Add documentation about package signing model (#30939)
Co-authored-by: Scott Wittenburg <scott.wittenburg@kitware.com> Co-authored-by: Massimiliano Culpo <massimiliano.culpo@gmail.com>
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			| @@ -76,6 +76,7 @@ or refer to the full manual below. | ||||
|    chain | ||||
|    extensions | ||||
|    pipelines | ||||
|    signing | ||||
|  | ||||
| .. toctree:: | ||||
|    :maxdepth: 2 | ||||
|   | ||||
							
								
								
									
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							| @@ -0,0 +1,484 @@ | ||||
| .. Copyright 2013-2022 Lawrence Livermore National Security, LLC and other | ||||
|    Spack Project Developers. See the top-level COPYRIGHT file for details. | ||||
|  | ||||
|    SPDX-License-Identifier: (Apache-2.0 OR MIT) | ||||
|  | ||||
| .. _signing: | ||||
|  | ||||
| ===================== | ||||
| Spack Package Signing | ||||
| ===================== | ||||
|  | ||||
| The goal of package signing in Spack is to provide data integrity | ||||
| assurances around official packages produced by the automated Spack CI | ||||
| pipelines. These assurances directly address the security of Spack’s | ||||
| software supply chain by explaining why a security-conscious user can | ||||
| be reasonably justified in the belief that packages installed via Spack | ||||
| have an uninterrupted auditable trail back to change management | ||||
| decisions judged to be appropriate by the Spack maintainers. This is | ||||
| achieved through cryptographic signing of packages built by Spack CI | ||||
| pipelines based on code that has been transparently reviewed and | ||||
| approved on GitHub. This document describes the signing process for | ||||
| interested users. | ||||
|  | ||||
| .. _risks: | ||||
|  | ||||
| ------------------------------ | ||||
| Risks, Impact and Threat Model | ||||
| ------------------------------ | ||||
|  | ||||
| This document addresses the approach taken to safeguard Spack’s | ||||
| reputation with regard to the integrity of the package data produced by | ||||
| Spack’s CI pipelines. It does not address issues of data confidentiality | ||||
| (Spack is intended to be largely open source) or availability (efforts | ||||
| are described elsewhere). With that said the main reputational risk can | ||||
| be broadly categorized as a loss of faith in the data integrity due to a | ||||
| breach of the private key used to sign packages. Remediation of a | ||||
| private key breach would require republishing the public key with a | ||||
| revocation certificate, generating a new signing key, an assessment and | ||||
| potential rebuild/resigning of all packages since the key was breached, | ||||
| and finally direct intervention by every spack user to update their copy | ||||
| of Spack’s public keys used for local verification. | ||||
|  | ||||
| The primary threat model used in mitigating the risks of these stated | ||||
| impacts is one of individual error not malicious intent or insider | ||||
| threat. The primary objective is to avoid the above impacts by making a | ||||
| private key breach nearly impossible due to oversight or configuration | ||||
| error. Obvious and straightforward measures are taken to mitigate issues | ||||
| of malicious interference in data integrity and insider threats but | ||||
| these attack vectors are not systematically addressed. It should be hard | ||||
| to exfiltrate the private key intentionally, and almost impossible to | ||||
| leak the key by accident. | ||||
|  | ||||
| .. _overview: | ||||
|  | ||||
| ----------------- | ||||
| Pipeline Overview | ||||
| ----------------- | ||||
|  | ||||
| Spack pipelines build software through progressive stages where packages | ||||
| in later stages nominally depend on packages built in earlier stages. | ||||
| For both technical and design reasons these dependencies are not | ||||
| implemented through the default GitLab artifacts mechanism; instead | ||||
| built packages are uploaded to AWS S3 mirrors (buckets) where they are | ||||
| retrieved by subsequent stages in the pipeline. Two broad categories of | ||||
| pipelines exist: Pull Request (PR) pipelines and Develop/Release | ||||
| pipelines. | ||||
|  | ||||
| -  PR pipelines are launched in response to pull requests made by | ||||
|    trusted and untrusted users. Packages built on these pipelines upload | ||||
