forkjo/services/asymkey/sign.go

402 lines
12 KiB
Go
Raw Normal View History

// Copyright 2021 The Gitea Authors. All rights reserved.
// SPDX-License-Identifier: MIT
Sign merges, CRUD, Wiki and Repository initialisation with gpg key (#7631) This PR fixes #7598 by providing a configurable way of signing commits across the Gitea instance. Per repository configurability and import/generation of trusted secure keys is not provided by this PR - from a security PoV that's probably impossible to do properly. Similarly web-signing, that is asking the user to sign something, is not implemented - this could be done at a later stage however. ## Features - [x] If commit.gpgsign is set in .gitconfig sign commits and files created through repofiles. (merges should already have been signed.) - [x] Verify commits signed with the default gpg as valid - [x] Signer, Committer and Author can all be different - [x] Allow signer to be arbitrarily different - We still require the key to have an activated email on Gitea. A more complete implementation would be to use a keyserver and mark external-or-unactivated with an "unknown" trust level icon. - [x] Add a signing-key.gpg endpoint to get the default gpg pub key if available - Rather than add a fake web-flow user I've added this as an endpoint on /api/v1/signing-key.gpg - [x] Try to match the default key with a user on gitea - this is done at verification time - [x] Make things configurable? - app.ini configuration done - [x] when checking commits are signed need to check if they're actually verifiable too - [x] Add documentation I have decided that adjusting the docker to create a default gpg key is not the correct thing to do and therefore have not implemented this.
2019-10-16 15:42:42 +02:00
package asymkey
Sign merges, CRUD, Wiki and Repository initialisation with gpg key (#7631) This PR fixes #7598 by providing a configurable way of signing commits across the Gitea instance. Per repository configurability and import/generation of trusted secure keys is not provided by this PR - from a security PoV that's probably impossible to do properly. Similarly web-signing, that is asking the user to sign something, is not implemented - this could be done at a later stage however. ## Features - [x] If commit.gpgsign is set in .gitconfig sign commits and files created through repofiles. (merges should already have been signed.) - [x] Verify commits signed with the default gpg as valid - [x] Signer, Committer and Author can all be different - [x] Allow signer to be arbitrarily different - We still require the key to have an activated email on Gitea. A more complete implementation would be to use a keyserver and mark external-or-unactivated with an "unknown" trust level icon. - [x] Add a signing-key.gpg endpoint to get the default gpg pub key if available - Rather than add a fake web-flow user I've added this as an endpoint on /api/v1/signing-key.gpg - [x] Try to match the default key with a user on gitea - this is done at verification time - [x] Make things configurable? - app.ini configuration done - [x] when checking commits are signed need to check if they're actually verifiable too - [x] Add documentation I have decided that adjusting the docker to create a default gpg key is not the correct thing to do and therefore have not implemented this.
2019-10-16 15:42:42 +02:00
import (
"context"
"fmt"
Sign merges, CRUD, Wiki and Repository initialisation with gpg key (#7631) This PR fixes #7598 by providing a configurable way of signing commits across the Gitea instance. Per repository configurability and import/generation of trusted secure keys is not provided by this PR - from a security PoV that's probably impossible to do properly. Similarly web-signing, that is asking the user to sign something, is not implemented - this could be done at a later stage however. ## Features - [x] If commit.gpgsign is set in .gitconfig sign commits and files created through repofiles. (merges should already have been signed.) - [x] Verify commits signed with the default gpg as valid - [x] Signer, Committer and Author can all be different - [x] Allow signer to be arbitrarily different - We still require the key to have an activated email on Gitea. A more complete implementation would be to use a keyserver and mark external-or-unactivated with an "unknown" trust level icon. - [x] Add a signing-key.gpg endpoint to get the default gpg pub key if available - Rather than add a fake web-flow user I've added this as an endpoint on /api/v1/signing-key.gpg - [x] Try to match the default key with a user on gitea - this is done at verification time - [x] Make things configurable? - app.ini configuration done - [x] when checking commits are signed need to check if they're actually verifiable too - [x] Add documentation I have decided that adjusting the docker to create a default gpg key is not the correct thing to do and therefore have not implemented this.
2019-10-16 15:42:42 +02:00
"strings"
asymkey_model "code.gitea.io/gitea/models/asymkey"
2022-01-02 14:12:35 +01:00
"code.gitea.io/gitea/models/auth"
"code.gitea.io/gitea/models/db"
git_model "code.gitea.io/gitea/models/git"
issues_model "code.gitea.io/gitea/models/issues"
user_model "code.gitea.io/gitea/models/user"
Sign merges, CRUD, Wiki and Repository initialisation with gpg key (#7631) This PR fixes #7598 by providing a configurable way of signing commits across the Gitea instance. Per repository configurability and import/generation of trusted secure keys is not provided by this PR - from a security PoV that's probably impossible to do properly. Similarly web-signing, that is asking the user to sign something, is not implemented - this could be done at a later stage however. ## Features - [x] If commit.gpgsign is set in .gitconfig sign commits and files created through repofiles. (merges should already have been signed.) - [x] Verify commits signed with the default gpg as valid - [x] Signer, Committer and Author can all be different - [x] Allow signer to be arbitrarily different - We still require the key to have an activated email on Gitea. A more complete implementation would be to use a keyserver and mark external-or-unactivated with an "unknown" trust level icon. - [x] Add a signing-key.gpg endpoint to get the default gpg pub key if available - Rather than add a fake web-flow user I've added this as an endpoint on /api/v1/signing-key.gpg - [x] Try to match the default key with a user on gitea - this is done at verification time - [x] Make things configurable? - app.ini configuration done - [x] when checking commits are signed need to check if they're actually verifiable too - [x] Add documentation I have decided that adjusting the docker to create a default gpg key is not the correct thing to do and therefore have not implemented this.
2019-10-16 15:42:42 +02:00
"code.gitea.io/gitea/modules/git"
"code.gitea.io/gitea/modules/log"
"code.gitea.io/gitea/modules/process"
"code.gitea.io/gitea/modules/setting"
)
type signingMode string
const (
never signingMode = "never"
always signingMode = "always"
pubkey signingMode = "pubkey"
twofa signingMode = "twofa"
parentSigned signingMode = "parentsigned"
baseSigned signingMode = "basesigned"
headSigned signingMode = "headsigned"
commitsSigned signingMode = "commitssigned"
approved signingMode = "approved"
noKey signingMode = "nokey"
Sign merges, CRUD, Wiki and Repository initialisation with gpg key (#7631) This PR fixes #7598 by providing a configurable way of signing commits across the Gitea instance. Per repository configurability and import/generation of trusted secure keys is not provided by this PR - from a security PoV that's probably impossible to do properly. Similarly web-signing, that is asking the user to sign something, is not implemented - this could be done at a later stage however. ## Features - [x] If commit.gpgsign is set in .gitconfig sign commits and files created through repofiles. (merges should already have been signed.) - [x] Verify commits signed with the default gpg as valid - [x] Signer, Committer and Author can all be different - [x] Allow signer to be arbitrarily different - We still require the key to have an activated email on Gitea. A more complete implementation would be to use a keyserver and mark external-or-unactivated with an "unknown" trust level icon. - [x] Add a signing-key.gpg endpoint to get the default gpg pub key if available - Rather than add a fake web-flow user I've added this as an endpoint on /api/v1/signing-key.gpg - [x] Try to match the default key with a user on gitea - this is done at verification time - [x] Make things configurable? - app.ini configuration done - [x] when checking commits are signed need to check if they're actually verifiable too - [x] Add documentation I have decided that adjusting the docker to create a default gpg key is not the correct thing to do and therefore have not implemented this.
2019-10-16 15:42:42 +02:00
)
func signingModeFromStrings(modeStrings []string) []signingMode {
returnable := make([]signingMode, 0, len(modeStrings))
for _, mode := range modeStrings {
Add configurable Trust Models (#11712) * Add configurable Trust Models Gitea's default signature verification model differs from GitHub. GitHub uses signatures to verify that the committer is who they say they are - meaning that when GitHub makes a signed commit it must be the committer. The GitHub model prevents re-publishing of commits after revocation of a key and prevents re-signing of other people's commits to create a completely trusted repository signed by one key or a set of trusted keys. The default behaviour of Gitea in contrast is to always display the avatar and information related to a signature. This allows signatures to be decoupled from the committer. That being said, allowing arbitary users to present other peoples commits as theirs is not necessarily desired therefore we have a trust model whereby signatures from collaborators are marked trusted, signatures matching the commit line are marked untrusted and signatures that match a user in the db but not the committer line are marked unmatched. The problem with this model is that this conflicts with Github therefore we need to provide an option to allow users to choose the Github model should they wish to. Signed-off-by: Andrew Thornton <art27@cantab.net> * Adjust locale strings Signed-off-by: Andrew Thornton <art27@cantab.net> * as per @6543 Co-authored-by: 6543 <6543@obermui.de> * Update models/gpg_key.go * Add migration for repository Signed-off-by: Andrew Thornton <art27@cantab.net> Co-authored-by: 6543 <6543@obermui.de> Co-authored-by: Lunny Xiao <xiaolunwen@gmail.com>
2020-09-19 18:44:55 +02:00
signMode := signingMode(strings.ToLower(strings.TrimSpace(mode)))
Sign merges, CRUD, Wiki and Repository initialisation with gpg key (#7631) This PR fixes #7598 by providing a configurable way of signing commits across the Gitea instance. Per repository configurability and import/generation of trusted secure keys is not provided by this PR - from a security PoV that's probably impossible to do properly. Similarly web-signing, that is asking the user to sign something, is not implemented - this could be done at a later stage however. ## Features - [x] If commit.gpgsign is set in .gitconfig sign commits and files created through repofiles. (merges should already have been signed.) - [x] Verify commits signed with the default gpg as valid - [x] Signer, Committer and Author can all be different - [x] Allow signer to be arbitrarily different - We still require the key to have an activated email on Gitea. A more complete implementation would be to use a keyserver and mark external-or-unactivated with an "unknown" trust level icon. - [x] Add a signing-key.gpg endpoint to get the default gpg pub key if available - Rather than add a fake web-flow user I've added this as an endpoint on /api/v1/signing-key.gpg - [x] Try to match the default key with a user on gitea - this is done at verification time - [x] Make things configurable? - app.ini configuration done - [x] when checking commits are signed need to check if they're actually verifiable too - [x] Add documentation I have decided that adjusting the docker to create a default gpg key is not the correct thing to do and therefore have not implemented this.
2019-10-16 15:42:42 +02:00
switch signMode {
case never:
return []signingMode{never}
case always:
return []signingMode{always}
case pubkey:
fallthrough
case twofa:
fallthrough
case parentSigned:
fallthrough
case baseSigned:
fallthrough
case headSigned:
fallthrough
case approved:
fallthrough
Sign merges, CRUD, Wiki and Repository initialisation with gpg key (#7631) This PR fixes #7598 by providing a configurable way of signing commits across the Gitea instance. Per repository configurability and import/generation of trusted secure keys is not provided by this PR - from a security PoV that's probably impossible to do properly. Similarly web-signing, that is asking the user to sign something, is not implemented - this could be done at a later stage however. ## Features - [x] If commit.gpgsign is set in .gitconfig sign commits and files created through repofiles. (merges should already have been signed.) - [x] Verify commits signed with the default gpg as valid - [x] Signer, Committer and Author can all be different - [x] Allow signer to be arbitrarily different - We still require the key to have an activated email on Gitea. A more complete implementation would be to use a keyserver and mark external-or-unactivated with an "unknown" trust level icon. - [x] Add a signing-key.gpg endpoint to get the default gpg pub key if available - Rather than add a fake web-flow user I've added this as an endpoint on /api/v1/signing-key.gpg - [x] Try to match the default key with a user on gitea - this is done at verification time - [x] Make things configurable? - app.ini configuration done - [x] when checking commits are signed need to check if they're actually verifiable too - [x] Add documentation I have decided that adjusting the docker to create a default gpg key is not the correct thing to do and therefore have not implemented this.
2019-10-16 15:42:42 +02:00
case commitsSigned:
returnable = append(returnable, signMode)
}
}
if len(returnable) == 0 {
return []signingMode{never}
}
return returnable
}
// ErrWontSign explains the first reason why a commit would not be signed
// There may be other reasons - this is just the first reason found
type ErrWontSign struct {
Reason signingMode
}
func (e *ErrWontSign) Error() string {
return fmt.Sprintf("wont sign: %s", e.Reason)
}
// IsErrWontSign checks if an error is a ErrWontSign
func IsErrWontSign(err error) bool {
_, ok := err.(*ErrWontSign)
return ok
}
Add configurable Trust Models (#11712) * Add configurable Trust Models Gitea's default signature verification model differs from GitHub. GitHub uses signatures to verify that the committer is who they say they are - meaning that when GitHub makes a signed commit it must be the committer. The GitHub model prevents re-publishing of commits after revocation of a key and prevents re-signing of other people's commits to create a completely trusted repository signed by one key or a set of trusted keys. The default behaviour of Gitea in contrast is to always display the avatar and information related to a signature. This allows signatures to be decoupled from the committer. That being said, allowing arbitary users to present other peoples commits as theirs is not necessarily desired therefore we have a trust model whereby signatures from collaborators are marked trusted, signatures matching the commit line are marked untrusted and signatures that match a user in the db but not the committer line are marked unmatched. The problem with this model is that this conflicts with Github therefore we need to provide an option to allow users to choose the Github model should they wish to. Signed-off-by: Andrew Thornton <art27@cantab.net> * Adjust locale strings Signed-off-by: Andrew Thornton <art27@cantab.net> * as per @6543 Co-authored-by: 6543 <6543@obermui.de> * Update models/gpg_key.go * Add migration for repository Signed-off-by: Andrew Thornton <art27@cantab.net> Co-authored-by: 6543 <6543@obermui.de> Co-authored-by: Lunny Xiao <xiaolunwen@gmail.com>
2020-09-19 18:44:55 +02:00
// SigningKey returns the KeyID and git Signature for the repo
func SigningKey(ctx context.Context, repoPath string) (string, *git.Signature) {
Sign merges, CRUD, Wiki and Repository initialisation with gpg key (#7631) This PR fixes #7598 by providing a configurable way of signing commits across the Gitea instance. Per repository configurability and import/generation of trusted secure keys is not provided by this PR - from a security PoV that's probably impossible to do properly. Similarly web-signing, that is asking the user to sign something, is not implemented - this could be done at a later stage however. ## Features - [x] If commit.gpgsign is set in .gitconfig sign commits and files created through repofiles. (merges should already have been signed.) - [x] Verify commits signed with the default gpg as valid - [x] Signer, Committer and Author can all be different - [x] Allow signer to be arbitrarily different - We still require the key to have an activated email on Gitea. A more complete implementation would be to use a keyserver and mark external-or-unactivated with an "unknown" trust level icon. - [x] Add a signing-key.gpg endpoint to get the default gpg pub key if available - Rather than add a fake web-flow user I've added this as an endpoint on /api/v1/signing-key.gpg - [x] Try to match the default key with a user on gitea - this is done at verification time - [x] Make things configurable? - app.ini configuration done - [x] when checking commits are signed need to check if they're actually verifiable too - [x] Add documentation I have decided that adjusting the docker to create a default gpg key is not the correct thing to do and therefore have not implemented this.
2019-10-16 15:42:42 +02:00
if setting.Repository.Signing.SigningKey == "none" {
Add configurable Trust Models (#11712) * Add configurable Trust Models Gitea's default signature verification model differs from GitHub. GitHub uses signatures to verify that the committer is who they say they are - meaning that when GitHub makes a signed commit it must be the committer. The GitHub model prevents re-publishing of commits after revocation of a key and prevents re-signing of other people's commits to create a completely trusted repository signed by one key or a set of trusted keys. The default behaviour of Gitea in contrast is to always display the avatar and information related to a signature. This allows signatures to be decoupled from the committer. That being said, allowing arbitary users to present other peoples commits as theirs is not necessarily desired therefore we have a trust model whereby signatures from collaborators are marked trusted, signatures matching the commit line are marked untrusted and signatures that match a user in the db but not the committer line are marked unmatched. The problem with this model is that this conflicts with Github therefore we need to provide an option to allow users to choose the Github model should they wish to. Signed-off-by: Andrew Thornton <art27@cantab.net> * Adjust locale strings Signed-off-by: Andrew Thornton <art27@cantab.net> * as per @6543 Co-authored-by: 6543 <6543@obermui.de> * Update models/gpg_key.go * Add migration for repository Signed-off-by: Andrew Thornton <art27@cantab.net> Co-authored-by: 6543 <6543@obermui.de> Co-authored-by: Lunny Xiao <xiaolunwen@gmail.com>
2020-09-19 18:44:55 +02:00
return "", nil
Sign merges, CRUD, Wiki and Repository initialisation with gpg key (#7631) This PR fixes #7598 by providing a configurable way of signing commits across the Gitea instance. Per repository configurability and import/generation of trusted secure keys is not provided by this PR - from a security PoV that's probably impossible to do properly. Similarly web-signing, that is asking the user to sign something, is not implemented - this could be done at a later stage however. ## Features - [x] If commit.gpgsign is set in .gitconfig sign commits and files created through repofiles. (merges should already have been signed.) - [x] Verify commits signed with the default gpg as valid - [x] Signer, Committer and Author can all be different - [x] Allow signer to be arbitrarily different - We still require the key to have an activated email on Gitea. A more complete implementation would be to use a keyserver and mark external-or-unactivated with an "unknown" trust level icon. - [x] Add a signing-key.gpg endpoint to get the default gpg pub key if available - Rather than add a fake web-flow user I've added this as an endpoint on /api/v1/signing-key.gpg - [x] Try to match the default key with a user on gitea - this is done at verification time - [x] Make things configurable? - app.ini configuration done - [x] when checking commits are signed need to check if they're actually verifiable too - [x] Add documentation I have decided that adjusting the docker to create a default gpg key is not the correct thing to do and therefore have not implemented this.
