when it stumbles upon a commit that lacks a signature, that is signed by a key not in the keyring branch, or that is signed by a key not listed in .guix-authorizations.

Maintaining the list of authorized committers

The .guix-authorizations file in the repository is central: it lists the OpenPGP fingerprints of authorized committers. Any commit that is not signed by a key listed in the .guix-authorizations file of its parent commit(s) is considered inauthentic—and an error is reported. The format of .guix-authorizations is based on S-expressions and looks like this:

;; 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"))))

The name bits are hints and do not have any effect; what matters is the fingerprints that are listed. You can obtain them with GnuPG by running commands like:

gpg --fingerprint charlie@example.org

At any time you can add or remove keys from .guix-authorizations and commit the changes; those changes take effect for child commits. For example, if we add Billie’s fingerprint to the file in commit A, then Billie becomes an authorized committer in descendants of commit A (we must make sure to add Billie’s key as a file in the keyring branch, too, as we saw above); Billie is still unauthorized in branches that lack A. If we remove Charlie’s key from the file in commit B, then Charlie is no longer an authorized committer, except in branches that start before B. This should feel rather natural.

That’s pretty much all you need to know to get started! Check the manual for more info.

All the information needed to authenticate the repository is contained in the repository itself—it does not depend on a forge or key server. That’s a good property to allow anyone to authenticate it, to ensure determinism and transparency, and to avoid lock-in.

Interested? You can help!

guix git authenticate is a great tool that you can start using today so you and fellow co-workers can be sure you’re getting the right code! It solves an important problem that, to my knowledge, hasn’t really been addressed by any other tool.

Maybe you’re interested but don’t feel like installing Guix “just” for this tool. Maybe you’re not into Scheme and Lisp and would rather use a tool written in your favorite language. Or maybe you think—and rightfully so—that such a tool ought to be part of Git proper.

That’s OK, we can talk! We’re open to discussing with folks who’d like to come up with alternative implementations—check out the articles mentioned above if you’d like to take that route. And we’re open to contributing to a standardization effort. Let’s get in touch!

Acknowledgments

Thanks to Florian Pelz and Simon Tournier for their insightful comments on an earlier draft of this post.

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Security Software development

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