On 3/25/21 12:22, Hendrik Haddorp wrote:
Hi,
Cosign looks interesting but does not seem to feature the nice verification integration
podman offers with the build in signing support. So it does not seem to protect from
unsigned images if I simply invoke podman run, which was the nice part of the existing
solution.
cosign is a demonstration, the current thought is we will integrate cosign directly into
podman so that podman sign, run, build will all be able to work with sigstore.
Our requirements actually changed a bit. First of all we need a sha512 for the container
as sha256 is not considered safe enough. Secondly we need the signing to happen with a
specific algorithm. Actually we want to sign the image with multiple algorithms in
parallel.
Add Luke Hinds to conversation, since he is one of the people behind sigstore, to get his
ideas.
The Yubikey code is currently a prototype in a pull request, the
priority on this being developed further is influenced by user
interest / engagement, so now is a good opportunity to discuss needs
and help shape the implementation. Generally we try to adhere to
'crypto-agility', but some code that is more experimental may have
hardcoded types - we mostly use ecdsa with cosign being curve P-256.
Consider sigstore to be an umbrella for a group of projects. The main
components are the infrastructure which is largely the WebPKI and
transparency log. We then have a series of signing clients with cosign
being one (we also have others in the works to sign rubygems, maven
jar signing). As Dan Walsh comments, cosign is considered to be a
reference implementation.
Multi key signing is discussed here, feel free to chime in:
Note: I am not on this list, I will try to sign up, but best to keep
me in To: as I may not see replies otherwise.
So I maybe the best solution would be to somehow provide a plug point
for the verification (the defect also seems to suggest something like that in the last
update). The code could be invoked after the image was pulled into the local registry and
then a handle to image is passed. The plugin could now either take the existing hash for
the image or calculate a new one, verify the signature in what ever way required and then
return the verification result. Cosign could be integrating in that way as well and would
now be able to prevent podman from starting illegal images. Just not sure how such a
plugin integration might work.
regards,
Hendrik
On 3/24/21 9:18 PM, Scott McCarty wrote:
Hendrik/All,
I'm reviving this thread because we are taking a look at a cool new project
called Cosign [1][2][3]. He briefly mentioned that he has a roadmap to handle key storing
devices like Yubikeys and I thought about this email thread (yes, my memory is strange
like that). With a little searching I found it and decided to revive it. I'm also
tracking a RHEL feature which could potentially implement this.
I'd love feedback from the people on this thread. Many of you seem to have very crisp
use cases around keys, know podman, and have strong opinions (which is good). Product
Managers love feedback from the community :-) Thoughts?
Also feel free to continue discussion in the GitHub issue [4].
[1]:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gCi9_4NYyR0
[2]:
https://github.com/sigstore/cosign
[3]:
https://dlorenc.medium.com/cosign-signed-container-images-c1016862618
[4]:
https://github.com/containers/podman/issues/6259
Best Regards
Scott M
On Mon, May 18, 2020 at 2:28 PM Scott McCarty <smccarty(a)redhat.com> wrote:
>
> Hendrik,
> Thank you for capturing this. We really appreciate it. I've added it to our
backlog to discuss at our next planning meeting. I also tagged Mitr (security ninja) in to
take a look.
>
> Best Regards
> Scott M
>
> On Mon, May 18, 2020 at 6:23 AM Hendrik Haddorp <hendrik.haddorp(a)gmx.net>
wrote:
>>
>> I opened an issue for this now:
https://github.com/containers/libpod/issues/6259
>>
>> On 5/13/20 5:08 PM, Hendrik Haddorp wrote:
>>
>> Hi Scott, I will open an issue in the next days just trying to collect some more
info first.
>>
>> On 5/13/20 2:51 AM, Scott McCarty wrote:
>>
>> Hendrik,
>> You might also think about filing a GitHub issue to capture it publicly!
>>
>> Best Regards
>> Scott M
>>
>> On Tue, May 12, 2020 at 8:50 PM Scott McCarty <smccarty(a)redhat.com> wrote:
>>>
>>> Hendrik,
>>> Thank you for helping me get my brain around this potential feature. We
very much appreciate these kinds of ideas. Currently, we are working heavily on the Podman
API V2, but I have captured this as a backlogged feature that we will discuss in upcoming
planning sessions. I've also captured this thread to come back to it and update when
we get a chance to discuss and think about it further.