2019-10-16 15:42:42 +02:00
}
if setting.Repository.Signing.SigningKey == "default" || setting.Repository.Signing.SigningKey == "" {
// Can ignore the error here as it means that commit.gpgsign is not set
value, _, _ := git.NewCommand(ctx, "config", "--get", "commit.gpgsign").RunStdString(&git.RunOpts{Dir: repoPath})
Sign merges, CRUD, Wiki and Repository initialisation with gpg key (#7631) This PR fixes #7598 by providing a configurable way of signing commits across the Gitea instance. Per repository configurability and import/generation of trusted secure keys is not provided by this PR - from a security PoV that's probably impossible to do properly. Similarly web-signing, that is asking the user to sign something, is not implemented - this could be done at a later stage however. ## Features - [x] If commit.gpgsign is set in .gitconfig sign commits and files created through repofiles. (merges should already have been signed.) - [x] Verify commits signed with the default gpg as valid - [x] Signer, Committer and Author can all be different - [x] Allow signer to be arbitrarily different - We still require the key to have an activated email on Gitea. A more complete implementation would be to use a keyserver and mark external-or-unactivated with an "unknown" trust level icon. - [x] Add a signing-key.gpg endpoint to get the default gpg pub key if available - Rather than add a fake web-flow user I've added this as an endpoint on /api/v1/signing-key.gpg - [x] Try to match the default key with a user on gitea - this is done at verification time - [x] Make things configurable? - app.ini configuration done - [x] when checking commits are signed need to check if they're actually verifiable too - [x] Add documentation I have decided that adjusting the docker to create a default gpg key is not the correct thing to do and therefore have not implemented this.
2019-10-16 15:42:42 +02:00
sign, valid := git.ParseBool(strings.TrimSpace(value))
if !sign || !valid {
Add configurable Trust Models (#11712) * Add configurable Trust Models Gitea's default signature verification model differs from GitHub. GitHub uses signatures to verify that the committer is who they say they are - meaning that when GitHub makes a signed commit it must be the committer. The GitHub model prevents re-publishing of commits after revocation of a key and prevents re-signing of other people's commits to create a completely trusted repository signed by one key or a set of trusted keys. The default behaviour of Gitea in contrast is to always display the avatar and information related to a signature. This allows signatures to be decoupled from the committer. That being said, allowing arbitary users to present other peoples commits as theirs is not necessarily desired therefore we have a trust model whereby signatures from collaborators are marked trusted, signatures matching the commit line are marked untrusted and signatures that match a user in the db but not the committer line are marked unmatched. The problem with this model is that this conflicts with Github therefore we need to provide an option to allow users to choose the Github model should they wish to. Signed-off-by: Andrew Thornton <art27@cantab.net> * Adjust locale strings Signed-off-by: Andrew Thornton <art27@cantab.net> * as per @6543 Co-authored-by: 6543 <6543@obermui.de> * Update models/gpg_key.go * Add migration for repository Signed-off-by: Andrew Thornton <art27@cantab.net> Co-authored-by: 6543 <6543@obermui.de> Co-authored-by: Lunny Xiao <xiaolunwen@gmail.com>
2020-09-19 18:44:55 +02:00
return "", nil
Sign merges, CRUD, Wiki and Repository initialisation with gpg key (#7631) This PR fixes #7598 by providing a configurable way of signing commits across the Gitea instance. Per repository configurability and import/generation of trusted secure keys is not provided by this PR - from a security PoV that's probably impossible to do properly. Similarly web-signing, that is asking the user to sign something, is not implemented - this could be done at a later stage however. ## Features - [x] If commit.gpgsign is set in .gitconfig sign commits and files created through repofiles. (merges should already have been signed.) - [x] Verify commits signed with the default gpg as valid - [x] Signer, Committer and Author can all be different - [x] Allow signer to be arbitrarily different - We still require the key to have an activated email on Gitea. A more complete implementation would be to use a keyserver and mark external-or-unactivated with an "unknown" trust level icon. - [x] Add a signing-key.gpg endpoint to get the default gpg pub key if available - Rather than add a fake web-flow user I've added this as an endpoint on /api/v1/signing-key.gpg - [x] Try to match the default key with a user on gitea - this is done at verification time - [x] Make things configurable? - app.ini configuration done - [x] when checking commits are signed need to check if they're actually verifiable too - [x] Add documentation I have decided that adjusting the docker to create a default gpg key is not the correct thing to do and therefore have not implemented this.
2019-10-16 15:42:42 +02:00
}
signingKey, _, _ := git.NewCommand(ctx, "config", "--get", "user.signingkey").RunStdString(&git.RunOpts{Dir: repoPath})
signingName, _, _ := git.NewCommand(ctx, "config", "--get", "user.name").RunStdString(&git.RunOpts{Dir: repoPath})
signingEmail, _, _ := git.NewCommand(ctx, "config", "--get", "user.email").RunStdString(&git.RunOpts{Dir: repoPath})
Add configurable Trust Models (#11712) * Add configurable Trust Models Gitea's default signature verification model differs from GitHub. GitHub uses signatures to verify that the committer is who they say they are - meaning that when GitHub makes a signed commit it must be the committer. The GitHub model prevents re-publishing of commits after revocation of a key and prevents re-signing of other people's commits to create a completely trusted repository signed by one key or a set of trusted keys. The default behaviour of Gitea in contrast is to always display the avatar and information related to a signature. This allows signatures to be decoupled from the committer. That being said, allowing arbitary users to present other peoples commits as theirs is not necessarily desired therefore we have a trust model whereby signatures from collaborators are marked trusted, signatures matching the commit line are marked untrusted and signatures that match a user in the db but not the committer line are marked unmatched. The problem with this model is that this conflicts with Github therefore we need to provide an option to allow users to choose the Github model should they wish to. Signed-off-by: Andrew Thornton <art27@cantab.net> * Adjust locale strings Signed-off-by: Andrew Thornton <art27@cantab.net> * as per @6543 Co-authored-by: 6543 <6543@obermui.de> * Update models/gpg_key.go * Add migration for repository Signed-off-by: Andrew Thornton <art27@cantab.net> Co-authored-by: 6543 <6543@obermui.de> Co-authored-by: Lunny Xiao <xiaolunwen@gmail.com>
2020-09-19 18:44:55 +02:00
return strings.TrimSpace(signingKey), &git.Signature{
Name: strings.TrimSpace(signingName),
Email: strings.TrimSpace(signingEmail),
}
Sign merges, CRUD, Wiki and Repository initialisation with gpg key (#7631) This PR fixes #7598 by providing a configurable way of signing commits across the Gitea instance. Per repository configurability and import/generation of trusted secure keys is not provided by this PR - from a security PoV that's probably impossible to do properly. Similarly web-signing, that is asking the user to sign something, is not implemented - this could be done at a later stage however. ## Features - [x] If commit.gpgsign is set in .gitconfig sign commits and files created through repofiles. (merges should already have been signed.) - [x] Verify commits signed with the default gpg as valid - [x] Signer, Committer and Author can all be different - [x] Allow signer to be arbitrarily different - We still require the key to have an activated email on Gitea. A more complete implementation would be to use a keyserver and mark external-or-unactivated with an "unknown" trust level icon. - [x] Add a signing-key.gpg endpoint to get the default gpg pub key if available - Rather than add a fake web-flow user I've added this as an endpoint on /api/v1/signing-key.gpg - [x] Try to match the default key with a user on gitea - this is done at verification time - [x] Make things configurable? - app.ini configuration done - [x] when checking commits are signed need to check if they're actually verifiable too - [x] Add documentation I have decided that adjusting the docker to create a default gpg key is not the correct thing to do and therefore have not implemented this.
2019-10-16 15:42:42 +02:00
}
Add configurable Trust Models (#11712) * Add configurable Trust Models Gitea's default signature verification model differs from GitHub. GitHub uses signatures to verify that the committer is who they say they are - meaning that when GitHub makes a signed commit it must be the committer. The GitHub model prevents re-publishing of commits after revocation of a key and prevents re-signing of other people's commits to create a completely trusted repository signed by one key or a set of trusted keys. The default behaviour of Gitea in contrast is to always display the avatar and information related to a signature. This allows signatures to be decoupled from the committer. That being said, allowing arbitary users to present other peoples commits as theirs is not necessarily desired therefore we have a trust model whereby signatures from collaborators are marked trusted, signatures matching the commit line are marked untrusted and signatures that match a user in the db but not the committer line are marked unmatched. The problem with this model is that this conflicts with Github therefore we need to provide an option to allow users to choose the Github model should they wish to. Signed-off-by: Andrew Thornton <art27@cantab.net> * Adjust locale strings Signed-off-by: Andrew Thornton <art27@cantab.net> * as per @6543 Co-authored-by: 6543 <6543@obermui.de> * Update models/gpg_key.go * Add migration for repository Signed-off-by: Andrew Thornton <art27@cantab.net> Co-authored-by: 6543 <6543@obermui.de> Co-authored-by: Lunny Xiao <xiaolunwen@gmail.com>
2020-09-19 18:44:55 +02:00
return setting.Repository.Signing.SigningKey, &git.Signature{
Name: setting.Repository.Signing.SigningName,
Email: setting.Repository.Signing.SigningEmail,
}
Sign merges, CRUD, Wiki and Repository initialisation with gpg key (#7631) This PR fixes #7598 by providing a configurable way of signing commits across the Gitea instance. Per repository configurability and import/generation of trusted secure keys is not provided by this PR - from a security PoV that's probably impossible to do properly. Similarly web-signing, that is asking the user to sign something, is not implemented - this could be done at a later stage however. ## Features - [x] If commit.gpgsign is set in .gitconfig sign commits and files created through repofiles. (merges should already have been signed.) - [x] Verify commits signed with the default gpg as valid - [x] Signer, Committer and Author can all be different - [x] Allow signer to be arbitrarily different - We still require the key to have an activated email on Gitea. A more complete implementation would be to use a keyserver and mark external-or-unactivated with an "unknown" trust level icon. - [x] Add a signing-key.gpg endpoint to get the default gpg pub key if available - Rather than add a fake web-flow user I've added this as an endpoint on /api/v1/signing-key.gpg - [x] Try to match the default key with a user on gitea - this is done at verification time - [x] Make things configurable? - app.ini configuration done - [x] when checking commits are signed need to check if they're actually verifiable too - [x] Add documentation I have decided that adjusting the docker to create a default gpg key is not the correct thing to do and therefore have not implemented this.
2019-10-16 15:42:42 +02:00
}
// PublicSigningKey gets the public signing key within a provided repository directory
func PublicSigningKey(ctx context.Context, repoPath string) (string, error) {
signingKey, _ := SigningKey(ctx, repoPath)
Sign merges, CRUD, Wiki and Repository initialisation with gpg key (#7631) This PR fixes #7598 by providing a configurable way of signing commits across the Gitea instance. Per repository configurability and import/generation of trusted secure keys is not provided by this PR - from a security PoV that's probably impossible to do properly. Similarly web-signing, that is asking the user to sign something, is not implemented - this could be done at a later stage however. ## Features - [x] If commit.gpgsign is set in .gitconfig sign commits and files created through repofiles. (merges should already have been signed.) - [x] Verify commits signed with the default gpg as valid - [x] Signer, Committer and Author can all be different - [x] Allow signer to be arbitrarily different - We still require the key to have an activated email on Gitea. A more complete implementation would be to use a keyserver and mark external-or-unactivated with an "unknown" trust level icon. - [x] Add a signing-key.gpg endpoint to get the default gpg pub key if available - Rather than add a fake web-flow user I've added this as an endpoint on /api/v1/signing-key.gpg - [x] Try to match the default key with a user on gitea - this is done at verification time - [x] Make things configurable? - app.ini configuration done - [x] when checking commits are signed need to check if they're actually verifiable too - [x] Add documentation I have decided that adjusting the docker to create a default gpg key is not the correct thing to do and therefore have not implemented this.
2019-10-16 15:42:42 +02:00
if signingKey == "" {
return "", nil
}
content, stderr, err := process.GetManager().ExecDir(ctx, -1, repoPath,
Sign merges, CRUD, Wiki and Repository initialisation with gpg key (#7631) This PR fixes #7598 by providing a configurable way of signing commits across the Gitea instance. Per repository configurability and import/generation of trusted secure keys is not provided by this PR - from a security PoV that's probably impossible to do properly. Similarly web-signing, that is asking the user to sign something, is not implemented - this could be done at a later stage however. ## Features - [x] If commit.gpgsign is set in .gitconfig sign commits and files created through repofiles. (merges should already have been signed.) - [x] Verify commits signed with the default gpg as valid - [x] Signer, Committer and Author can all be different - [x] Allow signer to be arbitrarily different - We still require the key to have an activated email on Gitea. A more complete implementation would be to use a keyserver and mark external-or-unactivated with an "unknown" trust level icon. - [x] Add a signing-key.gpg endpoint to get the default gpg pub key if available - Rather than add a fake web-flow user I've added this as an endpoint on /api/v1/signing-key.gpg - [x] Try to match the default key with a user on gitea - this is done at verification time - [x] Make things configurable? - app.ini configuration done - [x] when checking commits are signed need to check if they're actually verifiable too - [x] Add documentation I have decided that adjusting the docker to create a default gpg key is not the correct thing to do and therefore have not implemented this.
2019-10-16 15:42:42 +02:00
"gpg --export -a", "gpg", "--export", "-a", signingKey)
if err != nil {
log.Error("Unable to get default signing key in %s: %s, %s, %v", repoPath, signingKey, stderr, err)
return "", err
}
return content, nil
}
// SignInitialCommit determines if we should sign the initial commit to this repository
func SignInitialCommit(ctx context.Context, repoPath string, u *user_model.User) (bool, string, *git.Signature, error) {
Sign merges, CRUD, Wiki and Repository initialisation with gpg key (#7631) This PR fixes #7598 by providing a configurable way of signing commits across the Gitea instance. Per repository configurability and import/generation of trusted secure keys is not provided by this PR - from a security PoV that's probably impossible to do properly. Similarly web-signing, that is asking the user to sign something, is not implemented - this could be done at a later stage however. ## Features - [x] If commit.gpgsign is set in .gitconfig sign commits and files created through repofiles. (merges should already have been signed.) - [x] Verify commits signed with the default gpg as valid - [x] Signer, Committer and Author can all be different - [x] Allow signer to be arbitrarily different - We still require the key to have an activated email on Gitea. A more complete implementation would be to use a keyserver and mark external-or-unactivated with an "unknown" trust level icon. - [x] Add a signing-key.gpg endpoint to get the default gpg pub key if available - Rather than add a fake web-flow user I've added this as an endpoint on /api/v1/signing-key.gpg - [x] Try to match the default key with a user on gitea - this is done at verification time - [x] Make things configurable? - app.ini configuration done - [x] when checking commits are signed need to check if they're actually verifiable too - [x] Add documentation I have decided that adjusting the docker to create a default gpg key is not the correct thing to do and therefore have not implemented this.
2019-10-16 15:42:42 +02:00
rules := signingModeFromStrings(setting.Repository.Signing.InitialCommit)
signingKey, sig := SigningKey(ctx, repoPath)
Sign merges, CRUD, Wiki and Repository initialisation with gpg key (#7631) This PR fixes #7598 by providing a configurable way of signing commits across the Gitea instance. Per repository configurability and import/generation of trusted secure keys is not provided by this PR - from a security PoV that's probably impossible to do properly. Similarly web-signing, that is asking the user to sign something, is not implemented - this could be done at a later stage however. ## Features - [x] If commit.gpgsign is set in .gitconfig sign commits and files created through repofiles. (merges should already have been signed.) - [x] Verify commits signed with the default gpg as valid - [x] Signer, Committer and Author can all be different - [x] Allow signer to be arbitrarily different - We still require the key to have an activated email on Gitea. A more complete implementation would be to use a keyserver and mark external-or-unactivated with an "unknown" trust level icon. - [x] Add a signing-key.gpg endpoint to get the default gpg pub key if available - Rather than add a fake web-flow user I've added this as an endpoint on /api/v1/signing-key.gpg - [x] Try to match the default key with a user on gitea - this is done at verification time - [x] Make things configurable? - app.ini configuration done - [x] when checking commits are signed need to check if they're actually verifiable too - [x] Add documentation I have decided that adjusting the docker to create a default gpg key is not the correct thing to do and therefore have not implemented this.
2019-10-16 15:42:42 +02:00
if signingKey == "" {
Add configurable Trust Models (#11712) * Add configurable Trust Models Gitea's default signature verification model differs from GitHub. GitHub uses signatures to verify that the committer is who they say they are - meaning that when GitHub makes a signed commit it must be the committer. The GitHub model prevents re-publishing of commits after revocation of a key and prevents re-signing of other people's commits to create a completely trusted repository signed by one key or a set of trusted keys. The default behaviour of Gitea in contrast is to always display the avatar and information related to a signature. This allows signatures to be decoupled from the committer. That being said, allowing arbitary users to present other peoples commits as theirs is not necessarily desired therefore we have a trust model whereby signatures from collaborators are marked trusted, signatures matching the commit line are marked untrusted and signatures that match a user in the db but not the committer line are marked unmatched. The problem with this model is that this conflicts with Github therefore we need to provide an option to allow users to choose the Github model should they wish to. Signed-off-by: Andrew Thornton <art27@cantab.net> * Adjust locale strings Signed-off-by: Andrew Thornton <art27@cantab.net> * as per @6543 Co-authored-by: 6543 <6543@obermui.de> * Update models/gpg_key.go * Add migration for repository Signed-off-by: Andrew Thornton <art27@cantab.net> Co-authored-by: 6543 <6543@obermui.de> Co-authored-by: Lunny Xiao <xiaolunwen@gmail.com>
2020-09-19 18:44:55 +02:00
return false, "", nil, &ErrWontSign{noKey}
Sign merges, CRUD, Wiki and Repository initialisation with gpg key (#7631) This PR fixes #7598 by providing a configurable way of signing commits across the Gitea instance. Per repository configurability and import/generation of trusted secure keys is not provided by this PR - from a security PoV that's probably impossible to do properly. Similarly web-signing, that is asking the user to sign something, is not implemented - this could be done at a later stage however. ## Features - [x] If commit.gpgsign is set in .gitconfig sign commits and files created through repofiles. (merges should already have been signed.) - [x] Verify commits signed with the default gpg as valid - [x] Signer, Committer and Author can all be different - [x] Allow signer to be arbitrarily different - We still require the key to have an activated email on Gitea. A more complete implementation would be to use a keyserver and mark external-or-unactivated with an "unknown" trust level icon. - [x] Add a signing-key.gpg endpoint to get the default gpg pub key if available - Rather than add a fake web-flow user I've added this as an endpoint on /api/v1/signing-key.gpg - [x] Try to match the default key with a user on gitea - this is done at verification time - [x] Make things configurable? - app.ini configuration done - [x] when checking commits are signed need to check if they're actually verifiable too - [x] Add documentation I have decided that adjusting the docker to create a default gpg key is not the correct thing to do and therefore have not implemented this.
