terraform/internal/getproviders/package_authentication.go

555 lines
20 KiB
Go

package getproviders
import (
"bufio"
"bytes"
"crypto/sha256"
"encoding/hex"
"fmt"
"log"
"strings"
// TODO: replace crypto/openpgp since it is deprecated
// https://github.com/golang/go/issues/44226
//lint:file-ignore SA1019 openpgp is deprecated but there are no good alternatives yet
"golang.org/x/crypto/openpgp"
openpgpArmor "golang.org/x/crypto/openpgp/armor"
openpgpErrors "golang.org/x/crypto/openpgp/errors"
)
type packageAuthenticationResult int
const (
verifiedChecksum packageAuthenticationResult = iota
officialProvider
partnerProvider
communityProvider
)
// PackageAuthenticationResult is returned from a PackageAuthentication
// implementation. It is a mostly-opaque type intended for use in UI, which
// implements Stringer.
//
// A failed PackageAuthentication attempt will return an "unauthenticated"
// result, which is represented by nil.
type PackageAuthenticationResult struct {
result packageAuthenticationResult
KeyID string
}
func (t *PackageAuthenticationResult) String() string {
if t == nil {
return "unauthenticated"
}
return []string{
"verified checksum",
"signed by HashiCorp",
"signed by a HashiCorp partner",
"self-signed",
}[t.result]
}
// SignedByHashiCorp returns whether the package was authenticated as signed
// by HashiCorp.
func (t *PackageAuthenticationResult) SignedByHashiCorp() bool {
if t == nil {
return false
}
if t.result == officialProvider {
return true
}
return false
}
// SignedByAnyParty returns whether the package was authenticated as signed
// by either HashiCorp or by a third-party.
func (t *PackageAuthenticationResult) SignedByAnyParty() bool {
if t == nil {
return false
}
if t.result == officialProvider || t.result == partnerProvider || t.result == communityProvider {
return true
}
return false
}
// ThirdPartySigned returns whether the package was authenticated as signed by a party
// other than HashiCorp.
func (t *PackageAuthenticationResult) ThirdPartySigned() bool {
if t == nil {
return false
}
if t.result == partnerProvider || t.result == communityProvider {
return true
}
return false
}
// SigningKey represents a key used to sign packages from a registry, along
// with an optional trust signature from the registry operator. These are
// both in ASCII armored OpenPGP format.
//
// The JSON struct tags represent the field names used by the Registry API.
type SigningKey struct {
ASCIIArmor string `json:"ascii_armor"`
TrustSignature string `json:"trust_signature"`
}
// PackageAuthentication is an interface implemented by the optional package
// authentication implementations a source may include on its PackageMeta
// objects.
//
// A PackageAuthentication implementation is responsible for authenticating
// that a package is what its distributor intended to distribute and that it
// has not been tampered with.
type PackageAuthentication interface {
// AuthenticatePackage takes the local location of a package (which may or
// may not be the same as the original source location), and returns a
// PackageAuthenticationResult, or an error if the authentication checks
// fail.
//
// The local location is guaranteed not to be a PackageHTTPURL: a remote
// package will always be staged locally for inspection first.
AuthenticatePackage(localLocation PackageLocation) (*PackageAuthenticationResult, error)
}
// PackageAuthenticationHashes is an optional interface implemented by
// PackageAuthentication implementations that are able to return a set of
// hashes they would consider valid if a given PackageLocation referred to
// a package that matched that hash string.
//
// This can be used to record a set of acceptable hashes for a particular
// package in a lock file so that future install operations can determine
// whether the package has changed since its initial installation.
type PackageAuthenticationHashes interface {
PackageAuthentication
// AcceptableHashes returns a set of hashes that this authenticator
// considers to be valid for the current package or, where possible,
// equivalent packages on other platforms. The order of the items in
// the result is not significant, and it may contain duplicates
// that are also not significant.