|    code to quarantined AWS S3 locations which cache the built packages | ||||
|    for the purposes of review and iteration on the changes proposed in | ||||
|    the pull request. Packages built on PR pipelines can come from | ||||
|    untrusted users so signing of these pipelines is not implemented. | ||||
|    Jobs in these pipelines are executed via normal GitLab runners both | ||||
|    within the AWS GitLab infrastructure and at affiliated institutions. | ||||
| -  Develop and Release pipelines **sign** the packages they produce and carry | ||||
|    strong integrity assurances that trace back to auditable change management | ||||
|    decisions. These pipelines only run after members from a trusted group of | ||||
|    reviewers verify that the proposed changes in a pull request are appropriate. | ||||
|    Once the PR is merged, or a release is cut, a pipeline is run on protected | ||||
|    GitLab runners which provide access to the required signing keys within the | ||||
|    job. Intermediary keys are used to sign packages in each stage of the | ||||
|    pipeline as they are built and a final job officially signs each package | ||||
|    external to any specific packages’ build environment. An intermediate key | ||||
|    exists in the AWS infrastructure and for each affiliated instritution that | ||||
|    maintains protected runners. The runners that execute these pipelines | ||||
|    exclusively accept jobs from protected branches meaning the intermediate keys | ||||
|    are never exposed to unreviewed code and the official keys are never exposed | ||||
|    to any specific build environment. | ||||
|  | ||||
| .. _key_architecture: | ||||
|  | ||||
| ---------------- | ||||
| Key Architecture | ||||
| ---------------- | ||||
|  | ||||
| Spack’s CI process uses public-key infrastructure (PKI) based on GNU Privacy | ||||
| Guard (gpg) keypairs to sign public releases of spack package metadata, also | ||||
| called specs. Two classes of GPG keys are involved in the process to reduce the | ||||
| impact of an individual private key compromise, these key classes are the | ||||
| *Intermediate CI Key* and *Reputational Key*. Each of these keys has signing | ||||
| sub-keys that are used exclusively for signing packages. This can be confusing | ||||
| so for the purpose of this explanation we’ll refer to Root and Signing keys. | ||||
| Each key has a private and a public component as well as one or more identities | ||||
| and zero or more signatures. | ||||
|  | ||||
| ------------------- | ||||
| Intermediate CI Key | ||||
| ------------------- | ||||
|  | ||||
| The Intermediate key class is used to sign and verify packages between stages | ||||
| within a develop or release pipeline. An intermediate key exists for the AWS | ||||
| infrastructure as well as each affiliated institution that maintains protected | ||||
| runners. These intermediate keys are made available to the GitLab execution | ||||
| environment building the package so that the package’s dependencies may be | ||||
| verified by the Signing Intermediate CI Public Key and the final package may be | ||||
| signed by the Signing Intermediate CI Private Key. | ||||
|  | ||||
|  | ||||
| +---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------+ | ||||
| | **Intermediate CI Key (GPG)**                                                                           | | ||||
| +==================================================+======================================================+ | ||||
| | Root Intermediate CI Private Key (RSA 4096)#     |     Root Intermediate CI Public Key (RSA 4096)       | | ||||
| +--------------------------------------------------+------------------------------------------------------+ | ||||
| |   Signing Intermediate CI Private Key (RSA 4096) |        Signing Intermediate CI Public Key (RSA 4096) | | ||||
| +--------------------------------------------------+------------------------------------------------------+ | ||||
| | Identity: “Intermediate CI Key <maintainers@spack.io>”                                                  | | ||||
| +---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------+ | ||||
| | Signatures: None                                                                                        | | ||||
| +---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------+ | ||||
|  | ||||
|  | ||||
| The *Root intermediate CI Private Key*\ Is stripped out of the GPG key and | ||||