2019-10-16 15:42:42 +02:00
}
Loop:
Sign merges, CRUD, Wiki and Repository initialisation with gpg key (#7631) This PR fixes #7598 by providing a configurable way of signing commits across the Gitea instance. Per repository configurability and import/generation of trusted secure keys is not provided by this PR - from a security PoV that's probably impossible to do properly. Similarly web-signing, that is asking the user to sign something, is not implemented - this could be done at a later stage however. ## Features - [x] If commit.gpgsign is set in .gitconfig sign commits and files created through repofiles. (merges should already have been signed.) - [x] Verify commits signed with the default gpg as valid - [x] Signer, Committer and Author can all be different - [x] Allow signer to be arbitrarily different - We still require the key to have an activated email on Gitea. A more complete implementation would be to use a keyserver and mark external-or-unactivated with an "unknown" trust level icon. - [x] Add a signing-key.gpg endpoint to get the default gpg pub key if available - Rather than add a fake web-flow user I've added this as an endpoint on /api/v1/signing-key.gpg - [x] Try to match the default key with a user on gitea - this is done at verification time - [x] Make things configurable? - app.ini configuration done - [x] when checking commits are signed need to check if they're actually verifiable too - [x] Add documentation I have decided that adjusting the docker to create a default gpg key is not the correct thing to do and therefore have not implemented this.
2019-10-16 15:42:42 +02:00
for _, rule := range rules {
switch rule {
case never:
Add configurable Trust Models (#11712) * Add configurable Trust Models Gitea's default signature verification model differs from GitHub. GitHub uses signatures to verify that the committer is who they say they are - meaning that when GitHub makes a signed commit it must be the committer. The GitHub model prevents re-publishing of commits after revocation of a key and prevents re-signing of other people's commits to create a completely trusted repository signed by one key or a set of trusted keys. The default behaviour of Gitea in contrast is to always display the avatar and information related to a signature. This allows signatures to be decoupled from the committer. That being said, allowing arbitary users to present other peoples commits as theirs is not necessarily desired therefore we have a trust model whereby signatures from collaborators are marked trusted, signatures matching the commit line are marked untrusted and signatures that match a user in the db but not the committer line are marked unmatched. The problem with this model is that this conflicts with Github therefore we need to provide an option to allow users to choose the Github model should they wish to. Signed-off-by: Andrew Thornton <art27@cantab.net> * Adjust locale strings Signed-off-by: Andrew Thornton <art27@cantab.net> * as per @6543 Co-authored-by: 6543 <6543@obermui.de> * Update models/gpg_key.go * Add migration for repository Signed-off-by: Andrew Thornton <art27@cantab.net> Co-authored-by: 6543 <6543@obermui.de> Co-authored-by: Lunny Xiao <xiaolunwen@gmail.com>
2020-09-19 18:44:55 +02:00
return false, "", nil, &ErrWontSign{never}
Sign merges, CRUD, Wiki and Repository initialisation with gpg key (#7631) This PR fixes #7598 by providing a configurable way of signing commits across the Gitea instance. Per repository configurability and import/generation of trusted secure keys is not provided by this PR - from a security PoV that's probably impossible to do properly. Similarly web-signing, that is asking the user to sign something, is not implemented - this could be done at a later stage however. ## Features - [x] If commit.gpgsign is set in .gitconfig sign commits and files created through repofiles. (merges should already have been signed.) - [x] Verify commits signed with the default gpg as valid - [x] Signer, Committer and Author can all be different - [x] Allow signer to be arbitrarily different - We still require the key to have an activated email on Gitea. A more complete implementation would be to use a keyserver and mark external-or-unactivated with an "unknown" trust level icon. - [x] Add a signing-key.gpg endpoint to get the default gpg pub key if available - Rather than add a fake web-flow user I've added this as an endpoint on /api/v1/signing-key.gpg - [x] Try to match the default key with a user on gitea - this is done at verification time - [x] Make things configurable? - app.ini configuration done - [x] when checking commits are signed need to check if they're actually verifiable too - [x] Add documentation I have decided that adjusting the docker to create a default gpg key is not the correct thing to do and therefore have not implemented this.
2019-10-16 15:42:42 +02:00
case always:
break Loop
Sign merges, CRUD, Wiki and Repository initialisation with gpg key (#7631) This PR fixes #7598 by providing a configurable way of signing commits across the Gitea instance. Per repository configurability and import/generation of trusted secure keys is not provided by this PR - from a security PoV that's probably impossible to do properly. Similarly web-signing, that is asking the user to sign something, is not implemented - this could be done at a later stage however. ## Features - [x] If commit.gpgsign is set in .gitconfig sign commits and files created through repofiles. (merges should already have been signed.) - [x] Verify commits signed with the default gpg as valid - [x] Signer, Committer and Author can all be different - [x] Allow signer to be arbitrarily different - We still require the key to have an activated email on Gitea. A more complete implementation would be to use a keyserver and mark external-or-unactivated with an "unknown" trust level icon. - [x] Add a signing-key.gpg endpoint to get the default gpg pub key if available - Rather than add a fake web-flow user I've added this as an endpoint on /api/v1/signing-key.gpg - [x] Try to match the default key with a user on gitea - this is done at verification time - [x] Make things configurable? - app.ini configuration done - [x] when checking commits are signed need to check if they're actually verifiable too - [x] Add documentation I have decided that adjusting the docker to create a default gpg key is not the correct thing to do and therefore have not implemented this.
2019-10-16 15:42:42 +02:00
case pubkey:
keys, err := db.Find[asymkey_model.GPGKey](ctx, asymkey_model.FindGPGKeyOptions{
OwnerID: u.ID,
IncludeSubKeys: true,
})
if err != nil {
Add configurable Trust Models (#11712) * Add configurable Trust Models Gitea's default signature verification model differs from GitHub. GitHub uses signatures to verify that the committer is who they say they are - meaning that when GitHub makes a signed commit it must be the committer. The GitHub model prevents re-publishing of commits after revocation of a key and prevents re-signing of other people's commits to create a completely trusted repository signed by one key or a set of trusted keys. The default behaviour of Gitea in contrast is to always display the avatar and information related to a signature. This allows signatures to be decoupled from the committer. That being said, allowing arbitary users to present other peoples commits as theirs is not necessarily desired therefore we have a trust model whereby signatures from collaborators are marked trusted, signatures matching the commit line are marked untrusted and signatures that match a user in the db but not the committer line are marked unmatched. The problem with this model is that this conflicts with Github therefore we need to provide an option to allow users to choose the Github model should they wish to. Signed-off-by: Andrew Thornton <art27@cantab.net> * Adjust locale strings Signed-off-by: Andrew Thornton <art27@cantab.net> * as per @6543 Co-authored-by: 6543 <6543@obermui.de> * Update models/gpg_key.go * Add migration for repository Signed-off-by: Andrew Thornton <art27@cantab.net> Co-authored-by: 6543 <6543@obermui.de> Co-authored-by: Lunny Xiao <xiaolunwen@gmail.com>
2020-09-19 18:44:55 +02:00
return false, "", nil, err
}
if len(keys) == 0 {
Add configurable Trust Models (#11712) * Add configurable Trust Models Gitea's default signature verification model differs from GitHub. GitHub uses signatures to verify that the committer is who they say they are - meaning that when GitHub makes a signed commit it must be the committer. The GitHub model prevents re-publishing of commits after revocation of a key and prevents re-signing of other people's commits to create a completely trusted repository signed by one key or a set of trusted keys. The default behaviour of Gitea in contrast is to always display the avatar and information related to a signature. This allows signatures to be decoupled from the committer. That being said, allowing arbitary users to present other peoples commits as theirs is not necessarily desired therefore we have a trust model whereby signatures from collaborators are marked trusted, signatures matching the commit line are marked untrusted and signatures that match a user in the db but not the committer line are marked unmatched. The problem with this model is that this conflicts with Github therefore we need to provide an option to allow users to choose the Github model should they wish to. Signed-off-by: Andrew Thornton <art27@cantab.net> * Adjust locale strings Signed-off-by: Andrew Thornton <art27@cantab.net> * as per @6543 Co-authored-by: 6543 <6543@obermui.de> * Update models/gpg_key.go * Add migration for repository Signed-off-by: Andrew Thornton <art27@cantab.net> Co-authored-by: 6543 <6543@obermui.de> Co-authored-by: Lunny Xiao <xiaolunwen@gmail.com>
2020-09-19 18:44:55 +02:00
return false, "", nil, &ErrWontSign{pubkey}
Sign merges, CRUD, Wiki and Repository initialisation with gpg key (#7631) This PR fixes #7598 by providing a configurable way of signing commits across the Gitea instance. Per repository configurability and import/generation of trusted secure keys is not provided by this PR - from a security PoV that's probably impossible to do properly. Similarly web-signing, that is asking the user to sign something, is not implemented - this could be done at a later stage however. ## Features - [x] If commit.gpgsign is set in .gitconfig sign commits and files created through repofiles. (merges should already have been signed.) - [x] Verify commits signed with the default gpg as valid - [x] Signer, Committer and Author can all be different - [x] Allow signer to be arbitrarily different - We still require the key to have an activated email on Gitea. A more complete implementation would be to use a keyserver and mark external-or-unactivated with an "unknown" trust level icon. - [x] Add a signing-key.gpg endpoint to get the default gpg pub key if available - Rather than add a fake web-flow user I've added this as an endpoint on /api/v1/signing-key.gpg - [x] Try to match the default key with a user on gitea - this is done at verification time - [x] Make things configurable? - app.ini configuration done - [x] when checking commits are signed need to check if they're actually verifiable too - [x] Add documentation I have decided that adjusting the docker to create a default gpg key is not the correct thing to do and therefore have not implemented this.
2019-10-16 15:42:42 +02:00
}
case twofa:
twofaModel, err := auth.GetTwoFactorByUID(ctx, u.ID)
2022-01-02 14:12:35 +01:00
if err != nil && !auth.IsErrTwoFactorNotEnrolled(err) {
Add configurable Trust Models (#11712) * Add configurable Trust Models Gitea's default signature verification model differs from GitHub. GitHub uses signatures to verify that the committer is who they say they are - meaning that when GitHub makes a signed commit it must be the committer. The GitHub model prevents re-publishing of commits after revocation of a key and prevents re-signing of other people's commits to create a completely trusted repository signed by one key or a set of trusted keys. The default behaviour of Gitea in contrast is to always display the avatar and information related to a signature. This allows signatures to be decoupled from the committer. That being said, allowing arbitary users to present other peoples commits as theirs is not necessarily desired therefore we have a trust model whereby signatures from collaborators are marked trusted, signatures matching the commit line are marked untrusted and signatures that match a user in the db but not the committer line are marked unmatched. The problem with this model is that this conflicts with Github therefore we need to provide an option to allow users to choose the Github model should they wish to. Signed-off-by: Andrew Thornton <art27@cantab.net> * Adjust locale strings Signed-off-by: Andrew Thornton <art27@cantab.net> * as per @6543 Co-authored-by: 6543 <6543@obermui.de> * Update models/gpg_key.go * Add migration for repository Signed-off-by: Andrew Thornton <art27@cantab.net> Co-authored-by: 6543 <6543@obermui.de> Co-authored-by: Lunny Xiao <xiaolunwen@gmail.com>
2020-09-19 18:44:55 +02:00
return false, "", nil, err
}
if twofaModel == nil {
Add configurable Trust Models (#11712) * Add configurable Trust Models Gitea's default signature verification model differs from GitHub. GitHub uses signatures to verify that the committer is who they say they are - meaning that when GitHub makes a signed commit it must be the committer. The GitHub model prevents re-publishing of commits after revocation of a key and prevents re-signing of other people's commits to create a completely trusted repository signed by one key or a set of trusted keys. The default behaviour of Gitea in contrast is to always display the avatar and information related to a signature. This allows signatures to be decoupled from the committer. That being said, allowing arbitary users to present other peoples commits as theirs is not necessarily desired therefore we have a trust model whereby signatures from collaborators are marked trusted, signatures matching the commit line are marked untrusted and signatures that match a user in the db but not the committer line are marked unmatched. The problem with this model is that this conflicts with Github therefore we need to provide an option to allow users to choose the Github model should they wish to. Signed-off-by: Andrew Thornton <art27@cantab.net> * Adjust locale strings Signed-off-by: Andrew Thornton <art27@cantab.net> * as per @6543 Co-authored-by: 6543 <6543@obermui.de> * Update models/gpg_key.go * Add migration for repository Signed-off-by: Andrew Thornton <art27@cantab.net> Co-authored-by: 6543 <6543@obermui.de> Co-authored-by: Lunny Xiao <xiaolunwen@gmail.com>
2020-09-19 18:44:55 +02:00
return false, "", nil, &ErrWontSign{twofa}
Sign merges, CRUD, Wiki and Repository initialisation with gpg key (#7631) This PR fixes #7598 by providing a configurable way of signing commits across the Gitea instance. Per repository configurability and import/generation of trusted secure keys is not provided by this PR - from a security PoV that's probably impossible to do properly. Similarly web-signing, that is asking the user to sign something, is not implemented - this could be done at a later stage however. ## Features - [x] If commit.gpgsign is set in .gitconfig sign commits and files created through repofiles. (merges should already have been signed.) - [x] Verify commits signed with the default gpg as valid - [x] Signer, Committer and Author can all be different - [x] Allow signer to be arbitrarily different - We still require the key to have an activated email on Gitea. A more complete implementation would be to use a keyserver and mark external-or-unactivated with an "unknown" trust level icon. - [x] Add a signing-key.gpg endpoint to get the default gpg pub key if available - Rather than add a fake web-flow user I've added this as an endpoint on /api/v1/signing-key.gpg - [x] Try to match the default key with a user on gitea - this is done at verification time - [x] Make things configurable? - app.ini configuration done - [x] when checking commits are signed need to check if they're actually verifiable too - [x] Add documentation I have decided that adjusting the docker to create a default gpg key is not the correct thing to do and therefore have not implemented this.
2019-10-16 15:42:42 +02:00
}
}
}
Add configurable Trust Models (#11712) * Add configurable Trust Models Gitea's default signature verification model differs from GitHub. GitHub uses signatures to verify that the committer is who they say they are - meaning that when GitHub makes a signed commit it must be the committer. The GitHub model prevents re-publishing of commits after revocation of a key and prevents re-signing of other people's commits to create a completely trusted repository signed by one key or a set of trusted keys. The default behaviour of Gitea in contrast is to always display the avatar and information related to a signature. This allows signatures to be decoupled from the committer. That being said, allowing arbitary users to present other peoples commits as theirs is not necessarily desired therefore we have a trust model whereby signatures from collaborators are marked trusted, signatures matching the commit line are marked untrusted and signatures that match a user in the db but not the committer line are marked unmatched. The problem with this model is that this conflicts with Github therefore we need to provide an option to allow users to choose the Github model should they wish to. Signed-off-by: Andrew Thornton <art27@cantab.net> * Adjust locale strings Signed-off-by: Andrew Thornton <art27@cantab.net> * as per @6543 Co-authored-by: 6543 <6543@obermui.de> * Update models/gpg_key.go * Add migration for repository Signed-off-by: Andrew Thornton <art27@cantab.net> Co-authored-by: 6543 <6543@obermui.de> Co-authored-by: Lunny Xiao <xiaolunwen@gmail.com>
2020-09-19 18:44:55 +02:00
return true, signingKey, sig, nil
Sign merges, CRUD, Wiki and Repository initialisation with gpg key (#7631) This PR fixes #7598 by providing a configurable way of signing commits across the Gitea instance. Per repository configurability and import/generation of trusted secure keys is not provided by this PR - from a security PoV that's probably impossible to do properly. Similarly web-signing, that is asking the user to sign something, is not implemented - this could be done at a later stage however. ## Features - [x] If commit.gpgsign is set in .gitconfig sign commits and files created through repofiles. (merges should already have been signed.) - [x] Verify commits signed with the default gpg as valid - [x] Signer, Committer and Author can all be different - [x] Allow signer to be arbitrarily different - We still require the key to have an activated email on Gitea. A more complete implementation would be to use a keyserver and mark external-or-unactivated with an "unknown" trust level icon. - [x] Add a signing-key.gpg endpoint to get the default gpg pub key if available - Rather than add a fake web-flow user I've added this as an endpoint on /api/v1/signing-key.gpg - [x] Try to match the default key with a user on gitea - this is done at verification time - [x] Make things configurable? - app.ini configuration done - [x] when checking commits are signed need to check if they're actually verifiable too - [x] Add documentation I have decided that adjusting the docker to create a default gpg key is not the correct thing to do and therefore have not implemented this.