>>>
>>> Best Regards
>>> Scott M
>>>
>>> On Mon, May 11, 2020 at 5:25 PM Hendrik Haddorp
<hendrik.haddorp(a)gmx.net> wrote:
>>>>
>>>> Hi Scott,
>>>>
>>>> we would like to sign images using an HSM and those provide PKCS#11
(
https://www.ibm.com/security/cryptocards/pciecc/overview,
https://www.yubico.com/product/yubihsm-2,
https://www.nitrokey.com/#comparison) and there
does not seem to be any proper connection from that to the OpenPGP world. The only thing I
found might be
https://github.com/alonbl/gnupg-pkcs11-scd and that looks also a bit
limited and dated. I'm currently especially interested in a way to use that IBM crypto
card. A relatively easy solution might be to just store the signature hash in the
signature file. To verify that it seem to be enough to something like "openssl dgst
-sha256 -verify public.pem -signature manifest.sig manifest.json". My understanding
so far is that this is actually a PKCS#1 hash calculation. Anyhow if I could get podman
doing that openssl call instead of openpgp things would be working for me.
>>>>
>>>> regards,
>>>> Hendrik
>>>>
>>>> On 11.05.2020 18:38, Scott McCarty wrote:
>>>>
>>>> Hendrik,
>>>> That's all that's supported today. Do you have any other
tools you would be looking for?
>>>>
>>>> Best Regards
>>>> Scott M
>>>>
>>>> On Wed, May 6, 2020 at 3:15 AM Hendrik Haddorp
<hendrik.haddorp(a)gmx.net> wrote:
>>>>>
>>>>> Hi,
>>>>>
>>>>> is OpenPGP the only supported image signing open supported by podman
/
>>>>> skopeo or are there other options? Using OpenGPG works quite fine for
me
>>>>> so far but in the end we are trying to sign an image using an IBM
4765
>>>>> crypto card and so far have not figured out how this can play
together.
>>>>>
>>>>> thanks,
>>>>> Hendrk
>>>>> _______________________________________________
>>>>> Podman mailing list -- podman(a)lists.podman.io
>>>>> To unsubscribe send an email to podman-leave(a)lists.podman.io
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>
>>>> --
>>>>
>>>> --
>>>>
>>>> Moving Wordpress, Mediawiki and Request Tracker into containers:
http://crunchtools.com/a-hackers-guide-to-moving-linux-services-into-cont...
>>>>
>>>> --
>>>>
>>>> Scott McCarty
>>>> Product Management - Containers, Red Hat Enterprise Linux &
OpenShift
>>>> Email: smccarty(a)redhat.com
>>>> Phone: 312-660-3535
>>>> Cell: 330-807-1043
>>>> Web:
http://crunchtools.com
>>>>
>>>> Using Azure Pipelines with Red Hat Universal Base Image and Quay.io:
https://red.ht/2TvYo3Y
>>>>
>>>>
>>>
>>>
>>> --
>>>
>>> --
>>>
>>> Moving Wordpress, Mediawiki and Request Tracker into containers:
http://crunchtools.com/a-hackers-guide-to-moving-linux-services-into-cont...
>>>
>>> --
>>>
>>> Scott McCarty
>>> Product Management - Containers, Red Hat Enterprise Linux & OpenShift
>>> Email: smccarty(a)redhat.com
>>> Phone: 312-660-3535
>>> Cell: 330-807-1043
>>> Web:
http://crunchtools.com
>>>
>>> Using Azure Pipelines with Red Hat Universal Base Image and Quay.io:
https://red.ht/2TvYo3Y
>>
>>
>>
>> --
>>
>> --
>>
>> Moving Wordpress, Mediawiki and Request Tracker into containers:
http://crunchtools.com/a-hackers-guide-to-moving-linux-services-into-cont...
>>
>> --
>>
>> Scott McCarty
>> Product Management - Containers, Red Hat Enterprise Linux & OpenShift
>> Email: smccarty(a)redhat.com
>> Phone: 312-660-3535
>> Cell: 330-807-1043
>> Web:
http://crunchtools.com
>>
>> Using Azure Pipelines with Red Hat Universal Base Image and Quay.io:
https://red.ht/2TvYo3Y
>>
>>
>>
>
>
> --
>
> --
>
> Moving Wordpress, Mediawiki and Request Tracker into containers:
http://crunchtools.com/a-hackers-guide-to-moving-linux-services-into-cont...
>
> --
>
> Scott McCarty
> Product Management - Containers, Red Hat Enterprise Linux & OpenShift
> Email: smccarty(a)redhat.com
> Phone: 312-660-3535
> Cell: 330-807-1043
> Web:
http://crunchtools.com
>
> Using Azure Pipelines with Red Hat Universal Base Image and Quay.io:
https://red.ht/2TvYo3Y
--
--
18 ways to differentiate open source products from upstream suppliers:
https://opensource.com/article/21/2/differentiating-products-upstream-sup...
--
Scott McCarty
Product Management - Containers, Red Hat Enterprise Linux & OpenShift
Email: smccarty(a)redhat.com
Phone: 312-660-3535
Cell: 330-807-1043
Web:
http://crunchtools.com
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