| stored offline completely separate from Spack’s infrastructure. This allows the | ||||
| core development team to append revocation certificates to the GPG key and | ||||
| issue new sub-keys for use in the pipeline. It is our expectation that this | ||||
| will happen on a semi regular basis. A corollary of this is that *this key | ||||
| should not be used to verify package integrity outside the internal CI process.* | ||||
|  | ||||
| ---------------- | ||||
| Reputational Key | ||||
| ---------------- | ||||
|  | ||||
| The Reputational Key is the public facing key used to sign complete groups of | ||||
| development and release packages. Only one key pair exsits in this class of | ||||
| keys. In contrast to the Intermediate CI Key the Reputational Key *should* be | ||||
| used to verify package integrity. At the end of develop and release pipeline a | ||||
| final pipeline job pulls down all signed package metadata built by the pipeline, | ||||
| verifies they were signed with an Intermediate CI Key, then strips the | ||||
| Intermediate CI Key signature from the package and re-signs them with the | ||||
| Signing Reputational Private Key. The officially signed packages are then | ||||
| uploaded back to the AWS S3 mirror. Please note that separating use of the | ||||
| reputational key into this final job is done to prevent leakage of the key in a | ||||
| spack package. Because the Signing Reputational Private Key is never exposed to | ||||
| a build job it cannot accidentally end up in any built package. | ||||
|  | ||||
|  | ||||
| +---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------+ | ||||
| | **Reputational Key (GPG)**                                                                              | | ||||
| +==================================================+======================================================+ | ||||
| | Root Reputational Private Key (RSA 4096)#        |          Root Reputational Public Key (RSA 4096)     | | ||||
| +--------------------------------------------------+------------------------------------------------------+ | ||||
| | Signing Reputational Private Key (RSA 4096)      |          Signing Reputational Public Key (RSA 4096)  | | ||||
| +--------------------------------------------------+------------------------------------------------------+ | ||||
| | Identity: “Spack Project <maintainers@spack.io>”                                                        | | ||||
| +---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------+ | ||||
| | Signatures: Signed by core development team [#f1]_                                                      | | ||||
| +---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------+ | ||||
|  | ||||
| The Root Reputational Private Key is stripped out of the GPG key and stored | ||||
| offline completely separate from Spack’s infrastructure. This allows the core | ||||
| development team to append revocation certificates to the GPG key in the | ||||
| unlikely event that the Signing Reputation Private Key is compromised. In | ||||
| general it is the expectation that rotating this key will happen infrequently if | ||||
| at all. This should allow relatively transparent verification for the end-user | ||||
| community without needing deep familiarity with GnuPG or Public Key | ||||
| Infrastructure. | ||||
|  | ||||
|  | ||||
| .. _build_cache_format: | ||||
|  | ||||
| ------------------ | ||||
| Build Cache Format | ||||
| ------------------ | ||||
|  | ||||
| A binary package consists of a metadata file unambiguously defining the | ||||
| built package (and including other details such as how to relocate it) | ||||
| and the installation directory of the package stored as a compressed | ||||
| archive file. The metadata files can either be unsigned, in which case | ||||
| the contents are simply the json-serialized concrete spec plus metadata, | ||||
| or they can be signed, in which case the json-serialized concrete spec | ||||
| plus metadata is wrapped in a gpg cleartext signature. Built package | ||||
| metadata files are named to indicate the operating system and | ||||
| architecture for which the package was built as well as the compiler | ||||
| used to build it and the packages name and version. For example:: | ||||
|  | ||||
|   linux-ubuntu18.04-haswell-gcc-7.5.0-zlib-1.2.12-llv2ysfdxnppzjrt5ldybb5c52qbmoow.spec.json.sig | ||||