//
// This method's result should only be used to create a "lock" for a
// particular provider if an earlier call to AuthenticatePackage for
// the corresponding package succeeded. A caller might choose to apply
// differing levels of trust for the acceptable hashes depending on
// the authentication result: a "verified checksum" result only checked
// that the downloaded package matched what the source claimed, which
// could be considered to be less trustworthy than a check that includes
// verifying a signature from the origin registry, depending on what the
// hashes are going to be used for.
//
// Implementations of PackageAuthenticationHashes may return multiple
// hashes with different schemes, which means that all of them are equally
// acceptable. Implementors may also return hashes that use schemes the
// current version of the authenticator would not allow but that could be
// accepted by other versions of Terraform, e.g. if a particular hash
// scheme has been deprecated.
//
// Authenticators that don't use hashes as their authentication procedure
// will either not implement this interface or will have an implementation
// that returns an empty result.
AcceptableHashes() []Hash
}
type packageAuthenticationAll []PackageAuthentication
// PackageAuthenticationAll combines several authentications together into a
// single check value, which passes only if all of the given ones pass.
//
// The checks are processed in the order given, so a failure of an earlier
// check will prevent execution of a later one.
//
// The returned result is from the last authentication, so callers should
// take care to order the authentications such that the strongest is last.
//
// The returned object also implements the AcceptableHashes method from
// interface PackageAuthenticationHashes, returning the hashes from the
// last of the given checks that indicates at least one acceptable hash,
// or no hashes at all if none of the constituents indicate any. The result
// may therefore be incomplete if there is more than one check that can provide
// hashes and they disagree about which hashes are acceptable.
func PackageAuthenticationAll(checks ...PackageAuthentication) PackageAuthentication {
return packageAuthenticationAll(checks)
}
func (checks packageAuthenticationAll) AuthenticatePackage(localLocation PackageLocation) (*PackageAuthenticationResult, error) {
var authResult *PackageAuthenticationResult
for _, check := range checks {
var err error
authResult, err = check.AuthenticatePackage(localLocation)
if err != nil {
return authResult, err
}
}
return authResult, nil
}
func (checks packageAuthenticationAll) AcceptableHashes() []Hash {
// The elements of checks are expected to be ordered so that the strongest
// one is later in the list, so we'll visit them in reverse order and
// take the first one that implements the interface and returns a non-empty
// result.
for i := len(checks) - 1; i >= 0; i-- {
check, ok := checks[i].(PackageAuthenticationHashes)
if !ok {
continue
}
allHashes := check.AcceptableHashes()
if len(allHashes) > 0 {
return allHashes
}
}
return nil
}
type packageHashAuthentication struct {
RequiredHashes []Hash
AllHashes []Hash
Platform Platform
}
// NewPackageHashAuthentication returns a PackageAuthentication implementation
// that checks whether the contents of the package match whatever subset of the
// given hashes are considered acceptable by the current version of Terraform.
//
// This uses the hash algorithms implemented by functions PackageHash and
// MatchesHash. The PreferredHashes function will select which of the given
// hashes are considered by Terraform to be the strongest verification, and
// authentication succeeds as long as one of those matches.
func NewPackageHashAuthentication(platform Platform, validHashes []Hash) PackageAuthentication {
requiredHashes := PreferredHashes(validHashes)
return packageHashAuthentication{
RequiredHashes: requiredHashes,
AllHashes: validHashes,
Platform: platform,
}
}
func (a packageHashAuthentication) AuthenticatePackage(localLocation PackageLocation) (*PackageAuthenticationResult, error) {
if len(a.RequiredHashes) == 0 {
// Indicates that none of the hashes given to
// NewPackageHashAuthentication were considered to be usable by this
// version of Terraform.
return nil, fmt.Errorf("this version of Terraform does not support any of the checksum formats given for this provider")
}
matches, err := PackageMatchesAnyHash(localLocation, a.RequiredHashes)
if err != nil {
return nil, fmt.Errorf("failed to verify provider package checksums: %s", err)
}
if matches {
return &PackageAuthenticationResult{result: verifiedChecksum}, nil
}
if len(a.RequiredHashes) == 1 {
return nil, fmt.Errorf("provider package doesn't match the expected checksum %q", a.RequiredHashes[0].String())
}
// It's non-ideal that this doesn't actually list the expected checksums,
// but in the many-checksum case the message would get pretty unweildy.