2019-10-16 15:42:42 +02:00
}
// SignWikiCommit determines if we should sign the commits to this repository wiki
func SignWikiCommit(ctx context.Context, repoWikiPath string, u *user_model.User) (bool, string, *git.Signature, error) {
Sign merges, CRUD, Wiki and Repository initialisation with gpg key (#7631) This PR fixes #7598 by providing a configurable way of signing commits across the Gitea instance. Per repository configurability and import/generation of trusted secure keys is not provided by this PR - from a security PoV that's probably impossible to do properly. Similarly web-signing, that is asking the user to sign something, is not implemented - this could be done at a later stage however. ## Features - [x] If commit.gpgsign is set in .gitconfig sign commits and files created through repofiles. (merges should already have been signed.) - [x] Verify commits signed with the default gpg as valid - [x] Signer, Committer and Author can all be different - [x] Allow signer to be arbitrarily different - We still require the key to have an activated email on Gitea. A more complete implementation would be to use a keyserver and mark external-or-unactivated with an "unknown" trust level icon. - [x] Add a signing-key.gpg endpoint to get the default gpg pub key if available - Rather than add a fake web-flow user I've added this as an endpoint on /api/v1/signing-key.gpg - [x] Try to match the default key with a user on gitea - this is done at verification time - [x] Make things configurable? - app.ini configuration done - [x] when checking commits are signed need to check if they're actually verifiable too - [x] Add documentation I have decided that adjusting the docker to create a default gpg key is not the correct thing to do and therefore have not implemented this.
2019-10-16 15:42:42 +02:00
rules := signingModeFromStrings(setting.Repository.Signing.Wiki)
signingKey, sig := SigningKey(ctx, repoWikiPath)
Sign merges, CRUD, Wiki and Repository initialisation with gpg key (#7631) This PR fixes #7598 by providing a configurable way of signing commits across the Gitea instance. Per repository configurability and import/generation of trusted secure keys is not provided by this PR - from a security PoV that's probably impossible to do properly. Similarly web-signing, that is asking the user to sign something, is not implemented - this could be done at a later stage however. ## Features - [x] If commit.gpgsign is set in .gitconfig sign commits and files created through repofiles. (merges should already have been signed.) - [x] Verify commits signed with the default gpg as valid - [x] Signer, Committer and Author can all be different - [x] Allow signer to be arbitrarily different - We still require the key to have an activated email on Gitea. A more complete implementation would be to use a keyserver and mark external-or-unactivated with an "unknown" trust level icon. - [x] Add a signing-key.gpg endpoint to get the default gpg pub key if available - Rather than add a fake web-flow user I've added this as an endpoint on /api/v1/signing-key.gpg - [x] Try to match the default key with a user on gitea - this is done at verification time - [x] Make things configurable? - app.ini configuration done - [x] when checking commits are signed need to check if they're actually verifiable too - [x] Add documentation I have decided that adjusting the docker to create a default gpg key is not the correct thing to do and therefore have not implemented this.
2019-10-16 15:42:42 +02:00
if signingKey == "" {
Add configurable Trust Models (#11712) * Add configurable Trust Models Gitea's default signature verification model differs from GitHub. GitHub uses signatures to verify that the committer is who they say they are - meaning that when GitHub makes a signed commit it must be the committer. The GitHub model prevents re-publishing of commits after revocation of a key and prevents re-signing of other people's commits to create a completely trusted repository signed by one key or a set of trusted keys. The default behaviour of Gitea in contrast is to always display the avatar and information related to a signature. This allows signatures to be decoupled from the committer. That being said, allowing arbitary users to present other peoples commits as theirs is not necessarily desired therefore we have a trust model whereby signatures from collaborators are marked trusted, signatures matching the commit line are marked untrusted and signatures that match a user in the db but not the committer line are marked unmatched. The problem with this model is that this conflicts with Github therefore we need to provide an option to allow users to choose the Github model should they wish to. Signed-off-by: Andrew Thornton <art27@cantab.net> * Adjust locale strings Signed-off-by: Andrew Thornton <art27@cantab.net> * as per @6543 Co-authored-by: 6543 <6543@obermui.de> * Update models/gpg_key.go * Add migration for repository Signed-off-by: Andrew Thornton <art27@cantab.net> Co-authored-by: 6543 <6543@obermui.de> Co-authored-by: Lunny Xiao <xiaolunwen@gmail.com>
2020-09-19 18:44:55 +02:00
return false, "", nil, &ErrWontSign{noKey}
Sign merges, CRUD, Wiki and Repository initialisation with gpg key (#7631) This PR fixes #7598 by providing a configurable way of signing commits across the Gitea instance. Per repository configurability and import/generation of trusted secure keys is not provided by this PR - from a security PoV that's probably impossible to do properly. Similarly web-signing, that is asking the user to sign something, is not implemented - this could be done at a later stage however. ## Features - [x] If commit.gpgsign is set in .gitconfig sign commits and files created through repofiles. (merges should already have been signed.) - [x] Verify commits signed with the default gpg as valid - [x] Signer, Committer and Author can all be different - [x] Allow signer to be arbitrarily different - We still require the key to have an activated email on Gitea. A more complete implementation would be to use a keyserver and mark external-or-unactivated with an "unknown" trust level icon. - [x] Add a signing-key.gpg endpoint to get the default gpg pub key if available - Rather than add a fake web-flow user I've added this as an endpoint on /api/v1/signing-key.gpg - [x] Try to match the default key with a user on gitea - this is done at verification time - [x] Make things configurable? - app.ini configuration done - [x] when checking commits are signed need to check if they're actually verifiable too - [x] Add documentation I have decided that adjusting the docker to create a default gpg key is not the correct thing to do and therefore have not implemented this.
2019-10-16 15:42:42 +02:00
}
Loop:
Sign merges, CRUD, Wiki and Repository initialisation with gpg key (#7631) This PR fixes #7598 by providing a configurable way of signing commits across the Gitea instance. Per repository configurability and import/generation of trusted secure keys is not provided by this PR - from a security PoV that's probably impossible to do properly. Similarly web-signing, that is asking the user to sign something, is not implemented - this could be done at a later stage however. ## Features - [x] If commit.gpgsign is set in .gitconfig sign commits and files created through repofiles. (merges should already have been signed.) - [x] Verify commits signed with the default gpg as valid - [x] Signer, Committer and Author can all be different - [x] Allow signer to be arbitrarily different - We still require the key to have an activated email on Gitea. A more complete implementation would be to use a keyserver and mark external-or-unactivated with an "unknown" trust level icon. - [x] Add a signing-key.gpg endpoint to get the default gpg pub key if available - Rather than add a fake web-flow user I've added this as an endpoint on /api/v1/signing-key.gpg - [x] Try to match the default key with a user on gitea - this is done at verification time - [x] Make things configurable? - app.ini configuration done - [x] when checking commits are signed need to check if they're actually verifiable too - [x] Add documentation I have decided that adjusting the docker to create a default gpg key is not the correct thing to do and therefore have not implemented this.
2019-10-16 15:42:42 +02:00
for _, rule := range rules {
switch rule {
case never:
Add configurable Trust Models (#11712) * Add configurable Trust Models Gitea's default signature verification model differs from GitHub. GitHub uses signatures to verify that the committer is who they say they are - meaning that when GitHub makes a signed commit it must be the committer. The GitHub model prevents re-publishing of commits after revocation of a key and prevents re-signing of other people's commits to create a completely trusted repository signed by one key or a set of trusted keys. The default behaviour of Gitea in contrast is to always display the avatar and information related to a signature. This allows signatures to be decoupled from the committer. That being said, allowing arbitary users to present other peoples commits as theirs is not necessarily desired therefore we have a trust model whereby signatures from collaborators are marked trusted, signatures matching the commit line are marked untrusted and signatures that match a user in the db but not the committer line are marked unmatched. The problem with this model is that this conflicts with Github therefore we need to provide an option to allow users to choose the Github model should they wish to. Signed-off-by: Andrew Thornton <art27@cantab.net> * Adjust locale strings Signed-off-by: Andrew Thornton <art27@cantab.net> * as per @6543 Co-authored-by: 6543 <6543@obermui.de> * Update models/gpg_key.go * Add migration for repository Signed-off-by: Andrew Thornton <art27@cantab.net> Co-authored-by: 6543 <6543@obermui.de> Co-authored-by: Lunny Xiao <xiaolunwen@gmail.com>
2020-09-19 18:44:55 +02:00
return false, "", nil, &ErrWontSign{never}
Sign merges, CRUD, Wiki and Repository initialisation with gpg key (#7631) This PR fixes #7598 by providing a configurable way of signing commits across the Gitea instance. Per repository configurability and import/generation of trusted secure keys is not provided by this PR - from a security PoV that's probably impossible to do properly. Similarly web-signing, that is asking the user to sign something, is not implemented - this could be done at a later stage however. ## Features - [x] If commit.gpgsign is set in .gitconfig sign commits and files created through repofiles. (merges should already have been signed.) - [x] Verify commits signed with the default gpg as valid - [x] Signer, Committer and Author can all be different - [x] Allow signer to be arbitrarily different - We still require the key to have an activated email on Gitea. A more complete implementation would be to use a keyserver and mark external-or-unactivated with an "unknown" trust level icon. - [x] Add a signing-key.gpg endpoint to get the default gpg pub key if available - Rather than add a fake web-flow user I've added this as an endpoint on /api/v1/signing-key.gpg - [x] Try to match the default key with a user on gitea - this is done at verification time - [x] Make things configurable? - app.ini configuration done - [x] when checking commits are signed need to check if they're actually verifiable too - [x] Add documentation I have decided that adjusting the docker to create a default gpg key is not the correct thing to do and therefore have not implemented this.
2019-10-16 15:42:42 +02:00
case always:
break Loop
Sign merges, CRUD, Wiki and Repository initialisation with gpg key (#7631) This PR fixes #7598 by providing a configurable way of signing commits across the Gitea instance. Per repository configurability and import/generation of trusted secure keys is not provided by this PR - from a security PoV that's probably impossible to do properly. Similarly web-signing, that is asking the user to sign something, is not implemented - this could be done at a later stage however. ## Features - [x] If commit.gpgsign is set in .gitconfig sign commits and files created through repofiles. (merges should already have been signed.) - [x] Verify commits signed with the default gpg as valid - [x] Signer, Committer and Author can all be different - [x] Allow signer to be arbitrarily different - We still require the key to have an activated email on Gitea. A more complete implementation would be to use a keyserver and mark external-or-unactivated with an "unknown" trust level icon. - [x] Add a signing-key.gpg endpoint to get the default gpg pub key if available - Rather than add a fake web-flow user I've added this as an endpoint on /api/v1/signing-key.gpg - [x] Try to match the default key with a user on gitea - this is done at verification time - [x] Make things configurable? - app.ini configuration done - [x] when checking commits are signed need to check if they're actually verifiable too - [x] Add documentation I have decided that adjusting the docker to create a default gpg key is not the correct thing to do and therefore have not implemented this.
2019-10-16 15:42:42 +02:00
case pubkey:
keys, err := db.Find[asymkey_model.GPGKey](ctx, asymkey_model.FindGPGKeyOptions{
OwnerID: u.ID,
IncludeSubKeys: true,
})
if err != nil {
Add configurable Trust Models (#11712) * Add configurable Trust Models Gitea's default signature verification model differs from GitHub. GitHub uses signatures to verify that the committer is who they say they are - meaning that when GitHub makes a signed commit it must be the committer. The GitHub model prevents re-publishing of commits after revocation of a key and prevents re-signing of other people's commits to create a completely trusted repository signed by one key or a set of trusted keys. The default behaviour of Gitea in contrast is to always display the avatar and information related to a signature. This allows signatures to be decoupled from the committer. That being said, allowing arbitary users to present other peoples commits as theirs is not necessarily desired therefore we have a trust model whereby signatures from collaborators are marked trusted, signatures matching the commit line are marked untrusted and signatures that match a user in the db but not the committer line are marked unmatched. The problem with this model is that this conflicts with Github therefore we need to provide an option to allow users to choose the Github model should they wish to. Signed-off-by: Andrew Thornton <art27@cantab.net> * Adjust locale strings Signed-off-by: Andrew Thornton <art27@cantab.net> * as per @6543 Co-authored-by: 6543 <6543@obermui.de> * Update models/gpg_key.go * Add migration for repository Signed-off-by: Andrew Thornton <art27@cantab.net> Co-authored-by: 6543 <6543@obermui.de> Co-authored-by: Lunny Xiao <xiaolunwen@gmail.com>
2020-09-19 18:44:55 +02:00
return false, "", nil, err
}
if len(keys) == 0 {
Add configurable Trust Models (#11712) * Add configurable Trust Models Gitea's default signature verification model differs from GitHub. GitHub uses signatures to verify that the committer is who they say they are - meaning that when GitHub makes a signed commit it must be the committer. The GitHub model prevents re-publishing of commits after revocation of a key and prevents re-signing of other people's commits to create a completely trusted repository signed by one key or a set of trusted keys. The default behaviour of Gitea in contrast is to always display the avatar and information related to a signature. This allows signatures to be decoupled from the committer. That being said, allowing arbitary users to present other peoples commits as theirs is not necessarily desired therefore we have a trust model whereby signatures from collaborators are marked trusted, signatures matching the commit line are marked untrusted and signatures that match a user in the db but not the committer line are marked unmatched. The problem with this model is that this conflicts with Github therefore we need to provide an option to allow users to choose the Github model should they wish to. Signed-off-by: Andrew Thornton <art27@cantab.net> * Adjust locale strings Signed-off-by: Andrew Thornton <art27@cantab.net> * as per @6543 Co-authored-by: 6543 <6543@obermui.de> * Update models/gpg_key.go * Add migration for repository Signed-off-by: Andrew Thornton <art27@cantab.net> Co-authored-by: 6543 <6543@obermui.de> Co-authored-by: Lunny Xiao <xiaolunwen@gmail.com>
2020-09-19 18:44:55 +02:00
return false, "", nil, &ErrWontSign{pubkey}
Sign merges, CRUD, Wiki and Repository initialisation with gpg key (#7631) This PR fixes #7598 by providing a configurable way of signing commits across the Gitea instance. Per repository configurability and import/generation of trusted secure keys is not provided by this PR - from a security PoV that's probably impossible to do properly. Similarly web-signing, that is asking the user to sign something, is not implemented - this could be done at a later stage however. ## Features - [x] If commit.gpgsign is set in .gitconfig sign commits and files created through repofiles. (merges should already have been signed.) - [x] Verify commits signed with the default gpg as valid - [x] Signer, Committer and Author can all be different - [x] Allow signer to be arbitrarily different - We still require the key to have an activated email on Gitea. A more complete implementation would be to use a keyserver and mark external-or-unactivated with an "unknown" trust level icon. - [x] Add a signing-key.gpg endpoint to get the default gpg pub key if available - Rather than add a fake web-flow user I've added this as an endpoint on /api/v1/signing-key.gpg - [x] Try to match the default key with a user on gitea - this is done at verification time - [x] Make things configurable? - app.ini configuration done - [x] when checking commits are signed need to check if they're actually verifiable too - [x] Add documentation I have decided that adjusting the docker to create a default gpg key is not the correct thing to do and therefore have not implemented this.
2019-10-16 15:42:42 +02:00
}
case twofa:
twofaModel, err := auth.GetTwoFactorByUID(ctx, u.ID)
2022-01-02 14:12:35 +01:00
if err != nil && !auth.IsErrTwoFactorNotEnrolled(err) {
Add configurable Trust Models (#11712) * Add configurable Trust Models Gitea's default signature verification model differs from GitHub. GitHub uses signatures to verify that the committer is who they say they are - meaning that when GitHub makes a signed commit it must be the committer. The GitHub model prevents re-publishing of commits after revocation of a key and prevents re-signing of other people's commits to create a completely trusted repository signed by one key or a set of trusted keys. The default behaviour of Gitea in contrast is to always display the avatar and information related to a signature. This allows signatures to be decoupled from the committer. That being said, allowing arbitary users to present other peoples commits as theirs is not necessarily desired therefore we have a trust model whereby signatures from collaborators are marked trusted, signatures matching the commit line are marked untrusted and signatures that match a user in the db but not the committer line are marked unmatched. The problem with this model is that this conflicts with Github therefore we need to provide an option to allow users to choose the Github model should they wish to. Signed-off-by: Andrew Thornton <art27@cantab.net> * Adjust locale strings Signed-off-by: Andrew Thornton <art27@cantab.net> * as per @6543 Co-authored-by: 6543 <6543@obermui.de> * Update models/gpg_key.go * Add migration for repository Signed-off-by: Andrew Thornton <art27@cantab.net> Co-authored-by: 6543 <6543@obermui.de> Co-authored-by: Lunny Xiao <xiaolunwen@gmail.com>
2020-09-19 18:44:55 +02:00
return false, "", nil, err
}
if twofaModel == nil {
Add configurable Trust Models (#11712) * Add configurable Trust Models Gitea's default signature verification model differs from GitHub. GitHub uses signatures to verify that the committer is who they say they are - meaning that when GitHub makes a signed commit it must be the committer. The GitHub model prevents re-publishing of commits after revocation of a key and prevents re-signing of other people's commits to create a completely trusted repository signed by one key or a set of trusted keys. The default behaviour of Gitea in contrast is to always display the avatar and information related to a signature. This allows signatures to be decoupled from the committer. That being said, allowing arbitary users to present other peoples commits as theirs is not necessarily desired therefore we have a trust model whereby signatures from collaborators are marked trusted, signatures matching the commit line are marked untrusted and signatures that match a user in the db but not the committer line are marked unmatched. The problem with this model is that this conflicts with Github therefore we need to provide an option to allow users to choose the Github model should they wish to. Signed-off-by: Andrew Thornton <art27@cantab.net> * Adjust locale strings Signed-off-by: Andrew Thornton <art27@cantab.net> * as per @6543 Co-authored-by: 6543 <6543@obermui.de> * Update models/gpg_key.go * Add migration for repository Signed-off-by: Andrew Thornton <art27@cantab.net> Co-authored-by: 6543 <6543@obermui.de> Co-authored-by: Lunny Xiao <xiaolunwen@gmail.com>
2020-09-19 18:44:55 +02:00
return false, "", nil, &ErrWontSign{twofa}
Sign merges, CRUD, Wiki and Repository initialisation with gpg key (#7631) This PR fixes #7598 by providing a configurable way of signing commits across the Gitea instance. Per repository configurability and import/generation of trusted secure keys is not provided by this PR - from a security PoV that's probably impossible to do properly. Similarly web-signing, that is asking the user to sign something, is not implemented - this could be done at a later stage however. ## Features - [x] If commit.gpgsign is set in .gitconfig sign commits and files created through repofiles. (merges should already have been signed.) - [x] Verify commits signed with the default gpg as valid - [x] Signer, Committer and Author can all be different - [x] Allow signer to be arbitrarily different - We still require the key to have an activated email on Gitea. A more complete implementation would be to use a keyserver and mark external-or-unactivated with an "unknown" trust level icon. - [x] Add a signing-key.gpg endpoint to get the default gpg pub key if available - Rather than add a fake web-flow user I've added this as an endpoint on /api/v1/signing-key.gpg - [x] Try to match the default key with a user on gitea - this is done at verification time - [x] Make things configurable? - app.ini configuration done - [x] when checking commits are signed need to check if they're actually verifiable too - [x] Add documentation I have decided that adjusting the docker to create a default gpg key is not the correct thing to do and therefore have not implemented this.