|  | ||||
| would contain the concrete spec and binary metadata for a binary package | ||||
| of ``zlib@1.2.12``, built for the ``ubuntu`` operating system and ``haswell`` | ||||
| architecture. The id of the built package exists in the name of the file | ||||
| as well (after the package name and version) and in this case begins | ||||
| with ``llv2ys``. The id distinguishes a particular built package from all | ||||
| other built packages with the same os/arch, compiler, name, and version. | ||||
| Below is an example of a signed binary package metadata file. Such a | ||||
| file would live in the ``build_cache`` directory of a binary mirror:: | ||||
|  | ||||
|   -----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE----- | ||||
|   Hash: SHA512 | ||||
|  | ||||
|   { | ||||
|     "spec": { | ||||
|       <concrete-spec-contents-omitted> | ||||
|     }, | ||||
|  | ||||
|     "buildcache_layout_version": 1, | ||||
|     "binary_cache_checksum": { | ||||
|       "hash_algorithm": "sha256", | ||||
|       "hash": "4f1e46452c35a5e61bcacca205bae1bfcd60a83a399af201a29c95b7cc3e1423" | ||||
|      }, | ||||
|  | ||||
|     "buildinfo": { | ||||
|       "relative_prefix": | ||||
|       "linux-ubuntu18.04-haswell/gcc-7.5.0/zlib-1.2.12-llv2ysfdxnppzjrt5ldybb5c52qbmoow", | ||||
|       "relative_rpaths": false | ||||
|     } | ||||
|   } | ||||
|  | ||||
|   -----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE----- | ||||
|   iQGzBAEBCgAdFiEETZn0sLle8jIrdAPLx/P+voVcifMFAmKAGvwACgkQx/P+voVc | ||||
|   ifNoVgv/VrhA+wurVs5GB9PhmMA1m5U/AfXZb4BElDRwpT8ZcTPIv5X8xtv60eyn | ||||
|   4EOneGVbZoMThVxgev/NKARorGmhFXRqhWf+jknJZ1dicpqn/qpv34rELKUpgXU+ | ||||
|   QDQ4d1P64AIdTczXe2GI9ZvhOo6+bPvK7LIsTkBbtWmopkomVxF0LcMuxAVIbA6b | ||||
|   887yBvVO0VGlqRnkDW7nXx49r3AG2+wDcoU1f8ep8QtjOcMNaPTPJ0UnjD0VQGW6 | ||||
|   4ZFaGZWzdo45MY6tF3o5mqM7zJkVobpoW3iUz6J5tjz7H/nMlGgMkUwY9Kxp2PVH | ||||
|   qoj6Zip3LWplnl2OZyAY+vflPFdFh12Xpk4FG7Sxm/ux0r+l8tCAPvtw+G38a5P7 | ||||
|   QEk2JBr8qMGKASmnRlJUkm1vwz0a95IF3S9YDfTAA2vz6HH3PtsNLFhtorfx8eBi | ||||
|   Wn5aPJAGEPOawEOvXGGbsH4cDEKPeN0n6cy1k92uPEmBLDVsdnur8q42jk5c2Qyx | ||||
|   j3DXty57 | ||||
|   =3gvm | ||||
|   -----END PGP SIGNATURE----- | ||||
|  | ||||
| If a user has trusted the public key associated with the private key | ||||
| used to sign the above spec file, the signature can be verified with | ||||
| gpg, as follows:: | ||||
|  | ||||
|   $ gpg –verify linux-ubuntu18.04-haswell-gcc-7.5.0-zlib-1.2.12-llv2ysfdxnppzjrt5ldybb5c52qbmoow.spec.json.sig | ||||
|  | ||||
| The metadata (regardless whether signed or unsigned) contains the checksum | ||||
| of the ``.spack`` file containing the actual installation. The checksum should | ||||
| be compared to a checksum computed locally on the ``.spack`` file to ensure the | ||||
| contents have not changed since the binary spec plus metadata were signed. The | ||||
| ``.spack`` files are actually tarballs containing the compressed archive of the | ||||
| install tree.  These files, along with the metadata files, live within the | ||||
| ``build_cache`` directory of the mirror, and together are organized as follows:: | ||||
|  | ||||
|   build_cache/ | ||||
|     # unsigned metadata (for indexing, contains sha256 of .spack file) | ||||
|     <arch>-<compiler>-<name>-<ver>-24zvipcqgg2wyjpvdq2ajy5jnm564hen.spec.json | ||||
|     # clearsigned metadata (same as above, but signed) | ||||
|     <arch>-<compiler>-<name>-<ver>-24zvipcqgg2wyjpvdq2ajy5jnm564hen.spec.json.sig | ||||
|     <arch>/ | ||||
|       <compiler>/ | ||||
|         <name>-<ver>/ | ||||
|           # tar.gz-compressed prefix (may support more compression formats later) | ||||
|           <arch>-<compiler>-<name>-<ver>-24zvipcqgg2wyjpvdq2ajy5jnm564hen.spack | ||||
|  | ||||
| Uncompressing and extracting the ``.spack`` file results in the install tree. | ||||
| This is in contrast to previous versions of spack, where the ``.spack`` file | ||||
| contained a (duplicated) metadata file, a signature file and a nested tarball | ||||
| containing the install tree. | ||||
|  | ||||
| .. _internal_implementation: | ||||
|  | ||||
| ----------------------- | ||||
| Internal Implementation | ||||
| ----------------------- | ||||
|  | ||||
| The technical implementation of the pipeline signing process includes components | ||||
| defined in Amazon Web Services, the Kubernetes cluster, at affilicated | ||||
