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Roles and Delegations are still confused in parts of the implementation #660
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add_restricted_paths was renamed to add_path; however, this function represents a problematic element of TUF that assumes that roles are have a single delegator and delegatee, and that one can refer to a role's expected keys without being concerned about any delegation metadata.... So this is being removed from the tutorial. In time, add_paths will either be removed or changed (to expect a delegator role and a delegatee role, not just a delegatee role). This comment does not do justice to the issue: please see TUF GitHub Issue #660: #660 Signed-off-by: Sebastien Awwad <[email protected]>
add_restricted_paths was renamed to add_path; however, this function represents a problematic element of TUF that assumes that roles are have a single delegator and delegatee, and that one can refer to a role's expected keys without being concerned about any delegation metadata.... So this is being removed from the tutorial. In time, add_paths will either be removed or changed (to expect a delegator role and a delegatee role, not just a delegatee role). This comment does not do justice to the issue: please see TUF GitHub Issue #660: #660 Signed-off-by: Sebastien Awwad <[email protected]>
saving changes pending commit here, to switch tracks from ASN.1 support itself to finally resolve #660, which is causing problems here. Signed-off-by: Sebastien Awwad <[email protected]>
These aid in the roledb rewrite to start to address Issue #660. Also add two minor TODOs. Signed-off-by: Sebastien Awwad <[email protected]>
- Rename and alter some schemas that really address delegations, to make that clear. - Do away with the ROLEDB_SCHEMA, an intermediate metadata format that is not necessary and which incorrectly flattens the delegation graph, and similar schemas. - Rewrite getters/setters in roledb to respect the delegation graph rather than assuming that delegated targets roles have only one delegation pointing to them (see Issue #660). - Add a variety of TODOs for later. - Clarify docstrings as a result of the above. reinterpreting metadata Signed-off-by: Sebastien Awwad <[email protected]>
Kills classes MetaFile, RootFile, TargetsFile, MirrorsFile, SnapshotFile, and TimestampFile. They each had an unused from_ method and a used make_ method. They were all additional, unnecessary representations of the same metadata, and it is very important that metadata formats be defined once in the reference implementation, in the schemas that are already used more broadly, in foramts.py. Replaces the classes, their methods, and some associated variables with a single short function called build_dict_conforming_to_schema that takes keyword arguments and builds a dictionary, then checks to make sure that the result conforms to the given schema. This commit shifts repository_lib from use of the old classes to the new function. In later commits, we should use this function more broadly, since it can be of use in all schema construction. There are several TODOs added to the code, mostly for post-#660 tasks. Signed-off-by: Sebastien Awwad <[email protected]>
These aid in the roledb rewrite to start to address Issue #660. Also add two minor TODOs. Signed-off-by: Sebastien Awwad <[email protected]>
- Rename and alter some schemas that really address delegations, to make that clear. - Do away with the ROLEDB_SCHEMA, an intermediate metadata format that is not necessary and which incorrectly flattens the delegation graph, and similar schemas. - Rewrite getters/setters in roledb to respect the delegation graph rather than assuming that delegated targets roles have only one delegation pointing to them (see Issue #660). - Add a variety of TODOs for later. - Clarify docstrings as a result of the above. reinterpreting metadata Signed-off-by: Sebastien Awwad <[email protected]>
Kills classes MetaFile, RootFile, TargetsFile, MirrorsFile, SnapshotFile, and TimestampFile. They each had an unused from_ method and a used make_ method. They were all additional, unnecessary representations of the same metadata, and it is very important that metadata formats be defined once in the reference implementation, in the schemas that are already used more broadly, in foramts.py. Replaces the classes, their methods, and some associated variables with a single short function called build_dict_conforming_to_schema that takes keyword arguments and builds a dictionary, then checks to make sure that the result conforms to the given schema. This commit shifts repository_lib from use of the old classes to the new function. In later commits, we should use this function more broadly, since it can be of use in all schema construction. There are several TODOs added to the code, mostly for post-#660 tasks. Signed-off-by: Sebastien Awwad <[email protected]>
Kills classes MetaFile, RootFile, TargetsFile, MirrorsFile, SnapshotFile, and TimestampFile. They each had an unused from_ method and a used make_ method. They were all additional, unnecessary representations of the same metadata, and it is very important that metadata formats be defined once in the reference implementation, in the schemas that are already used more broadly, in foramts.py. Replaces the classes, their methods, and some associated variables with a single short function called build_dict_conforming_to_schema that takes keyword arguments and builds a dictionary, then checks to make sure that the result conforms to the given schema. This commit shifts repository_lib from use of the old classes to the new function. In later commits, we should use this function more broadly, since it can be of use in all schema construction. There are several TODOs added to the code, mostly for post-#660 tasks. Signed-off-by: Sebastien Awwad <[email protected]>
Kills classes MetaFile, RootFile, TargetsFile, MirrorsFile, SnapshotFile, and TimestampFile. They each had an unused from_ method and a used make_ method. They were all additional, unnecessary representations of the same metadata, and it is very important that metadata formats be defined once in the reference implementation, in the schemas that are already used more broadly, in foramts.py. Replaces the classes, their methods, and some associated variables with a single short function called build_dict_conforming_to_schema that takes keyword arguments and builds a dictionary, then checks to make sure that the result conforms to the given schema. This commit shifts repository_lib from use of the old classes to the new function. In later commits, we should use this function more broadly, since it can be of use in all schema construction. There are several TODOs added to the code, mostly for post-#660 tasks. Signed-off-by: Sebastien Awwad <[email protected]>