2019-10-16 15:42:42 +02:00
}
case parentSigned:
gitRepo, err := git.OpenRepository(ctx, repoWikiPath)
Sign merges, CRUD, Wiki and Repository initialisation with gpg key (#7631) This PR fixes #7598 by providing a configurable way of signing commits across the Gitea instance. Per repository configurability and import/generation of trusted secure keys is not provided by this PR - from a security PoV that's probably impossible to do properly. Similarly web-signing, that is asking the user to sign something, is not implemented - this could be done at a later stage however. ## Features - [x] If commit.gpgsign is set in .gitconfig sign commits and files created through repofiles. (merges should already have been signed.) - [x] Verify commits signed with the default gpg as valid - [x] Signer, Committer and Author can all be different - [x] Allow signer to be arbitrarily different - We still require the key to have an activated email on Gitea. A more complete implementation would be to use a keyserver and mark external-or-unactivated with an "unknown" trust level icon. - [x] Add a signing-key.gpg endpoint to get the default gpg pub key if available - Rather than add a fake web-flow user I've added this as an endpoint on /api/v1/signing-key.gpg - [x] Try to match the default key with a user on gitea - this is done at verification time - [x] Make things configurable? - app.ini configuration done - [x] when checking commits are signed need to check if they're actually verifiable too - [x] Add documentation I have decided that adjusting the docker to create a default gpg key is not the correct thing to do and therefore have not implemented this.
2019-10-16 15:42:42 +02:00
if err != nil {
Add configurable Trust Models (#11712) * Add configurable Trust Models Gitea's default signature verification model differs from GitHub. GitHub uses signatures to verify that the committer is who they say they are - meaning that when GitHub makes a signed commit it must be the committer. The GitHub model prevents re-publishing of commits after revocation of a key and prevents re-signing of other people's commits to create a completely trusted repository signed by one key or a set of trusted keys. The default behaviour of Gitea in contrast is to always display the avatar and information related to a signature. This allows signatures to be decoupled from the committer. That being said, allowing arbitary users to present other peoples commits as theirs is not necessarily desired therefore we have a trust model whereby signatures from collaborators are marked trusted, signatures matching the commit line are marked untrusted and signatures that match a user in the db but not the committer line are marked unmatched. The problem with this model is that this conflicts with Github therefore we need to provide an option to allow users to choose the Github model should they wish to. Signed-off-by: Andrew Thornton <art27@cantab.net> * Adjust locale strings Signed-off-by: Andrew Thornton <art27@cantab.net> * as per @6543 Co-authored-by: 6543 <6543@obermui.de> * Update models/gpg_key.go * Add migration for repository Signed-off-by: Andrew Thornton <art27@cantab.net> Co-authored-by: 6543 <6543@obermui.de> Co-authored-by: Lunny Xiao <xiaolunwen@gmail.com>
2020-09-19 18:44:55 +02:00
return false, "", nil, err
Sign merges, CRUD, Wiki and Repository initialisation with gpg key (#7631) This PR fixes #7598 by providing a configurable way of signing commits across the Gitea instance. Per repository configurability and import/generation of trusted secure keys is not provided by this PR - from a security PoV that's probably impossible to do properly. Similarly web-signing, that is asking the user to sign something, is not implemented - this could be done at a later stage however. ## Features - [x] If commit.gpgsign is set in .gitconfig sign commits and files created through repofiles. (merges should already have been signed.) - [x] Verify commits signed with the default gpg as valid - [x] Signer, Committer and Author can all be different - [x] Allow signer to be arbitrarily different - We still require the key to have an activated email on Gitea. A more complete implementation would be to use a keyserver and mark external-or-unactivated with an "unknown" trust level icon. - [x] Add a signing-key.gpg endpoint to get the default gpg pub key if available - Rather than add a fake web-flow user I've added this as an endpoint on /api/v1/signing-key.gpg - [x] Try to match the default key with a user on gitea - this is done at verification time - [x] Make things configurable? - app.ini configuration done - [x] when checking commits are signed need to check if they're actually verifiable too - [x] Add documentation I have decided that adjusting the docker to create a default gpg key is not the correct thing to do and therefore have not implemented this.
2019-10-16 15:42:42 +02:00
}
defer gitRepo.Close()
Sign merges, CRUD, Wiki and Repository initialisation with gpg key (#7631) This PR fixes #7598 by providing a configurable way of signing commits across the Gitea instance. Per repository configurability and import/generation of trusted secure keys is not provided by this PR - from a security PoV that's probably impossible to do properly. Similarly web-signing, that is asking the user to sign something, is not implemented - this could be done at a later stage however. ## Features - [x] If commit.gpgsign is set in .gitconfig sign commits and files created through repofiles. (merges should already have been signed.) - [x] Verify commits signed with the default gpg as valid - [x] Signer, Committer and Author can all be different - [x] Allow signer to be arbitrarily different - We still require the key to have an activated email on Gitea. A more complete implementation would be to use a keyserver and mark external-or-unactivated with an "unknown" trust level icon. - [x] Add a signing-key.gpg endpoint to get the default gpg pub key if available - Rather than add a fake web-flow user I've added this as an endpoint on /api/v1/signing-key.gpg - [x] Try to match the default key with a user on gitea - this is done at verification time - [x] Make things configurable? - app.ini configuration done - [x] when checking commits are signed need to check if they're actually verifiable too - [x] Add documentation I have decided that adjusting the docker to create a default gpg key is not the correct thing to do and therefore have not implemented this.
2019-10-16 15:42:42 +02:00
commit, err := gitRepo.GetCommit("HEAD")
if err != nil {
Add configurable Trust Models (#11712) * Add configurable Trust Models Gitea's default signature verification model differs from GitHub. GitHub uses signatures to verify that the committer is who they say they are - meaning that when GitHub makes a signed commit it must be the committer. The GitHub model prevents re-publishing of commits after revocation of a key and prevents re-signing of other people's commits to create a completely trusted repository signed by one key or a set of trusted keys. The default behaviour of Gitea in contrast is to always display the avatar and information related to a signature. This allows signatures to be decoupled from the committer. That being said, allowing arbitary users to present other peoples commits as theirs is not necessarily desired therefore we have a trust model whereby signatures from collaborators are marked trusted, signatures matching the commit line are marked untrusted and signatures that match a user in the db but not the committer line are marked unmatched. The problem with this model is that this conflicts with Github therefore we need to provide an option to allow users to choose the Github model should they wish to. Signed-off-by: Andrew Thornton <art27@cantab.net> * Adjust locale strings Signed-off-by: Andrew Thornton <art27@cantab.net> * as per @6543 Co-authored-by: 6543 <6543@obermui.de> * Update models/gpg_key.go * Add migration for repository Signed-off-by: Andrew Thornton <art27@cantab.net> Co-authored-by: 6543 <6543@obermui.de> Co-authored-by: Lunny Xiao <xiaolunwen@gmail.com>
2020-09-19 18:44:55 +02:00
return false, "", nil, err
Sign merges, CRUD, Wiki and Repository initialisation with gpg key (#7631) This PR fixes #7598 by providing a configurable way of signing commits across the Gitea instance. Per repository configurability and import/generation of trusted secure keys is not provided by this PR - from a security PoV that's probably impossible to do properly. Similarly web-signing, that is asking the user to sign something, is not implemented - this could be done at a later stage however. ## Features - [x] If commit.gpgsign is set in .gitconfig sign commits and files created through repofiles. (merges should already have been signed.) - [x] Verify commits signed with the default gpg as valid - [x] Signer, Committer and Author can all be different - [x] Allow signer to be arbitrarily different - We still require the key to have an activated email on Gitea. A more complete implementation would be to use a keyserver and mark external-or-unactivated with an "unknown" trust level icon. - [x] Add a signing-key.gpg endpoint to get the default gpg pub key if available - Rather than add a fake web-flow user I've added this as an endpoint on /api/v1/signing-key.gpg - [x] Try to match the default key with a user on gitea - this is done at verification time - [x] Make things configurable? - app.ini configuration done - [x] when checking commits are signed need to check if they're actually verifiable too - [x] Add documentation I have decided that adjusting the docker to create a default gpg key is not the correct thing to do and therefore have not implemented this.
2019-10-16 15:42:42 +02:00
}
if commit.Signature == nil {
Add configurable Trust Models (#11712) * Add configurable Trust Models Gitea's default signature verification model differs from GitHub. GitHub uses signatures to verify that the committer is who they say they are - meaning that when GitHub makes a signed commit it must be the committer. The GitHub model prevents re-publishing of commits after revocation of a key and prevents re-signing of other people's commits to create a completely trusted repository signed by one key or a set of trusted keys. The default behaviour of Gitea in contrast is to always display the avatar and information related to a signature. This allows signatures to be decoupled from the committer. That being said, allowing arbitary users to present other peoples commits as theirs is not necessarily desired therefore we have a trust model whereby signatures from collaborators are marked trusted, signatures matching the commit line are marked untrusted and signatures that match a user in the db but not the committer line are marked unmatched. The problem with this model is that this conflicts with Github therefore we need to provide an option to allow users to choose the Github model should they wish to. Signed-off-by: Andrew Thornton <art27@cantab.net> * Adjust locale strings Signed-off-by: Andrew Thornton <art27@cantab.net> * as per @6543 Co-authored-by: 6543 <6543@obermui.de> * Update models/gpg_key.go * Add migration for repository Signed-off-by: Andrew Thornton <art27@cantab.net> Co-authored-by: 6543 <6543@obermui.de> Co-authored-by: Lunny Xiao <xiaolunwen@gmail.com>
2020-09-19 18:44:55 +02:00
return false, "", nil, &ErrWontSign{parentSigned}
Sign merges, CRUD, Wiki and Repository initialisation with gpg key (#7631) This PR fixes #7598 by providing a configurable way of signing commits across the Gitea instance. Per repository configurability and import/generation of trusted secure keys is not provided by this PR - from a security PoV that's probably impossible to do properly. Similarly web-signing, that is asking the user to sign something, is not implemented - this could be done at a later stage however. ## Features - [x] If commit.gpgsign is set in .gitconfig sign commits and files created through repofiles. (merges should already have been signed.) - [x] Verify commits signed with the default gpg as valid - [x] Signer, Committer and Author can all be different - [x] Allow signer to be arbitrarily different - We still require the key to have an activated email on Gitea. A more complete implementation would be to use a keyserver and mark external-or-unactivated with an "unknown" trust level icon. - [x] Add a signing-key.gpg endpoint to get the default gpg pub key if available - Rather than add a fake web-flow user I've added this as an endpoint on /api/v1/signing-key.gpg - [x] Try to match the default key with a user on gitea - this is done at verification time - [x] Make things configurable? - app.ini configuration done - [x] when checking commits are signed need to check if they're actually verifiable too - [x] Add documentation I have decided that adjusting the docker to create a default gpg key is not the correct thing to do and therefore have not implemented this.
2019-10-16 15:42:42 +02:00
}
Add context cache as a request level cache (#22294) To avoid duplicated load of the same data in an HTTP request, we can set a context cache to do that. i.e. Some pages may load a user from a database with the same id in different areas on the same page. But the code is hidden in two different deep logic. How should we share the user? As a result of this PR, now if both entry functions accept `context.Context` as the first parameter and we just need to refactor `GetUserByID` to reuse the user from the context cache. Then it will not be loaded twice on an HTTP request. But of course, sometimes we would like to reload an object from the database, that's why `RemoveContextData` is also exposed. The core context cache is here. It defines a new context ```go type cacheContext struct { ctx context.Context data map[any]map[any]any lock sync.RWMutex } var cacheContextKey = struct{}{} func WithCacheContext(ctx context.Context) context.Context { return context.WithValue(ctx, cacheContextKey, &cacheContext{ ctx: ctx, data: make(map[any]map[any]any), }) } ``` Then you can use the below 4 methods to read/write/del the data within the same context. ```go func GetContextData(ctx context.Context, tp, key any) any func SetContextData(ctx context.Context, tp, key, value any) func RemoveContextData(ctx context.Context, tp, key any) func GetWithContextCache[T any](ctx context.Context, cacheGroupKey string, cacheTargetID any, f func() (T, error)) (T, error) ``` Then let's take a look at how `system.GetString` implement it. ```go func GetSetting(ctx context.Context, key string) (string, error) { return cache.GetWithContextCache(ctx, contextCacheKey, key, func() (string, error) { return cache.GetString(genSettingCacheKey(key), func() (string, error) { res, err := GetSettingNoCache(ctx, key) if err != nil { return "", err } return res.SettingValue, nil }) }) } ``` First, it will check if context data include the setting object with the key. If not, it will query from the global cache which may be memory or a Redis cache. If not, it will get the object from the database. In the end, if the object gets from the global cache or database, it will be set into the context cache. An object stored in the context cache will only be destroyed after the context disappeared.
2023-02-15 14:37:34 +01:00
verification := asymkey_model.ParseCommitWithSignature(ctx, commit)
Sign merges, CRUD, Wiki and Repository initialisation with gpg key (#7631) This PR fixes #7598 by providing a configurable way of signing commits across the Gitea instance. Per repository configurability and import/generation of trusted secure keys is not provided by this PR - from a security PoV that's probably impossible to do properly. Similarly web-signing, that is asking the user to sign something, is not implemented - this could be done at a later stage however. ## Features - [x] If commit.gpgsign is set in .gitconfig sign commits and files created through repofiles. (merges should already have been signed.) - [x] Verify commits signed with the default gpg as valid - [x] Signer, Committer and Author can all be different - [x] Allow signer to be arbitrarily different - We still require the key to have an activated email on Gitea. A more complete implementation would be to use a keyserver and mark external-or-unactivated with an "unknown" trust level icon. - [x] Add a signing-key.gpg endpoint to get the default gpg pub key if available - Rather than add a fake web-flow user I've added this as an endpoint on /api/v1/signing-key.gpg - [x] Try to match the default key with a user on gitea - this is done at verification time - [x] Make things configurable? - app.ini configuration done - [x] when checking commits are signed need to check if they're actually verifiable too - [x] Add documentation I have decided that adjusting the docker to create a default gpg key is not the correct thing to do and therefore have not implemented this.
2019-10-16 15:42:42 +02:00
if !verification.Verified {
Add configurable Trust Models (#11712) * Add configurable Trust Models Gitea's default signature verification model differs from GitHub. GitHub uses signatures to verify that the committer is who they say they are - meaning that when GitHub makes a signed commit it must be the committer. The GitHub model prevents re-publishing of commits after revocation of a key and prevents re-signing of other people's commits to create a completely trusted repository signed by one key or a set of trusted keys. The default behaviour of Gitea in contrast is to always display the avatar and information related to a signature. This allows signatures to be decoupled from the committer. That being said, allowing arbitary users to present other peoples commits as theirs is not necessarily desired therefore we have a trust model whereby signatures from collaborators are marked trusted, signatures matching the commit line are marked untrusted and signatures that match a user in the db but not the committer line are marked unmatched. The problem with this model is that this conflicts with Github therefore we need to provide an option to allow users to choose the Github model should they wish to. Signed-off-by: Andrew Thornton <art27@cantab.net> * Adjust locale strings Signed-off-by: Andrew Thornton <art27@cantab.net> * as per @6543 Co-authored-by: 6543 <6543@obermui.de> * Update models/gpg_key.go * Add migration for repository Signed-off-by: Andrew Thornton <art27@cantab.net> Co-authored-by: 6543 <6543@obermui.de> Co-authored-by: Lunny Xiao <xiaolunwen@gmail.com>
2020-09-19 18:44:55 +02:00
return false, "", nil, &ErrWontSign{parentSigned}
Sign merges, CRUD, Wiki and Repository initialisation with gpg key (#7631) This PR fixes #7598 by providing a configurable way of signing commits across the Gitea instance. Per repository configurability and import/generation of trusted secure keys is not provided by this PR - from a security PoV that's probably impossible to do properly. Similarly web-signing, that is asking the user to sign something, is not implemented - this could be done at a later stage however. ## Features - [x] If commit.gpgsign is set in .gitconfig sign commits and files created through repofiles. (merges should already have been signed.) - [x] Verify commits signed with the default gpg as valid - [x] Signer, Committer and Author can all be different - [x] Allow signer to be arbitrarily different - We still require the key to have an activated email on Gitea. A more complete implementation would be to use a keyserver and mark external-or-unactivated with an "unknown" trust level icon. - [x] Add a signing-key.gpg endpoint to get the default gpg pub key if available - Rather than add a fake web-flow user I've added this as an endpoint on /api/v1/signing-key.gpg - [x] Try to match the default key with a user on gitea - this is done at verification time - [x] Make things configurable? - app.ini configuration done - [x] when checking commits are signed need to check if they're actually verifiable too - [x] Add documentation I have decided that adjusting the docker to create a default gpg key is not the correct thing to do and therefore have not implemented this.