| institutions, and the GitLab/GitLab Runner deployment. We present the techincal | ||||
| implementation in two interdependent sections. The first addresses how secrets | ||||
| are managed through the lifecycle of a develop or release pipeline. The second | ||||
| section describes how Gitlab Runner and pipelines are configured and managed to | ||||
| support secure automated signing. | ||||
|  | ||||
| Secrets Management | ||||
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ | ||||
|  | ||||
| As stated above the Root Private Keys (intermediate and reputational) | ||||
| are stripped from the GPG keys and stored outside Spack’s | ||||
| infrastructure. | ||||
|  | ||||
| .. warning:: | ||||
|   **TODO** | ||||
|     - Explanation here about where and how access is handled for these keys. | ||||
|     - Both Root private keys are protected with strong passwords | ||||
|     - Who has access to these and how? | ||||
|  | ||||
| **Intermediate CI Key** | ||||
| ----------------------- | ||||
|  | ||||
| Multiple intermediate CI signing keys exist, one Intermediate CI Key for jobs | ||||
| run in AWS, and one key for each affiliated institution (e.g. Univerity of | ||||
| Oregon). Here we describe how the Intermediate CI Key is managed in AWS: | ||||
|  | ||||
| The Intermediate CI Key (including the Signing Intermediate CI Private Key is | ||||
| exported as an ASCII armored file and stored in a Kubernetes secret called | ||||
| ``spack-intermediate-ci-signing-key``. For convenience sake, this same secret | ||||
| contains an ASCII-armored export of just the *public* components of the | ||||
| Reputational Key. This secret also contains the *public* components of each of | ||||
| the affiliated institutions' Intermediate CI Key. These are potentially needed | ||||
| to verify dependent packages which may have been found in the public mirror or | ||||
| built by a protected job running on an affiliated institution's infrastrcuture | ||||
| in an earlier stage of the pipeline. | ||||
|  | ||||
| Procedurally the ``spack-intermediate-ci-signing-key`` secret is used in | ||||
| the following way: | ||||
|  | ||||
| 1. A ``large-arm-prot`` or ``large-x86-prot`` protected runner picks up | ||||
|    a job tagged ``protected`` from a protected GitLab branch. (See | ||||
|    `Protected Runners and Reserved Tags <#_8bawjmgykv0b>`__). | ||||
| 2. Based on its configuration, the runner creates a job Pod in the | ||||
|    pipeline namespace and mounts the spack-intermediate-ci-signing-key | ||||
|    Kubernetes secret into the build container | ||||
| 3. The Intermediate CI Key, affiliated institutions' public key and the | ||||
|    Reputational Public Key are imported into a keyring by the ``spack gpg …`` | ||||
|    sub-command. This is initiated by the job’s build script which is created by | ||||
|    the generate job at the beginning of the pipeline. | ||||
| 4. Assuming the package has dependencies those specs are verified using | ||||
|    the keyring. | ||||
| 5. The package is built and the spec.json is generated | ||||
| 6. The spec.json is signed by the keyring and uploaded to the mirror’s | ||||
|    build cache. | ||||
|  | ||||
| **Reputational Key** | ||||
| -------------------- | ||||
|  | ||||
| Because of the increased impact to end users in the case of a private | ||||
| key breach, the Reputational Key is managed separately from the | ||||
| Intermediate CI Keys and has additional controls. First, the Reputational | ||||
| Key was generated outside of Spack’s infrastructure and has been signed | ||||
| by the core development team. The Reputational Key (along with the | ||||
| Signing Reputational Private Key) was then ASCII armor exported to a | ||||
| file. Unlike the Intermediate CI Key this exported file is not stored as | ||||
| a base64 encoded secret in Kubernetes. Instead\ *the key file | ||||
| itself*\ is encrypted and stored in Kubernetes as the | ||||
| ``spack-signing-key-encrypted`` secret in the pipeline namespace. | ||||
|  | ||||
| The encryption of the exported Reputational Key (including the Signing | ||||
| Reputational Private Key) is handled by `AWS Key Management Store (KMS) data | ||||
| keys | ||||
| <https://docs.aws.amazon.com/kms/latest/developerguide/concepts.html#data-keys>`__. | ||||
| The private key material is decrypted and imported at the time of signing into a | ||||
| memory mounted temporary directory holding the keychain. The signing job uses | ||||