// In practice today we typically use this authenticator only with a
// single hash returned from a network mirror, so the better message
// above will prevail in that case. Maybe we'll improve on this somehow
// if the future introduction of a new hash scheme causes there to more
// commonly be multiple hashes.
return nil, fmt.Errorf("provider package doesn't match the any of the expected checksums")
}
func (a packageHashAuthentication) AcceptableHashes() []Hash {
// In this case we include even hashes the current version of Terraform
// doesn't prefer, because this result is used for building a lock file
// and so it's helpful to include older hash formats that other Terraform
// versions might need in order to do authentication successfully.
return a.AllHashes
}
type archiveHashAuthentication struct {
Platform Platform
WantSHA256Sum [sha256.Size]byte
}
// NewArchiveChecksumAuthentication returns a PackageAuthentication
// implementation that checks that the original distribution archive matches
// the given hash.
//
// This authentication is suitable only for PackageHTTPURL and
// PackageLocalArchive source locations, because the unpacked layout
// (represented by PackageLocalDir) does not retain access to the original
// source archive. Therefore this authenticator will return an error if its
// given localLocation is not PackageLocalArchive.
//
// NewPackageHashAuthentication is preferable to use when possible because
// it uses the newer hashing scheme (implemented by function PackageHash) that
// can work with both packed and unpacked provider packages.
func NewArchiveChecksumAuthentication(platform Platform, wantSHA256Sum [sha256.Size]byte) PackageAuthentication {
return archiveHashAuthentication{platform, wantSHA256Sum}
}
func (a archiveHashAuthentication) AuthenticatePackage(localLocation PackageLocation) (*PackageAuthenticationResult, error) {
archiveLocation, ok := localLocation.(PackageLocalArchive)
if !ok {
// A source should not use this authentication type for non-archive
// locations.
return nil, fmt.Errorf("cannot check archive hash for non-archive location %s", localLocation)
}
gotHash, err := PackageHashLegacyZipSHA(archiveLocation)
if err != nil {
return nil, fmt.Errorf("failed to compute checksum for %s: %s", archiveLocation, err)
}
wantHash := HashLegacyZipSHAFromSHA(a.WantSHA256Sum)
if gotHash != wantHash {
return nil, fmt.Errorf("archive has incorrect checksum %s (expected %s)", gotHash, wantHash)
}
return &PackageAuthenticationResult{result: verifiedChecksum}, nil
}
func (a archiveHashAuthentication) AcceptableHashes() []Hash {
return []Hash{HashLegacyZipSHAFromSHA(a.WantSHA256Sum)}
}
type matchingChecksumAuthentication struct {
Document []byte
Filename string
WantSHA256Sum [sha256.Size]byte
}
// NewMatchingChecksumAuthentication returns a PackageAuthentication
// implementation that scans a registry-provided SHA256SUMS document for a
// specified filename, and compares the SHA256 hash against the expected hash.
// This is necessary to ensure that the signed SHA256SUMS document matches the
// declared SHA256 hash for the package, and therefore that a valid signature
// of this document authenticates the package.