2019-10-16 15:42:42 +02:00
}
}
}
Add configurable Trust Models (#11712) * Add configurable Trust Models Gitea's default signature verification model differs from GitHub. GitHub uses signatures to verify that the committer is who they say they are - meaning that when GitHub makes a signed commit it must be the committer. The GitHub model prevents re-publishing of commits after revocation of a key and prevents re-signing of other people's commits to create a completely trusted repository signed by one key or a set of trusted keys. The default behaviour of Gitea in contrast is to always display the avatar and information related to a signature. This allows signatures to be decoupled from the committer. That being said, allowing arbitary users to present other peoples commits as theirs is not necessarily desired therefore we have a trust model whereby signatures from collaborators are marked trusted, signatures matching the commit line are marked untrusted and signatures that match a user in the db but not the committer line are marked unmatched. The problem with this model is that this conflicts with Github therefore we need to provide an option to allow users to choose the Github model should they wish to. Signed-off-by: Andrew Thornton <art27@cantab.net> * Adjust locale strings Signed-off-by: Andrew Thornton <art27@cantab.net> * as per @6543 Co-authored-by: 6543 <6543@obermui.de> * Update models/gpg_key.go * Add migration for repository Signed-off-by: Andrew Thornton <art27@cantab.net> Co-authored-by: 6543 <6543@obermui.de> Co-authored-by: Lunny Xiao <xiaolunwen@gmail.com>
2020-09-19 18:44:55 +02:00
return true, signingKey, sig, nil
Sign merges, CRUD, Wiki and Repository initialisation with gpg key (#7631) This PR fixes #7598 by providing a configurable way of signing commits across the Gitea instance. Per repository configurability and import/generation of trusted secure keys is not provided by this PR - from a security PoV that's probably impossible to do properly. Similarly web-signing, that is asking the user to sign something, is not implemented - this could be done at a later stage however. ## Features - [x] If commit.gpgsign is set in .gitconfig sign commits and files created through repofiles. (merges should already have been signed.) - [x] Verify commits signed with the default gpg as valid - [x] Signer, Committer and Author can all be different - [x] Allow signer to be arbitrarily different - We still require the key to have an activated email on Gitea. A more complete implementation would be to use a keyserver and mark external-or-unactivated with an "unknown" trust level icon. - [x] Add a signing-key.gpg endpoint to get the default gpg pub key if available - Rather than add a fake web-flow user I've added this as an endpoint on /api/v1/signing-key.gpg - [x] Try to match the default key with a user on gitea - this is done at verification time - [x] Make things configurable? - app.ini configuration done - [x] when checking commits are signed need to check if they're actually verifiable too - [x] Add documentation I have decided that adjusting the docker to create a default gpg key is not the correct thing to do and therefore have not implemented this.
2019-10-16 15:42:42 +02:00
}
// SignCRUDAction determines if we should sign a CRUD commit to this repository
func SignCRUDAction(ctx context.Context, repoPath string, u *user_model.User, tmpBasePath, parentCommit string) (bool, string, *git.Signature, error) {
Sign merges, CRUD, Wiki and Repository initialisation with gpg key (#7631) This PR fixes #7598 by providing a configurable way of signing commits across the Gitea instance. Per repository configurability and import/generation of trusted secure keys is not provided by this PR - from a security PoV that's probably impossible to do properly. Similarly web-signing, that is asking the user to sign something, is not implemented - this could be done at a later stage however. ## Features - [x] If commit.gpgsign is set in .gitconfig sign commits and files created through repofiles. (merges should already have been signed.) - [x] Verify commits signed with the default gpg as valid - [x] Signer, Committer and Author can all be different - [x] Allow signer to be arbitrarily different - We still require the key to have an activated email on Gitea. A more complete implementation would be to use a keyserver and mark external-or-unactivated with an "unknown" trust level icon. - [x] Add a signing-key.gpg endpoint to get the default gpg pub key if available - Rather than add a fake web-flow user I've added this as an endpoint on /api/v1/signing-key.gpg - [x] Try to match the default key with a user on gitea - this is done at verification time - [x] Make things configurable? - app.ini configuration done - [x] when checking commits are signed need to check if they're actually verifiable too - [x] Add documentation I have decided that adjusting the docker to create a default gpg key is not the correct thing to do and therefore have not implemented this.
2019-10-16 15:42:42 +02:00
rules := signingModeFromStrings(setting.Repository.Signing.CRUDActions)
signingKey, sig := SigningKey(ctx, repoPath)
Sign merges, CRUD, Wiki and Repository initialisation with gpg key (#7631) This PR fixes #7598 by providing a configurable way of signing commits across the Gitea instance. Per repository configurability and import/generation of trusted secure keys is not provided by this PR - from a security PoV that's probably impossible to do properly. Similarly web-signing, that is asking the user to sign something, is not implemented - this could be done at a later stage however. ## Features - [x] If commit.gpgsign is set in .gitconfig sign commits and files created through repofiles. (merges should already have been signed.) - [x] Verify commits signed with the default gpg as valid - [x] Signer, Committer and Author can all be different - [x] Allow signer to be arbitrarily different - We still require the key to have an activated email on Gitea. A more complete implementation would be to use a keyserver and mark external-or-unactivated with an "unknown" trust level icon. - [x] Add a signing-key.gpg endpoint to get the default gpg pub key if available - Rather than add a fake web-flow user I've added this as an endpoint on /api/v1/signing-key.gpg - [x] Try to match the default key with a user on gitea - this is done at verification time - [x] Make things configurable? - app.ini configuration done - [x] when checking commits are signed need to check if they're actually verifiable too - [x] Add documentation I have decided that adjusting the docker to create a default gpg key is not the correct thing to do and therefore have not implemented this.
2019-10-16 15:42:42 +02:00
if signingKey == "" {
Add configurable Trust Models (#11712) * Add configurable Trust Models Gitea's default signature verification model differs from GitHub. GitHub uses signatures to verify that the committer is who they say they are - meaning that when GitHub makes a signed commit it must be the committer. The GitHub model prevents re-publishing of commits after revocation of a key and prevents re-signing of other people's commits to create a completely trusted repository signed by one key or a set of trusted keys. The default behaviour of Gitea in contrast is to always display the avatar and information related to a signature. This allows signatures to be decoupled from the committer. That being said, allowing arbitary users to present other peoples commits as theirs is not necessarily desired therefore we have a trust model whereby signatures from collaborators are marked trusted, signatures matching the commit line are marked untrusted and signatures that match a user in the db but not the committer line are marked unmatched. The problem with this model is that this conflicts with Github therefore we need to provide an option to allow users to choose the Github model should they wish to. Signed-off-by: Andrew Thornton <art27@cantab.net> * Adjust locale strings Signed-off-by: Andrew Thornton <art27@cantab.net> * as per @6543 Co-authored-by: 6543 <6543@obermui.de> * Update models/gpg_key.go * Add migration for repository Signed-off-by: Andrew Thornton <art27@cantab.net> Co-authored-by: 6543 <6543@obermui.de> Co-authored-by: Lunny Xiao <xiaolunwen@gmail.com>
2020-09-19 18:44:55 +02:00
return false, "", nil, &ErrWontSign{noKey}
Sign merges, CRUD, Wiki and Repository initialisation with gpg key (#7631) This PR fixes #7598 by providing a configurable way of signing commits across the Gitea instance. Per repository configurability and import/generation of trusted secure keys is not provided by this PR - from a security PoV that's probably impossible to do properly. Similarly web-signing, that is asking the user to sign something, is not implemented - this could be done at a later stage however. ## Features - [x] If commit.gpgsign is set in .gitconfig sign commits and files created through repofiles. (merges should already have been signed.) - [x] Verify commits signed with the default gpg as valid - [x] Signer, Committer and Author can all be different - [x] Allow signer to be arbitrarily different - We still require the key to have an activated email on Gitea. A more complete implementation would be to use a keyserver and mark external-or-unactivated with an "unknown" trust level icon. - [x] Add a signing-key.gpg endpoint to get the default gpg pub key if available - Rather than add a fake web-flow user I've added this as an endpoint on /api/v1/signing-key.gpg - [x] Try to match the default key with a user on gitea - this is done at verification time - [x] Make things configurable? - app.ini configuration done - [x] when checking commits are signed need to check if they're actually verifiable too - [x] Add documentation I have decided that adjusting the docker to create a default gpg key is not the correct thing to do and therefore have not implemented this.
2019-10-16 15:42:42 +02:00
}
Loop:
Sign merges, CRUD, Wiki and Repository initialisation with gpg key (#7631) This PR fixes #7598 by providing a configurable way of signing commits across the Gitea instance. Per repository configurability and import/generation of trusted secure keys is not provided by this PR - from a security PoV that's probably impossible to do properly. Similarly web-signing, that is asking the user to sign something, is not implemented - this could be done at a later stage however. ## Features - [x] If commit.gpgsign is set in .gitconfig sign commits and files created through repofiles. (merges should already have been signed.) - [x] Verify commits signed with the default gpg as valid - [x] Signer, Committer and Author can all be different - [x] Allow signer to be arbitrarily different - We still require the key to have an activated email on Gitea. A more complete implementation would be to use a keyserver and mark external-or-unactivated with an "unknown" trust level icon. - [x] Add a signing-key.gpg endpoint to get the default gpg pub key if available - Rather than add a fake web-flow user I've added this as an endpoint on /api/v1/signing-key.gpg - [x] Try to match the default key with a user on gitea - this is done at verification time - [x] Make things configurable? - app.ini configuration done - [x] when checking commits are signed need to check if they're actually verifiable too - [x] Add documentation I have decided that adjusting the docker to create a default gpg key is not the correct thing to do and therefore have not implemented this.
2019-10-16 15:42:42 +02:00
for _, rule := range rules {
switch rule {
case never:
Add configurable Trust Models (#11712) * Add configurable Trust Models Gitea's default signature verification model differs from GitHub. GitHub uses signatures to verify that the committer is who they say they are - meaning that when GitHub makes a signed commit it must be the committer. The GitHub model prevents re-publishing of commits after revocation of a key and prevents re-signing of other people's commits to create a completely trusted repository signed by one key or a set of trusted keys. The default behaviour of Gitea in contrast is to always display the avatar and information related to a signature. This allows signatures to be decoupled from the committer. That being said, allowing arbitary users to present other peoples commits as theirs is not necessarily desired therefore we have a trust model whereby signatures from collaborators are marked trusted, signatures matching the commit line are marked untrusted and signatures that match a user in the db but not the committer line are marked unmatched. The problem with this model is that this conflicts with Github therefore we need to provide an option to allow users to choose the Github model should they wish to. Signed-off-by: Andrew Thornton <art27@cantab.net> * Adjust locale strings Signed-off-by: Andrew Thornton <art27@cantab.net> * as per @6543 Co-authored-by: 6543 <6543@obermui.de> * Update models/gpg_key.go * Add migration for repository Signed-off-by: Andrew Thornton <art27@cantab.net> Co-authored-by: 6543 <6543@obermui.de> Co-authored-by: Lunny Xiao <xiaolunwen@gmail.com>
2020-09-19 18:44:55 +02:00
return false, "", nil, &ErrWontSign{never}
Sign merges, CRUD, Wiki and Repository initialisation with gpg key (#7631) This PR fixes #7598 by providing a configurable way of signing commits across the Gitea instance. Per repository configurability and import/generation of trusted secure keys is not provided by this PR - from a security PoV that's probably impossible to do properly. Similarly web-signing, that is asking the user to sign something, is not implemented - this could be done at a later stage however. ## Features - [x] If commit.gpgsign is set in .gitconfig sign commits and files created through repofiles. (merges should already have been signed.) - [x] Verify commits signed with the default gpg as valid - [x] Signer, Committer and Author can all be different - [x] Allow signer to be arbitrarily different - We still require the key to have an activated email on Gitea. A more complete implementation would be to use a keyserver and mark external-or-unactivated with an "unknown" trust level icon. - [x] Add a signing-key.gpg endpoint to get the default gpg pub key if available - Rather than add a fake web-flow user I've added this as an endpoint on /api/v1/signing-key.gpg - [x] Try to match the default key with a user on gitea - this is done at verification time - [x] Make things configurable? - app.ini configuration done - [x] when checking commits are signed need to check if they're actually verifiable too - [x] Add documentation I have decided that adjusting the docker to create a default gpg key is not the correct thing to do and therefore have not implemented this.
2019-10-16 15:42:42 +02:00
case always:
break Loop
Sign merges, CRUD, Wiki and Repository initialisation with gpg key (#7631) This PR fixes #7598 by providing a configurable way of signing commits across the Gitea instance. Per repository configurability and import/generation of trusted secure keys is not provided by this PR - from a security PoV that's probably impossible to do properly. Similarly web-signing, that is asking the user to sign something, is not implemented - this could be done at a later stage however. ## Features - [x] If commit.gpgsign is set in .gitconfig sign commits and files created through repofiles. (merges should already have been signed.) - [x] Verify commits signed with the default gpg as valid - [x] Signer, Committer and Author can all be different - [x] Allow signer to be arbitrarily different - We still require the key to have an activated email on Gitea. A more complete implementation would be to use a keyserver and mark external-or-unactivated with an "unknown" trust level icon. - [x] Add a signing-key.gpg endpoint to get the default gpg pub key if available - Rather than add a fake web-flow user I've added this as an endpoint on /api/v1/signing-key.gpg - [x] Try to match the default key with a user on gitea - this is done at verification time - [x] Make things configurable? - app.ini configuration done - [x] when checking commits are signed need to check if they're actually verifiable too - [x] Add documentation I have decided that adjusting the docker to create a default gpg key is not the correct thing to do and therefore have not implemented this.
2019-10-16 15:42:42 +02:00
case pubkey:
keys, err := db.Find[asymkey_model.GPGKey](ctx, asymkey_model.FindGPGKeyOptions{
OwnerID: u.ID,
IncludeSubKeys: true,
})
if err != nil {
Add configurable Trust Models (#11712) * Add configurable Trust Models Gitea's default signature verification model differs from GitHub. GitHub uses signatures to verify that the committer is who they say they are - meaning that when GitHub makes a signed commit it must be the committer. The GitHub model prevents re-publishing of commits after revocation of a key and prevents re-signing of other people's commits to create a completely trusted repository signed by one key or a set of trusted keys. The default behaviour of Gitea in contrast is to always display the avatar and information related to a signature. This allows signatures to be decoupled from the committer. That being said, allowing arbitary users to present other peoples commits as theirs is not necessarily desired therefore we have a trust model whereby signatures from collaborators are marked trusted, signatures matching the commit line are marked untrusted and signatures that match a user in the db but not the committer line are marked unmatched. The problem with this model is that this conflicts with Github therefore we need to provide an option to allow users to choose the Github model should they wish to. Signed-off-by: Andrew Thornton <art27@cantab.net> * Adjust locale strings Signed-off-by: Andrew Thornton <art27@cantab.net> * as per @6543 Co-authored-by: 6543 <6543@obermui.de> * Update models/gpg_key.go * Add migration for repository Signed-off-by: Andrew Thornton <art27@cantab.net> Co-authored-by: 6543 <6543@obermui.de> Co-authored-by: Lunny Xiao <xiaolunwen@gmail.com>
2020-09-19 18:44:55 +02:00
return false, "", nil, err
}
if len(keys) == 0 {
Add configurable Trust Models (#11712) * Add configurable Trust Models Gitea's default signature verification model differs from GitHub. GitHub uses signatures to verify that the committer is who they say they are - meaning that when GitHub makes a signed commit it must be the committer. The GitHub model prevents re-publishing of commits after revocation of a key and prevents re-signing of other people's commits to create a completely trusted repository signed by one key or a set of trusted keys. The default behaviour of Gitea in contrast is to always display the avatar and information related to a signature. This allows signatures to be decoupled from the committer. That being said, allowing arbitary users to present other peoples commits as theirs is not necessarily desired therefore we have a trust model whereby signatures from collaborators are marked trusted, signatures matching the commit line are marked untrusted and signatures that match a user in the db but not the committer line are marked unmatched. The problem with this model is that this conflicts with Github therefore we need to provide an option to allow users to choose the Github model should they wish to. Signed-off-by: Andrew Thornton <art27@cantab.net> * Adjust locale strings Signed-off-by: Andrew Thornton <art27@cantab.net> * as per @6543 Co-authored-by: 6543 <6543@obermui.de> * Update models/gpg_key.go * Add migration for repository Signed-off-by: Andrew Thornton <art27@cantab.net> Co-authored-by: 6543 <6543@obermui.de> Co-authored-by: Lunny Xiao <xiaolunwen@gmail.com>
2020-09-19 18:44:55 +02:00
return false, "", nil, &ErrWontSign{pubkey}
Sign merges, CRUD, Wiki and Repository initialisation with gpg key (#7631) This PR fixes #7598 by providing a configurable way of signing commits across the Gitea instance. Per repository configurability and import/generation of trusted secure keys is not provided by this PR - from a security PoV that's probably impossible to do properly. Similarly web-signing, that is asking the user to sign something, is not implemented - this could be done at a later stage however. ## Features - [x] If commit.gpgsign is set in .gitconfig sign commits and files created through repofiles. (merges should already have been signed.) - [x] Verify commits signed with the default gpg as valid - [x] Signer, Committer and Author can all be different - [x] Allow signer to be arbitrarily different - We still require the key to have an activated email on Gitea. A more complete implementation would be to use a keyserver and mark external-or-unactivated with an "unknown" trust level icon. - [x] Add a signing-key.gpg endpoint to get the default gpg pub key if available - Rather than add a fake web-flow user I've added this as an endpoint on /api/v1/signing-key.gpg - [x] Try to match the default key with a user on gitea - this is done at verification time - [x] Make things configurable? - app.ini configuration done - [x] when checking commits are signed need to check if they're actually verifiable too - [x] Add documentation I have decided that adjusting the docker to create a default gpg key is not the correct thing to do and therefore have not implemented this.