| the `AWS Encryption SDK | ||||
| <https://docs.aws.amazon.com/encryption-sdk/latest/developer-guide/crypto-cli.html>`__ | ||||
| (i.e. ``aws-encryption-cli``) to decrypt the Reputational Key. Permission to | ||||
| decrypt the key is granted to the job Pod through a Kubernetes service account | ||||
| specifically used for this, and only this, function. Finally, for convenience | ||||
| sake, this same secret contains an ASCII-armored export of the *public* | ||||
| components of the Intermediate CI Keys and the Reputational Key. This allows the | ||||
| signing script to verify that packages were built by the pipeline (both on AWS | ||||
| or at affiliated institutions), or signed previously as a part of a different | ||||
| pipeline. This is is done *before* importing decrypting and importing the | ||||
| Signing Reputational Private Key material and officially signing the packages. | ||||
|  | ||||
| Procedurally the ``spack-singing-key-encrypted`` secret is used in the | ||||
| following way: | ||||
|  | ||||
| 1.  The ``spack-package-signing-gitlab-runner`` protected runner picks | ||||
|     up a job tagged ``notary`` from a protected GitLab branch (See | ||||
|     `Protected Runners and Reserved Tags <#_8bawjmgykv0b>`__). | ||||
| 2.  Based on its configuration, the runner creates a job pod in the | ||||
|     pipeline namespace. The job is run in a stripped down purpose-built | ||||
|     image ``ghcr.io/spack/notary:latest`` Docker image. The runner is | ||||
|     configured to only allow running jobs with this image. | ||||
| 3.  The runner also mounts the ``spack-signing-key-encrypted`` secret to | ||||
|     a path on disk. Note that this becomes several files on disk, the | ||||
|     public components of the Intermediate CI Keys, the public components | ||||
|     of the Reputational CI, and an AWS KMS encrypted file containing the | ||||
|     Singing Reputational Private Key. | ||||
| 4.  In addition to the secret, the runner creates a tmpfs memory mounted | ||||
|     directory where the GnuPG keyring will be created to verify, and | ||||
|     then resign the package specs. | ||||
| 5.  The job script syncs all spec.json.sig files from the build cache to | ||||
|     a working directory in the job’s execution environment. | ||||
| 6.  The job script then runs the ``sign.sh`` script built into the | ||||
|     notary Docker image. | ||||
| 7.  The ``sign.sh`` script imports the public components of the | ||||
|     Reputational and Intermediate CI Keys and uses them to verify good | ||||
|     signatures on the spec.json.sig files. If any signed spec does not | ||||
|     verify the job immediately fails. | ||||
| 8.  Assuming all specs are verified, the ``sign.sh`` script then unpacks | ||||
|     the spec json data from the signed file in preparation for being | ||||
|     re-signed with the Reputational Key. | ||||
| 9.  The private components of the Reputational Key are decrypted to | ||||
|     standard out using ``aws-encryption-cli`` directly into a ``gpg | ||||
|     –import …`` statement which imports the key into the | ||||
|     keyring mounted in-memory. | ||||
| 10. The private key is then used to sign each of the json specs and the | ||||
|     keyring is removed from disk. | ||||
| 11. The re-signed json specs are resynced to the AWS S3 Mirror and the | ||||
|     public signing of the packages for the develop or release pipeline | ||||
|     that created them is complete. | ||||
|  | ||||
| Non service-account access to the private components of the Reputational | ||||
| Key that are managed through access to the symmetric secret in KMS used | ||||
| to encrypt the data key (which in turn is used to encrypt the GnuPG key | ||||
| - See:\ `Encryption SDK | ||||
| Documentation <https://docs.aws.amazon.com/encryption-sdk/latest/developer-guide/crypto-cli-examples.html#cli-example-encrypt-file>`__). | ||||
| A small trusted subset of the core development team are the only | ||||
| individuals with access to this symmetric key. | ||||
|  | ||||
| .. _protected_runners: | ||||
|  | ||||
| Protected Runners and Reserved Tags | ||||
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ | ||||
|  | ||||
| Spack has a large number of Gitlab Runners operating in its build farm. | ||||
| These include runners deployed in the AWS Kubernetes cluster as well as | ||||