//
// This authentication always returns a nil result, since it alone cannot offer
// any assertions about package integrity. It should be combined with other
// authentications to be useful.
func NewMatchingChecksumAuthentication(document []byte, filename string, wantSHA256Sum [sha256.Size]byte) PackageAuthentication {
return matchingChecksumAuthentication{
Document: document,
Filename: filename,
WantSHA256Sum: wantSHA256Sum,
}
}
func (m matchingChecksumAuthentication) AuthenticatePackage(location PackageLocation) (*PackageAuthenticationResult, error) {
// Find the checksum in the list with matching filename. The document is
// in the form "0123456789abcdef filename.zip".
filename := []byte(m.Filename)
var checksum []byte
for _, line := range bytes.Split(m.Document, []byte("\n")) {
parts := bytes.Fields(line)
if len(parts) > 1 && bytes.Equal(parts[1], filename) {
checksum = parts[0]
break
}
}
if checksum == nil {
return nil, fmt.Errorf("checksum list has no SHA-256 hash for %q", m.Filename)
}
// Decode the ASCII checksum into a byte array for comparison.
var gotSHA256Sum [sha256.Size]byte
if _, err := hex.Decode(gotSHA256Sum[:], checksum); err != nil {
return nil, fmt.Errorf("checksum list has invalid SHA256 hash %q: %s", string(checksum), err)
}
// If the checksums don't match, authentication fails.
if !bytes.Equal(gotSHA256Sum[:], m.WantSHA256Sum[:]) {
return nil, fmt.Errorf("checksum list has unexpected SHA-256 hash %x (expected %x)", gotSHA256Sum, m.WantSHA256Sum[:])
}
// Success! But this doesn't result in any real authentication, only a
// lack of authentication errors, so we return a nil result.
return nil, nil
}
type signatureAuthentication struct {
Document []byte
Signature []byte
Keys []SigningKey
}
// NewSignatureAuthentication returns a PackageAuthentication implementation
// that verifies the cryptographic signature for a package against any of the
// provided keys.
//
// The signing key for a package will be auto detected by attempting each key
// in turn until one is successful. If such a key is found, there are three
// possible successful authentication results:
//
// 1. If the signing key is the HashiCorp official key, it is an official
// provider;
// 2. Otherwise, if the signing key has a trust signature from the HashiCorp
// Partners key, it is a partner provider;
// 3. If neither of the above is true, it is a community provider.
//
// Any failure in the process of validating the signature will result in an
// unauthenticated result.
func NewSignatureAuthentication(document, signature []byte, keys []SigningKey) PackageAuthentication {
return signatureAuthentication{
Document: document,
Signature: signature,
Keys: keys,
}
}
func (s signatureAuthentication) AuthenticatePackage(location PackageLocation) (*PackageAuthenticationResult, error) {
// Find the key that signed the checksum file. This can fail if there is no
// valid signature for any of the provided keys.
signingKey, keyID, err := s.findSigningKey()
if err != nil {
return nil, err
}
// Verify the signature using the HashiCorp public key. If this succeeds,
// this is an official provider.
hashicorpKeyring, err := openpgp.ReadArmoredKeyRing(strings.NewReader(HashicorpPublicKey))
if err != nil {
return nil, fmt.Errorf("error creating HashiCorp keyring: %s", err)
}
_, err = openpgp.CheckDetachedSignature(hashicorpKeyring, bytes.NewReader(s.Document), bytes.NewReader(s.Signature))
if err == nil {
return &PackageAuthenticationResult{result: officialProvider, KeyID: keyID}, nil
}
// If the signing key has a trust signature, attempt to verify it with the
// HashiCorp partners public key.
if signingKey.TrustSignature != "" {
hashicorpPartnersKeyring, err := openpgp.ReadArmoredKeyRing(strings.NewReader(HashicorpPartnersKey))
if err != nil {
return nil, fmt.Errorf("error creating HashiCorp Partners keyring: %s", err)
}
authorKey, err := openpgpArmor.Decode(strings.NewReader(signingKey.ASCIIArmor))
if err != nil {
return nil, fmt.Errorf("error decoding signing key: %s", err)
}
trustSignature, err := openpgpArmor.Decode(strings.NewReader(signingKey.TrustSignature))
if err != nil {
return nil, fmt.Errorf("error decoding trust signature: %s", err)
}
_, err = openpgp.CheckDetachedSignature(hashicorpPartnersKeyring, authorKey.Body, trustSignature.Body)
if err != nil {
return nil, fmt.Errorf("error verifying trust signature: %s", err)
}
return &PackageAuthenticationResult{result: partnerProvider, KeyID: keyID}, nil
}
// We have a valid signature, but it's not from the HashiCorp key, and it
// also isn't a trusted partner. This is a community provider.