2019-10-16 15:42:42 +02:00
}
case twofa:
twofaModel, err := auth.GetTwoFactorByUID(ctx, u.ID)
2022-01-02 14:12:35 +01:00
if err != nil && !auth.IsErrTwoFactorNotEnrolled(err) {
Add configurable Trust Models (#11712) * Add configurable Trust Models Gitea's default signature verification model differs from GitHub. GitHub uses signatures to verify that the committer is who they say they are - meaning that when GitHub makes a signed commit it must be the committer. The GitHub model prevents re-publishing of commits after revocation of a key and prevents re-signing of other people's commits to create a completely trusted repository signed by one key or a set of trusted keys. The default behaviour of Gitea in contrast is to always display the avatar and information related to a signature. This allows signatures to be decoupled from the committer. That being said, allowing arbitary users to present other peoples commits as theirs is not necessarily desired therefore we have a trust model whereby signatures from collaborators are marked trusted, signatures matching the commit line are marked untrusted and signatures that match a user in the db but not the committer line are marked unmatched. The problem with this model is that this conflicts with Github therefore we need to provide an option to allow users to choose the Github model should they wish to. Signed-off-by: Andrew Thornton <art27@cantab.net> * Adjust locale strings Signed-off-by: Andrew Thornton <art27@cantab.net> * as per @6543 Co-authored-by: 6543 <6543@obermui.de> * Update models/gpg_key.go * Add migration for repository Signed-off-by: Andrew Thornton <art27@cantab.net> Co-authored-by: 6543 <6543@obermui.de> Co-authored-by: Lunny Xiao <xiaolunwen@gmail.com>
2020-09-19 18:44:55 +02:00
return false, "", nil, err
}
if twofaModel == nil {
Add configurable Trust Models (#11712) * Add configurable Trust Models Gitea's default signature verification model differs from GitHub. GitHub uses signatures to verify that the committer is who they say they are - meaning that when GitHub makes a signed commit it must be the committer. The GitHub model prevents re-publishing of commits after revocation of a key and prevents re-signing of other people's commits to create a completely trusted repository signed by one key or a set of trusted keys. The default behaviour of Gitea in contrast is to always display the avatar and information related to a signature. This allows signatures to be decoupled from the committer. That being said, allowing arbitary users to present other peoples commits as theirs is not necessarily desired therefore we have a trust model whereby signatures from collaborators are marked trusted, signatures matching the commit line are marked untrusted and signatures that match a user in the db but not the committer line are marked unmatched. The problem with this model is that this conflicts with Github therefore we need to provide an option to allow users to choose the Github model should they wish to. Signed-off-by: Andrew Thornton <art27@cantab.net> * Adjust locale strings Signed-off-by: Andrew Thornton <art27@cantab.net> * as per @6543 Co-authored-by: 6543 <6543@obermui.de> * Update models/gpg_key.go * Add migration for repository Signed-off-by: Andrew Thornton <art27@cantab.net> Co-authored-by: 6543 <6543@obermui.de> Co-authored-by: Lunny Xiao <xiaolunwen@gmail.com>
2020-09-19 18:44:55 +02:00
return false, "", nil, &ErrWontSign{twofa}
Sign merges, CRUD, Wiki and Repository initialisation with gpg key (#7631) This PR fixes #7598 by providing a configurable way of signing commits across the Gitea instance. Per repository configurability and import/generation of trusted secure keys is not provided by this PR - from a security PoV that's probably impossible to do properly. Similarly web-signing, that is asking the user to sign something, is not implemented - this could be done at a later stage however. ## Features - [x] If commit.gpgsign is set in .gitconfig sign commits and files created through repofiles. (merges should already have been signed.) - [x] Verify commits signed with the default gpg as valid - [x] Signer, Committer and Author can all be different - [x] Allow signer to be arbitrarily different - We still require the key to have an activated email on Gitea. A more complete implementation would be to use a keyserver and mark external-or-unactivated with an "unknown" trust level icon. - [x] Add a signing-key.gpg endpoint to get the default gpg pub key if available - Rather than add a fake web-flow user I've added this as an endpoint on /api/v1/signing-key.gpg - [x] Try to match the default key with a user on gitea - this is done at verification time - [x] Make things configurable? - app.ini configuration done - [x] when checking commits are signed need to check if they're actually verifiable too - [x] Add documentation I have decided that adjusting the docker to create a default gpg key is not the correct thing to do and therefore have not implemented this.
2019-10-16 15:42:42 +02:00
}
case parentSigned:
gitRepo, err := git.OpenRepository(ctx, tmpBasePath)
Sign merges, CRUD, Wiki and Repository initialisation with gpg key (#7631) This PR fixes #7598 by providing a configurable way of signing commits across the Gitea instance. Per repository configurability and import/generation of trusted secure keys is not provided by this PR - from a security PoV that's probably impossible to do properly. Similarly web-signing, that is asking the user to sign something, is not implemented - this could be done at a later stage however. ## Features - [x] If commit.gpgsign is set in .gitconfig sign commits and files created through repofiles. (merges should already have been signed.) - [x] Verify commits signed with the default gpg as valid - [x] Signer, Committer and Author can all be different - [x] Allow signer to be arbitrarily different - We still require the key to have an activated email on Gitea. A more complete implementation would be to use a keyserver and mark external-or-unactivated with an "unknown" trust level icon. - [x] Add a signing-key.gpg endpoint to get the default gpg pub key if available - Rather than add a fake web-flow user I've added this as an endpoint on /api/v1/signing-key.gpg - [x] Try to match the default key with a user on gitea - this is done at verification time - [x] Make things configurable? - app.ini configuration done - [x] when checking commits are signed need to check if they're actually verifiable too - [x] Add documentation I have decided that adjusting the docker to create a default gpg key is not the correct thing to do and therefore have not implemented this.
2019-10-16 15:42:42 +02:00
if err != nil {
Add configurable Trust Models (#11712) * Add configurable Trust Models Gitea's default signature verification model differs from GitHub. GitHub uses signatures to verify that the committer is who they say they are - meaning that when GitHub makes a signed commit it must be the committer. The GitHub model prevents re-publishing of commits after revocation of a key and prevents re-signing of other people's commits to create a completely trusted repository signed by one key or a set of trusted keys. The default behaviour of Gitea in contrast is to always display the avatar and information related to a signature. This allows signatures to be decoupled from the committer. That being said, allowing arbitary users to present other peoples commits as theirs is not necessarily desired therefore we have a trust model whereby signatures from collaborators are marked trusted, signatures matching the commit line are marked untrusted and signatures that match a user in the db but not the committer line are marked unmatched. The problem with this model is that this conflicts with Github therefore we need to provide an option to allow users to choose the Github model should they wish to. Signed-off-by: Andrew Thornton <art27@cantab.net> * Adjust locale strings Signed-off-by: Andrew Thornton <art27@cantab.net> * as per @6543 Co-authored-by: 6543 <6543@obermui.de> * Update models/gpg_key.go * Add migration for repository Signed-off-by: Andrew Thornton <art27@cantab.net> Co-authored-by: 6543 <6543@obermui.de> Co-authored-by: Lunny Xiao <xiaolunwen@gmail.com>
2020-09-19 18:44:55 +02:00
return false, "", nil, err
Sign merges, CRUD, Wiki and Repository initialisation with gpg key (#7631) This PR fixes #7598 by providing a configurable way of signing commits across the Gitea instance. Per repository configurability and import/generation of trusted secure keys is not provided by this PR - from a security PoV that's probably impossible to do properly. Similarly web-signing, that is asking the user to sign something, is not implemented - this could be done at a later stage however. ## Features - [x] If commit.gpgsign is set in .gitconfig sign commits and files created through repofiles. (merges should already have been signed.) - [x] Verify commits signed with the default gpg as valid - [x] Signer, Committer and Author can all be different - [x] Allow signer to be arbitrarily different - We still require the key to have an activated email on Gitea. A more complete implementation would be to use a keyserver and mark external-or-unactivated with an "unknown" trust level icon. - [x] Add a signing-key.gpg endpoint to get the default gpg pub key if available - Rather than add a fake web-flow user I've added this as an endpoint on /api/v1/signing-key.gpg - [x] Try to match the default key with a user on gitea - this is done at verification time - [x] Make things configurable? - app.ini configuration done - [x] when checking commits are signed need to check if they're actually verifiable too - [x] Add documentation I have decided that adjusting the docker to create a default gpg key is not the correct thing to do and therefore have not implemented this.
2019-10-16 15:42:42 +02:00
}
defer gitRepo.Close()
Sign merges, CRUD, Wiki and Repository initialisation with gpg key (#7631) This PR fixes #7598 by providing a configurable way of signing commits across the Gitea instance. Per repository configurability and import/generation of trusted secure keys is not provided by this PR - from a security PoV that's probably impossible to do properly. Similarly web-signing, that is asking the user to sign something, is not implemented - this could be done at a later stage however. ## Features - [x] If commit.gpgsign is set in .gitconfig sign commits and files created through repofiles. (merges should already have been signed.) - [x] Verify commits signed with the default gpg as valid - [x] Signer, Committer and Author can all be different - [x] Allow signer to be arbitrarily different - We still require the key to have an activated email on Gitea. A more complete implementation would be to use a keyserver and mark external-or-unactivated with an "unknown" trust level icon. - [x] Add a signing-key.gpg endpoint to get the default gpg pub key if available - Rather than add a fake web-flow user I've added this as an endpoint on /api/v1/signing-key.gpg - [x] Try to match the default key with a user on gitea - this is done at verification time - [x] Make things configurable? - app.ini configuration done - [x] when checking commits are signed need to check if they're actually verifiable too - [x] Add documentation I have decided that adjusting the docker to create a default gpg key is not the correct thing to do and therefore have not implemented this.
2019-10-16 15:42:42 +02:00
commit, err := gitRepo.GetCommit(parentCommit)
if err != nil {
Add configurable Trust Models (#11712) * Add configurable Trust Models Gitea's default signature verification model differs from GitHub. GitHub uses signatures to verify that the committer is who they say they are - meaning that when GitHub makes a signed commit it must be the committer. The GitHub model prevents re-publishing of commits after revocation of a key and prevents re-signing of other people's commits to create a completely trusted repository signed by one key or a set of trusted keys. The default behaviour of Gitea in contrast is to always display the avatar and information related to a signature. This allows signatures to be decoupled from the committer. That being said, allowing arbitary users to present other peoples commits as theirs is not necessarily desired therefore we have a trust model whereby signatures from collaborators are marked trusted, signatures matching the commit line are marked untrusted and signatures that match a user in the db but not the committer line are marked unmatched. The problem with this model is that this conflicts with Github therefore we need to provide an option to allow users to choose the Github model should they wish to. Signed-off-by: Andrew Thornton <art27@cantab.net> * Adjust locale strings Signed-off-by: Andrew Thornton <art27@cantab.net> * as per @6543 Co-authored-by: 6543 <6543@obermui.de> * Update models/gpg_key.go * Add migration for repository Signed-off-by: Andrew Thornton <art27@cantab.net> Co-authored-by: 6543 <6543@obermui.de> Co-authored-by: Lunny Xiao <xiaolunwen@gmail.com>
2020-09-19 18:44:55 +02:00
return false, "", nil, err
Sign merges, CRUD, Wiki and Repository initialisation with gpg key (#7631) This PR fixes #7598 by providing a configurable way of signing commits across the Gitea instance. Per repository configurability and import/generation of trusted secure keys is not provided by this PR - from a security PoV that's probably impossible to do properly. Similarly web-signing, that is asking the user to sign something, is not implemented - this could be done at a later stage however. ## Features - [x] If commit.gpgsign is set in .gitconfig sign commits and files created through repofiles. (merges should already have been signed.) - [x] Verify commits signed with the default gpg as valid - [x] Signer, Committer and Author can all be different - [x] Allow signer to be arbitrarily different - We still require the key to have an activated email on Gitea. A more complete implementation would be to use a keyserver and mark external-or-unactivated with an "unknown" trust level icon. - [x] Add a signing-key.gpg endpoint to get the default gpg pub key if available - Rather than add a fake web-flow user I've added this as an endpoint on /api/v1/signing-key.gpg - [x] Try to match the default key with a user on gitea - this is done at verification time - [x] Make things configurable? - app.ini configuration done - [x] when checking commits are signed need to check if they're actually verifiable too - [x] Add documentation I have decided that adjusting the docker to create a default gpg key is not the correct thing to do and therefore have not implemented this.
2019-10-16 15:42:42 +02:00
}
if commit.Signature == nil {
Add configurable Trust Models (#11712) * Add configurable Trust Models Gitea's default signature verification model differs from GitHub. GitHub uses signatures to verify that the committer is who they say they are - meaning that when GitHub makes a signed commit it must be the committer. The GitHub model prevents re-publishing of commits after revocation of a key and prevents re-signing of other people's commits to create a completely trusted repository signed by one key or a set of trusted keys. The default behaviour of Gitea in contrast is to always display the avatar and information related to a signature. This allows signatures to be decoupled from the committer. That being said, allowing arbitary users to present other peoples commits as theirs is not necessarily desired therefore we have a trust model whereby signatures from collaborators are marked trusted, signatures matching the commit line are marked untrusted and signatures that match a user in the db but not the committer line are marked unmatched. The problem with this model is that this conflicts with Github therefore we need to provide an option to allow users to choose the Github model should they wish to. Signed-off-by: Andrew Thornton <art27@cantab.net> * Adjust locale strings Signed-off-by: Andrew Thornton <art27@cantab.net> * as per @6543 Co-authored-by: 6543 <6543@obermui.de> * Update models/gpg_key.go * Add migration for repository Signed-off-by: Andrew Thornton <art27@cantab.net> Co-authored-by: 6543 <6543@obermui.de> Co-authored-by: Lunny Xiao <xiaolunwen@gmail.com>
2020-09-19 18:44:55 +02:00
return false, "", nil, &ErrWontSign{parentSigned}
Sign merges, CRUD, Wiki and Repository initialisation with gpg key (#7631) This PR fixes #7598 by providing a configurable way of signing commits across the Gitea instance. Per repository configurability and import/generation of trusted secure keys is not provided by this PR - from a security PoV that's probably impossible to do properly. Similarly web-signing, that is asking the user to sign something, is not implemented - this could be done at a later stage however. ## Features - [x] If commit.gpgsign is set in .gitconfig sign commits and files created through repofiles. (merges should already have been signed.) - [x] Verify commits signed with the default gpg as valid - [x] Signer, Committer and Author can all be different - [x] Allow signer to be arbitrarily different - We still require the key to have an activated email on Gitea. A more complete implementation would be to use a keyserver and mark external-or-unactivated with an "unknown" trust level icon. - [x] Add a signing-key.gpg endpoint to get the default gpg pub key if available - Rather than add a fake web-flow user I've added this as an endpoint on /api/v1/signing-key.gpg - [x] Try to match the default key with a user on gitea - this is done at verification time - [x] Make things configurable? - app.ini configuration done - [x] when checking commits are signed need to check if they're actually verifiable too - [x] Add documentation I have decided that adjusting the docker to create a default gpg key is not the correct thing to do and therefore have not implemented this.
2019-10-16 15:42:42 +02:00
}
Add context cache as a request level cache (#22294) To avoid duplicated load of the same data in an HTTP request, we can set a context cache to do that. i.e. Some pages may load a user from a database with the same id in different areas on the same page. But the code is hidden in two different deep logic. How should we share the user? As a result of this PR, now if both entry functions accept `context.Context` as the first parameter and we just need to refactor `GetUserByID` to reuse the user from the context cache. Then it will not be loaded twice on an HTTP request. But of course, sometimes we would like to reload an object from the database, that's why `RemoveContextData` is also exposed. The core context cache is here. It defines a new context ```go type cacheContext struct { ctx context.Context data map[any]map[any]any lock sync.RWMutex } var cacheContextKey = struct{}{} func WithCacheContext(ctx context.Context) context.Context { return context.WithValue(ctx, cacheContextKey, &cacheContext{ ctx: ctx, data: make(map[any]map[any]any), }) } ``` Then you can use the below 4 methods to read/write/del the data within the same context. ```go func GetContextData(ctx context.Context, tp, key any) any func SetContextData(ctx context.Context, tp, key, value any) func RemoveContextData(ctx context.Context, tp, key any) func GetWithContextCache[T any](ctx context.Context, cacheGroupKey string, cacheTargetID any, f func() (T, error)) (T, error) ``` Then let's take a look at how `system.GetString` implement it. ```go func GetSetting(ctx context.Context, key string) (string, error) { return cache.GetWithContextCache(ctx, contextCacheKey, key, func() (string, error) { return cache.GetString(genSettingCacheKey(key), func() (string, error) { res, err := GetSettingNoCache(ctx, key) if err != nil { return "", err } return res.SettingValue, nil }) }) } ``` First, it will check if context data include the setting object with the key. If not, it will query from the global cache which may be memory or a Redis cache. If not, it will get the object from the database. In the end, if the object gets from the global cache or database, it will be set into the context cache. An object stored in the context cache will only be destroyed after the context disappeared.