| runners deployed at affiliated institutions. The majority of runners are | ||||
| shared runners that operate across projects in gitlab.spack.io. These | ||||
| runners pick up jobs primarily from the spack/spack project and execute | ||||
| them in PR pipelines. | ||||
|  | ||||
| A small number of runners operating on AWS and at affiliated institutions are | ||||
| registered as specific *protected* runners on the spack/spack project. In | ||||
| addition to protected runners there are protected branches on the spack/spack | ||||
| project. These are the ``develop`` branch, any release branch (i.e. managed with | ||||
| the ``releases/v*`` wildcard) and any tag branch (managed with the ``v*`` | ||||
| wildcard) Finally Spack’s pipeline generation code reserves certain tags to make | ||||
| sure jobs are routed to the correct runners, these tags are ``public``, | ||||
| ``protected``, and ``notary``. Understanding how all this works together to | ||||
| protect secrets and provide integrity assurances can be a little confusing so | ||||
| lets break these down: | ||||
|  | ||||
| -  **Protected Branches**- Protected branches in Spack prevent anyone | ||||
|    other than Maintainers in GitLab from pushing code. In the case of | ||||
|    Spack the only Maintainer level entity pushing code to protected | ||||
|    branches is Spack bot. Protecting branches also marks them in such a | ||||
|    way that Protected Runners will only run jobs from those branches | ||||
| - **Protected Runners**- Protected Runners only run jobs from protected | ||||
|    branches. Because protected runners have access to secrets, it's critical | ||||
|    that they not run Jobs from untrusted code (i.e. PR branches). If they did it | ||||
|    would be possible for a PR branch to tag a job in such a way that a protected | ||||
|    runner executed that job and mounted secrets into a code execution | ||||
|    environment that had not been reviewed by Spack maintainers. Note however | ||||
|    that in the absence of tagging used to route jobs, public runners *could* run | ||||
|    jobs from protected branches. No secrets would be at risk of being breached | ||||
|    because non-protected runners do not have access to those secrets; lack of | ||||
|    secrets would, however, cause the jobs to fail. | ||||
| - **Reserved Tags**- To mitigate the issue of public runners picking up | ||||
|    protected jobs Spack uses a small set of “reserved” job tags (Note that these | ||||
|    are *job* tags not git tags). These tags are “public”, “private”, and | ||||
|    “notary.” The majority of jobs executed in Spack’s GitLab instance are | ||||
|    executed via a ``generate`` job. The generate job code systematically ensures | ||||
|    that no user defined configuration sets these tags. Instead, the ``generate`` | ||||
|    job sets these tags based on rules related to the branch where this pipeline | ||||
|    originated. If the job is a part of a pipeline on a PR branch it sets the | ||||
|    ``public`` tag. If the job is part of a pipeline on a protected branch it | ||||
|    sets the ``protected`` tag. Finally if the job is the package signing job and | ||||
|    it is running on a pipeline that is part of a protected branch then it sets | ||||
|    the ``notary`` tag. | ||||
|  | ||||
| Protected Runners are configured to only run jobs from protected branches. Only | ||||
| jobs running in pipelines on protected branches are tagged with ``protected`` or | ||||
| ``notary`` tags. This tightly couples jobs on protected branches to protected | ||||
| runners that provide access to the secrets required to sign the built packages. | ||||
| The secrets are can **only** be accessed via: | ||||
|  | ||||
| 1. Runners under direct control of the core development team. | ||||
| 2. Runners under direct control of trusted maintainers at affiliated institutions. | ||||
| 3. By code running the automated pipeline that has been reviewed by the | ||||
|    Spack maintainers and judged to be appropriate. | ||||
|  | ||||
| Other attempts (either through malicious intent or incompetence) can at | ||||
| worst grab jobs intended for protected runners which will cause those | ||||
| jobs to fail alerting both Spack maintainers and the core development | ||||
| team. | ||||
|  | ||||
| .. [#f1] | ||||
|    The Reputational Key has also cross signed core development team | ||||
|    keys. | ||||
		Reference in New Issue
	
	Block a user