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45842c3d2 Improve documentation for running verify-commits.py script (Jameson Lopp) Pull request description: I ran into 3 different issues while trying to run the verify-commits script for the first time and I think documenting them would help save time for future developers. 1. I was trying to just run it with "python" and didn't realize I had multiple python versions installed and this script is only syntactically valid for python 3.x. 2. I needed to import the trusted keys 3. The script was hanging because it was triggering my yubikey for signature verification Tree-SHA512: dfc7a62972ca3de528fae3c9d420c7d2d6658767a555ebbf5f4a27c04748c35ccf8bf63bfc9f264358346de0db49bfbaf2d1540793a609d81c2d9b622ee8182c |
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allow-incorrect-sha512-commits | ||
allow-revsig-commits | ||
allow-unclean-merge-commits | ||
gpg.sh | ||
pre-push-hook.sh | ||
README.md | ||
trusted-git-root | ||
trusted-keys | ||
trusted-sha512-root-commit | ||
verify-commits.py |
Tooling for verification of PGP signed commits
This is an incomplete work in progress, but currently includes a pre-push hook
script (pre-push-hook.sh
) for maintainers to ensure that their own commits
are PGP signed (nearly always merge commits), as well as a Python 3 script to verify
commits against a trusted keys list.
Using verify-commits.py safely
Remember that you can't use an untrusted script to verify itself. This means
that checking out code, then running verify-commits.py
against HEAD
is
not safe, because the version of verify-commits.py
that you just ran could
be backdoored. Instead, you need to use a trusted version of verify-commits
prior to checkout to make sure you're checking out only code signed by trusted
keys:
git fetch origin && \
./contrib/verify-commits/verify-commits.py origin/master && \
git checkout origin/master
Note that the above isn't a good UI/UX yet, and needs significant improvements to make it more convenient and reduce the chance of errors; pull-reqs improving this process would be much appreciated.
Configuration files
trusted-git-root
: This file should contain a single git commit hash which is the first unsigned git commit (hence it is the "root of trust").trusted-sha512-root-commit
: This file should contain a single git commit hash which is the first commit without a SHA512 root commitment.trusted-keys
: This file should contain a \n-delimited list of all PGP fingerprints of authorized commit signers (primary, not subkeys).allow-revsig-commits
: This file should contain a \n-delimited list of git commit hashes. See next section for more info.
Import trusted keys
In order to check the commit signatures you must add the trusted PGP keys to your machine. This can be done in Linux by running
gpg --recv-keys $(<contrib/verify-commits/trusted-keys)
Key expiry/revocation
When a key (or subkey) which has signed old commits expires or is revoked,
verify-commits will start failing to verify all commits which were signed by
said key. In order to avoid bumping the root-of-trust trusted-git-root
file, individual commits which were signed by such a key can be added to the
allow-revsig-commits
file. That way, the PGP signatures are still verified
but no new commits can be signed by any expired/revoked key. To easily build a
list of commits which need to be added, verify-commits.py can be edited to test
each commit with BITCOIN_VERIFY_COMMITS_ALLOW_REVSIG set to both 1 and 0, and
those which need it set to 1 printed.