2023-02-15 14:37:34 +01:00
verification := asymkey_model.ParseCommitWithSignature(ctx, commit)
Sign merges, CRUD, Wiki and Repository initialisation with gpg key (#7631) This PR fixes #7598 by providing a configurable way of signing commits across the Gitea instance. Per repository configurability and import/generation of trusted secure keys is not provided by this PR - from a security PoV that's probably impossible to do properly. Similarly web-signing, that is asking the user to sign something, is not implemented - this could be done at a later stage however. ## Features - [x] If commit.gpgsign is set in .gitconfig sign commits and files created through repofiles. (merges should already have been signed.) - [x] Verify commits signed with the default gpg as valid - [x] Signer, Committer and Author can all be different - [x] Allow signer to be arbitrarily different - We still require the key to have an activated email on Gitea. A more complete implementation would be to use a keyserver and mark external-or-unactivated with an "unknown" trust level icon. - [x] Add a signing-key.gpg endpoint to get the default gpg pub key if available - Rather than add a fake web-flow user I've added this as an endpoint on /api/v1/signing-key.gpg - [x] Try to match the default key with a user on gitea - this is done at verification time - [x] Make things configurable? - app.ini configuration done - [x] when checking commits are signed need to check if they're actually verifiable too - [x] Add documentation I have decided that adjusting the docker to create a default gpg key is not the correct thing to do and therefore have not implemented this.
2019-10-16 15:42:42 +02:00
if !verification.Verified {
Add configurable Trust Models (#11712) * Add configurable Trust Models Gitea's default signature verification model differs from GitHub. GitHub uses signatures to verify that the committer is who they say they are - meaning that when GitHub makes a signed commit it must be the committer. The GitHub model prevents re-publishing of commits after revocation of a key and prevents re-signing of other people's commits to create a completely trusted repository signed by one key or a set of trusted keys. The default behaviour of Gitea in contrast is to always display the avatar and information related to a signature. This allows signatures to be decoupled from the committer. That being said, allowing arbitary users to present other peoples commits as theirs is not necessarily desired therefore we have a trust model whereby signatures from collaborators are marked trusted, signatures matching the commit line are marked untrusted and signatures that match a user in the db but not the committer line are marked unmatched. The problem with this model is that this conflicts with Github therefore we need to provide an option to allow users to choose the Github model should they wish to. Signed-off-by: Andrew Thornton <art27@cantab.net> * Adjust locale strings Signed-off-by: Andrew Thornton <art27@cantab.net> * as per @6543 Co-authored-by: 6543 <6543@obermui.de> * Update models/gpg_key.go * Add migration for repository Signed-off-by: Andrew Thornton <art27@cantab.net> Co-authored-by: 6543 <6543@obermui.de> Co-authored-by: Lunny Xiao <xiaolunwen@gmail.com>
2020-09-19 18:44:55 +02:00
return false, "", nil, &ErrWontSign{parentSigned}
Sign merges, CRUD, Wiki and Repository initialisation with gpg key (#7631) This PR fixes #7598 by providing a configurable way of signing commits across the Gitea instance. Per repository configurability and import/generation of trusted secure keys is not provided by this PR - from a security PoV that's probably impossible to do properly. Similarly web-signing, that is asking the user to sign something, is not implemented - this could be done at a later stage however. ## Features - [x] If commit.gpgsign is set in .gitconfig sign commits and files created through repofiles. (merges should already have been signed.) - [x] Verify commits signed with the default gpg as valid - [x] Signer, Committer and Author can all be different - [x] Allow signer to be arbitrarily different - We still require the key to have an activated email on Gitea. A more complete implementation would be to use a keyserver and mark external-or-unactivated with an "unknown" trust level icon. - [x] Add a signing-key.gpg endpoint to get the default gpg pub key if available - Rather than add a fake web-flow user I've added this as an endpoint on /api/v1/signing-key.gpg - [x] Try to match the default key with a user on gitea - this is done at verification time - [x] Make things configurable? - app.ini configuration done - [x] when checking commits are signed need to check if they're actually verifiable too - [x] Add documentation I have decided that adjusting the docker to create a default gpg key is not the correct thing to do and therefore have not implemented this.
2019-10-16 15:42:42 +02:00
}
}
}
Add configurable Trust Models (#11712) * Add configurable Trust Models Gitea's default signature verification model differs from GitHub. GitHub uses signatures to verify that the committer is who they say they are - meaning that when GitHub makes a signed commit it must be the committer. The GitHub model prevents re-publishing of commits after revocation of a key and prevents re-signing of other people's commits to create a completely trusted repository signed by one key or a set of trusted keys. The default behaviour of Gitea in contrast is to always display the avatar and information related to a signature. This allows signatures to be decoupled from the committer. That being said, allowing arbitary users to present other peoples commits as theirs is not necessarily desired therefore we have a trust model whereby signatures from collaborators are marked trusted, signatures matching the commit line are marked untrusted and signatures that match a user in the db but not the committer line are marked unmatched. The problem with this model is that this conflicts with Github therefore we need to provide an option to allow users to choose the Github model should they wish to. Signed-off-by: Andrew Thornton <art27@cantab.net> * Adjust locale strings Signed-off-by: Andrew Thornton <art27@cantab.net> * as per @6543 Co-authored-by: 6543 <6543@obermui.de> * Update models/gpg_key.go * Add migration for repository Signed-off-by: Andrew Thornton <art27@cantab.net> Co-authored-by: 6543 <6543@obermui.de> Co-authored-by: Lunny Xiao <xiaolunwen@gmail.com>
2020-09-19 18:44:55 +02:00
return true, signingKey, sig, nil
Sign merges, CRUD, Wiki and Repository initialisation with gpg key (#7631) This PR fixes #7598 by providing a configurable way of signing commits across the Gitea instance. Per repository configurability and import/generation of trusted secure keys is not provided by this PR - from a security PoV that's probably impossible to do properly. Similarly web-signing, that is asking the user to sign something, is not implemented - this could be done at a later stage however. ## Features - [x] If commit.gpgsign is set in .gitconfig sign commits and files created through repofiles. (merges should already have been signed.) - [x] Verify commits signed with the default gpg as valid - [x] Signer, Committer and Author can all be different - [x] Allow signer to be arbitrarily different - We still require the key to have an activated email on Gitea. A more complete implementation would be to use a keyserver and mark external-or-unactivated with an "unknown" trust level icon. - [x] Add a signing-key.gpg endpoint to get the default gpg pub key if available - Rather than add a fake web-flow user I've added this as an endpoint on /api/v1/signing-key.gpg - [x] Try to match the default key with a user on gitea - this is done at verification time - [x] Make things configurable? - app.ini configuration done - [x] when checking commits are signed need to check if they're actually verifiable too - [x] Add documentation I have decided that adjusting the docker to create a default gpg key is not the correct thing to do and therefore have not implemented this.
2019-10-16 15:42:42 +02:00
}
// SignMerge determines if we should sign a PR merge commit to the base repository
func SignMerge(ctx context.Context, pr *issues_model.PullRequest, u *user_model.User, tmpBasePath, baseCommit, headCommit string) (bool, string, *git.Signature, error) {
if err := pr.LoadBaseRepo(ctx); err != nil {
log.Error("Unable to get Base Repo for pull request")
return false, "", nil, err
}
repo := pr.BaseRepo
signingKey, signer := SigningKey(ctx, repo.RepoPath())
if signingKey == "" {
return false, "", nil, &ErrWontSign{noKey}
}
rules := signingModeFromStrings(setting.Repository.Signing.Merges)
var gitRepo *git.Repository
var err error
Loop:
for _, rule := range rules {
switch rule {
case never:
return false, "", nil, &ErrWontSign{never}
case always:
break Loop
case pubkey:
keys, err := db.Find[asymkey_model.GPGKey](ctx, asymkey_model.FindGPGKeyOptions{
OwnerID: u.ID,
IncludeSubKeys: true,
})
if err != nil {
return false, "", nil, err
}
if len(keys) == 0 {
return false, "", nil, &ErrWontSign{pubkey}
}
case twofa:
twofaModel, err := auth.GetTwoFactorByUID(ctx, u.ID)
2022-01-02 14:12:35 +01:00
if err != nil && !auth.IsErrTwoFactorNotEnrolled(err) {
return false, "", nil, err
}
if twofaModel == nil {
return false, "", nil, &ErrWontSign{twofa}
}
case approved:
protectedBranch, err := git_model.GetFirstMatchProtectedBranchRule(ctx, repo.ID, pr.BaseBranch)
if err != nil {
return false, "", nil, err
}
if protectedBranch == nil {
return false, "", nil, &ErrWontSign{approved}
}
if issues_model.GetGrantedApprovalsCount(ctx, protectedBranch, pr) < 1 {
return false, "", nil, &ErrWontSign{approved}
}
case baseSigned:
if gitRepo == nil {
gitRepo, err = git.OpenRepository(ctx, tmpBasePath)
if err != nil {
return false, "", nil, err
}
defer gitRepo.Close()
}
commit, err := gitRepo.GetCommit(baseCommit)
if err != nil {
return false, "", nil, err
}
Add context cache as a request level cache (#22294) To avoid duplicated load of the same data in an HTTP request, we can set a context cache to do that. i.e. Some pages may load a user from a database with the same id in different areas on the same page. But the code is hidden in two different deep logic. How should we share the user? As a result of this PR, now if both entry functions accept `context.Context` as the first parameter and we just need to refactor `GetUserByID` to reuse the user from the context cache. Then it will not be loaded twice on an HTTP request. But of course, sometimes we would like to reload an object from the database, that's why `RemoveContextData` is also exposed. The core context cache is here. It defines a new context ```go type cacheContext struct { ctx context.Context data map[any]map[any]any lock sync.RWMutex } var cacheContextKey = struct{}{} func WithCacheContext(ctx context.Context) context.Context { return context.WithValue(ctx, cacheContextKey, &cacheContext{ ctx: ctx, data: make(map[any]map[any]any), }) } ``` Then you can use the below 4 methods to read/write/del the data within the same context. ```go func GetContextData(ctx context.Context, tp, key any) any func SetContextData(ctx context.Context, tp, key, value any) func RemoveContextData(ctx context.Context, tp, key any) func GetWithContextCache[T any](ctx context.Context, cacheGroupKey string, cacheTargetID any, f func() (T, error)) (T, error) ``` Then let's take a look at how `system.GetString` implement it. ```go func GetSetting(ctx context.Context, key string) (string, error) { return cache.GetWithContextCache(ctx, contextCacheKey, key, func() (string, error) { return cache.GetString(genSettingCacheKey(key), func() (string, error) { res, err := GetSettingNoCache(ctx, key) if err != nil { return "", err } return res.SettingValue, nil }) }) } ``` First, it will check if context data include the setting object with the key. If not, it will query from the global cache which may be memory or a Redis cache. If not, it will get the object from the database. In the end, if the object gets from the global cache or database, it will be set into the context cache. An object stored in the context cache will only be destroyed after the context disappeared.
2023-02-15 14:37:34 +01:00
verification := asymkey_model.ParseCommitWithSignature(ctx, commit)
if !verification.Verified {
return false, "", nil, &ErrWontSign{baseSigned}
}
case headSigned:
if gitRepo == nil {
gitRepo, err = git.OpenRepository(ctx, tmpBasePath)
if err != nil {
return false, "", nil, err
}
defer gitRepo.Close()
}
commit, err := gitRepo.GetCommit(headCommit)
if err != nil {
return false, "", nil, err
}
Add context cache as a request level cache (#22294) To avoid duplicated load of the same data in an HTTP request, we can set a context cache to do that. i.e. Some pages may load a user from a database with the same id in different areas on the same page. But the code is hidden in two different deep logic. How should we share the user? As a result of this PR, now if both entry functions accept `context.Context` as the first parameter and we just need to refactor `GetUserByID` to reuse the user from the context cache. Then it will not be loaded twice on an HTTP request. But of course, sometimes we would like to reload an object from the database, that's why `RemoveContextData` is also exposed. The core context cache is here. It defines a new context ```go type cacheContext struct { ctx context.Context data map[any]map[any]any lock sync.RWMutex } var cacheContextKey = struct{}{} func WithCacheContext(ctx context.Context) context.Context { return context.WithValue(ctx, cacheContextKey, &cacheContext{ ctx: ctx, data: make(map[any]map[any]any), }) } ``` Then you can use the below 4 methods to read/write/del the data within the same context. ```go func GetContextData(ctx context.Context, tp, key any) any func SetContextData(ctx context.Context, tp, key, value any) func RemoveContextData(ctx context.Context, tp, key any) func GetWithContextCache[T any](ctx context.Context, cacheGroupKey string, cacheTargetID any, f func() (T, error)) (T, error) ``` Then let's take a look at how `system.GetString` implement it. ```go func GetSetting(ctx context.Context, key string) (string, error) { return cache.GetWithContextCache(ctx, contextCacheKey, key, func() (string, error) { return cache.GetString(genSettingCacheKey(key), func() (string, error) { res, err := GetSettingNoCache(ctx, key) if err != nil { return "", err } return res.SettingValue, nil }) }) } ``` First, it will check if context data include the setting object with the key. If not, it will query from the global cache which may be memory or a Redis cache. If not, it will get the object from the database. In the end, if the object gets from the global cache or database, it will be set into the context cache. An object stored in the context cache will only be destroyed after the context disappeared.
2023-02-15 14:37:34 +01:00
verification := asymkey_model.ParseCommitWithSignature(ctx, commit)
if !verification.Verified {
return false, "", nil, &ErrWontSign{headSigned}
}
case commitsSigned:
if gitRepo == nil {
gitRepo, err = git.OpenRepository(ctx, tmpBasePath)
if err != nil {
return false, "", nil, err
}
defer gitRepo.Close()
}
commit, err := gitRepo.GetCommit(headCommit)
if err != nil {
return false, "", nil, err
}
Add context cache as a request level cache (#22294) To avoid duplicated load of the same data in an HTTP request, we can set a context cache to do that. i.e. Some pages may load a user from a database with the same id in different areas on the same page. But the code is hidden in two different deep logic. How should we share the user? As a result of this PR, now if both entry functions accept `context.Context` as the first parameter and we just need to refactor `GetUserByID` to reuse the user from the context cache. Then it will not be loaded twice on an HTTP request. But of course, sometimes we would like to reload an object from the database, that's why `RemoveContextData` is also exposed. The core context cache is here. It defines a new context ```go type cacheContext struct { ctx context.Context data map[any]map[any]any lock sync.RWMutex } var cacheContextKey = struct{}{} func WithCacheContext(ctx context.Context) context.Context { return context.WithValue(ctx, cacheContextKey, &cacheContext{ ctx: ctx, data: make(map[any]map[any]any), }) } ``` Then you can use the below 4 methods to read/write/del the data within the same context. ```go func GetContextData(ctx context.Context, tp, key any) any func SetContextData(ctx context.Context, tp, key, value any) func RemoveContextData(ctx context.Context, tp, key any) func GetWithContextCache[T any](ctx context.Context, cacheGroupKey string, cacheTargetID any, f func() (T, error)) (T, error) ``` Then let's take a look at how `system.GetString` implement it. ```go func GetSetting(ctx context.Context, key string) (string, error) { return cache.GetWithContextCache(ctx, contextCacheKey, key, func() (string, error) { return cache.GetString(genSettingCacheKey(key), func() (string, error) { res, err := GetSettingNoCache(ctx, key) if err != nil { return "", err } return res.SettingValue, nil }) }) } ``` First, it will check if context data include the setting object with the key. If not, it will query from the global cache which may be memory or a Redis cache. If not, it will get the object from the database. In the end, if the object gets from the global cache or database, it will be set into the context cache. An object stored in the context cache will only be destroyed after the context disappeared.
2023-02-15 14:37:34 +01:00
verification := asymkey_model.ParseCommitWithSignature(ctx, commit)
if !verification.Verified {
return false, "", nil, &ErrWontSign{commitsSigned}
}
// need to work out merge-base
mergeBaseCommit, _, err := gitRepo.GetMergeBase("", baseCommit, headCommit)
if err != nil {
return false, "", nil, err
}
commitList, err := commit.CommitsBeforeUntil(mergeBaseCommit)
if err != nil {
return false, "", nil, err
}
for _, commit := range commitList {
Add context cache as a request level cache (#22294) To avoid duplicated load of the same data in an HTTP request, we can set a context cache to do that. i.e. Some pages may load a user from a database with the same id in different areas on the same page. But the code is hidden in two different deep logic. How should we share the user? As a result of this PR, now if both entry functions accept `context.Context` as the first parameter and we just need to refactor `GetUserByID` to reuse the user from the context cache. Then it will not be loaded twice on an HTTP request. But of course, sometimes we would like to reload an object from the database, that's why `RemoveContextData` is also exposed. The core context cache is here. It defines a new context ```go type cacheContext struct { ctx context.Context data map[any]map[any]any lock sync.RWMutex } var cacheContextKey = struct{}{} func WithCacheContext(ctx context.Context) context.Context { return context.WithValue(ctx, cacheContextKey, &cacheContext{ ctx: ctx, data: make(map[any]map[any]any), }) } ``` Then you can use the below 4 methods to read/write/del the data within the same context. ```go func GetContextData(ctx context.Context, tp, key any) any func SetContextData(ctx context.Context, tp, key, value any) func RemoveContextData(ctx context.Context, tp, key any) func GetWithContextCache[T any](ctx context.Context, cacheGroupKey string, cacheTargetID any, f func() (T, error)) (T, error) ``` Then let's take a look at how `system.GetString` implement it. ```go func GetSetting(ctx context.Context, key string) (string, error) { return cache.GetWithContextCache(ctx, contextCacheKey, key, func() (string, error) { return cache.GetString(genSettingCacheKey(key), func() (string, error) { res, err := GetSettingNoCache(ctx, key) if err != nil { return "", err } return res.SettingValue, nil }) }) } ``` First, it will check if context data include the setting object with the key. If not, it will query from the global cache which may be memory or a Redis cache. If not, it will get the object from the database. In the end, if the object gets from the global cache or database, it will be set into the context cache. An object stored in the context cache will only be destroyed after the context disappeared.
2023-02-15 14:37:34 +01:00
verification := asymkey_model.ParseCommitWithSignature(ctx, commit)
if !verification.Verified {
return false, "", nil, &ErrWontSign{commitsSigned}
}
}
}
}
return true, signingKey, signer, nil
}