return &PackageAuthenticationResult{result: communityProvider, KeyID: keyID}, nil
}
func (s signatureAuthentication) AcceptableHashes() []Hash {
// This is a bit of an abstraction leak because signatureAuthentication
// otherwise just treats the document as an opaque blob that's been
// signed, but here we're making assumptions about its format because
// we only want to trust that _all_ of the checksums are valid (rather
// than just the current platform's one) if we've also verified that the
// bag of checksums is signed.
//
// In recognition of that layering quirk this implementation is intended to
// be somewhat resilient to potentially using this authenticator with
// non-checksums files in future (in which case it'll return nothing at all)
// but it might be better in the long run to instead combine
// signatureAuthentication and matchingChecksumAuthentication together and
// be explicit that the resulting merged authenticator is exclusively for
// checksums files.
var ret []Hash
sc := bufio.NewScanner(bytes.NewReader(s.Document))
for sc.Scan() {
parts := bytes.Fields(sc.Bytes())
if len(parts) != 0 && len(parts) < 2 {
// Doesn't look like a valid sums file line, so we'll assume
// this whole thing isn't a checksums file.
return nil
}
// If this is a checksums file then the first part should be a
// hex-encoded SHA256 hash, so it should be 64 characters long
// and contain only hex digits.
hashStr := parts[0]
if len(hashStr) != 64 {
return nil // doesn't look like a checksums file
}
var gotSHA256Sum [sha256.Size]byte
if _, err := hex.Decode(gotSHA256Sum[:], hashStr); err != nil {
return nil // doesn't look like a checksums file
}
ret = append(ret, HashLegacyZipSHAFromSHA(gotSHA256Sum))
}
return ret
}
// findSigningKey attempts to verify the signature using each of the keys
// returned by the registry. If a valid signature is found, it returns the
// signing key.
//
// Note: currently the registry only returns one key, but this may change in
// the future.
func (s signatureAuthentication) findSigningKey() (*SigningKey, string, error) {
for _, key := range s.Keys {
keyring, err := openpgp.ReadArmoredKeyRing(strings.NewReader(key.ASCIIArmor))
if err != nil {
return nil, "", fmt.Errorf("error decoding signing key: %s", err)
}
entity, err := openpgp.CheckDetachedSignature(keyring, bytes.NewReader(s.Document), bytes.NewReader(s.Signature))
// If the signature issuer does not match the the key, keep trying the
// rest of the provided keys.
if err == openpgpErrors.ErrUnknownIssuer {
continue
}
// Any other signature error is terminal.
if err != nil {
return nil, "", fmt.Errorf("error checking signature: %s", err)
}
keyID := "n/a"
if entity.PrimaryKey != nil {
keyID = entity.PrimaryKey.KeyIdString()
}
log.Printf("[DEBUG] Provider signed by %s", entityString(entity))
return &key, keyID, nil
}
// If none of the provided keys issued the signature, this package is
// unsigned. This is currently a terminal authentication error.
return nil, "", fmt.Errorf("authentication signature from unknown issuer")
}
// entityString extracts the key ID and identity name(s) from an openpgp.Entity
// for logging.
func entityString(entity *openpgp.Entity) string {
if entity == nil {
return ""
}
keyID := "n/a"
if entity.PrimaryKey != nil {
keyID = entity.PrimaryKey.KeyIdString()
}
var names []string
for _, identity := range entity.Identities {
names = append(names, identity.Name)
}
return fmt.Sprintf("%s %s", keyID, strings.Join(names, ", "))
}