Kills classes MetaFile, RootFile, TargetsFile, MirrorsFile, SnapshotFile, and TimestampFile. They each had an unused from_ method and a used make_ method. They were all additional, unnecessary representations of the same metadata, and it is very important that metadata formats be defined once in the reference implementation, in the schemas that are already used more broadly, in foramts.py. Replaces the classes, their methods, and some associated variables with a single short function called build_dict_conforming_to_schema that takes keyword arguments and builds a dictionary, then checks to make sure that the result conforms to the given schema. This commit shifts repository_lib from use of the old classes to the new function. In later commits, we should use this function more broadly, since it can be of use in all schema construction. There are several TODOs added to the code, mostly for post-#660 tasks. Signed-off-by: Sebastien Awwad <[email protected]>
These aid in the roledb rewrite to start to address Issue #660. Also add two minor TODOs. Signed-off-by: Sebastien Awwad <[email protected]>
- Rename and alter some schemas that really address delegations, to make that clear. - Do away with the ROLEDB_SCHEMA, an intermediate metadata format that is not necessary and which incorrectly flattens the delegation graph, and similar schemas. - Rewrite getters/setters in roledb to respect the delegation graph rather than assuming that delegated targets roles have only one delegation pointing to them (see Issue #660). - Add a variety of TODOs for later. - Clarify docstrings as a result of the above. reinterpreting metadata Signed-off-by: Sebastien Awwad <[email protected]>
These aid in the roledb rewrite to start to address Issue #660. Also add two minor TODOs. Signed-off-by: Sebastien Awwad <[email protected]>
- remove duplicate ROLENAME_SCHEMA and ROLEDICT_SCHEMA - remove outdated and duplicate ROLE_SCHEMA Note that this is a quick fix that may be overridden with refactoring work in theupdateframework#660/theupdateframework#846. Signed-off-by: Lukas Puehringer <[email protected]>
add_restricted_paths was renamed to add_path; however, this function represents a problematic element of TUF that assumes that roles are have a single delegator and delegatee, and that one can refer to a role's expected keys without being concerned about any delegation metadata.... So this is being removed from the tutorial. In time, add_paths will either be removed or changed (to expect a delegator role and a delegatee role, not just a delegatee role). This comment does not do justice to the issue: please see TUF GitHub Issue theupdateframework#660: theupdateframework#660 Signed-off-by: Sebastien Awwad <[email protected]>
add_restricted_paths was renamed to add_path; however, this function represents a problematic element of TUF that assumes that roles are have a single delegator and delegatee, and that one can refer to a role's expected keys without being concerned about any delegation metadata.... So this is being removed from the tutorial. In time, add_paths will either be removed or changed (to expect a delegator role and a delegatee role, not just a delegatee role). This comment does not do justice to the issue: please see TUF GitHub Issue theupdateframework#660: theupdateframework#660 Signed-off-by: Sebastien Awwad <[email protected]>
add_restricted_paths was renamed to add_path; however, this function represents a problematic element of TUF that assumes that roles are have a single delegator and delegatee, and that one can refer to a role's expected keys without being concerned about any delegation metadata.... So this is being removed from the tutorial. In time, add_paths will either be removed or changed (to expect a delegator role and a delegatee role, not just a delegatee role). This comment does not do justice to the issue: please see TUF GitHub Issue #660: #660 Signed-off-by: Sebastien Awwad <[email protected]>
This commit performs restructuring on the recently added metadata class model architecture, which shall be part of a new simple TUF API. The key change is that the Metadata class is now used as container for inner TUF metadata (Root, Timestamp, Snapshot, Targets) instead of serving as base class for these, that means we use 'composition' instead of 'inheritance'. Still, in order to aggregate common attributes of the inner Metadata (expires, version, spec_version), we use a new baseclass 'Signed', which also corresponds to the signed field of the outer metadata container. Based on prior observations in TUF's sister project in-toto, this architecture seems to more closely represent the metadata model as it is defined in the specification (see in-toto/in-toto#98 and in-toto/in-toto#142 for related discussions). Note that the proposed changes require us to now access some attributes/methods via the signed attribute of a Metadata object and not directly on the Metadata object, but it would be possible to add short-cuts. (see todo notes in doc header). Further changes include: - Add minimal doc header with TODO notes - Make attributes that correspond to fields in TUF JSON metadata public again. There doesn't seem to be a good reason to protect them with leading underscores and use setters/getters instead, it just adds more code. - Generally try to reduce code. - Remove keyring and consistent_snapshot attributes from metadata class. As discussed in #1060 they are a better fit for extra management code (also see #660) - Remove sslib schema checks (see TODO notes about validation in doc header) - Drop usage of build_dict_conforming_to_schema, it seems a lot simpler and more explicit to just code this here. - ... same goes for make_metadata_fileinfo - Adapt tests accordingly TODO: Document!!! Signed-off-by: Lukas Puehringer <[email protected]>
This commit performs restructuring on the recently added metadata class model architecture, which shall be part of a new simple TUF API. The key change is that the Metadata class is now used as container for inner TUF metadata (Root, Timestamp, Snapshot, Targets) instead of serving as base class for these, that means we use 'composition' instead of 'inheritance'. Still, in order to aggregate common attributes of the inner Metadata (expires, version, spec_version), we use a new baseclass 'Signed', which also corresponds to the signed field of the outer metadata container. Based on prior observations in TUF's sister project in-toto, this architecture seems to more closely represent the metadata model as it is defined in the specification (see in-toto/in-toto#98 and in-toto/in-toto#142 for related discussions). Note that the proposed changes require us to now access some attributes/methods via the signed attribute of a Metadata object and not directly on the Metadata object, but it would be possible to add short-cuts. (see todo notes in doc header). Further changes include: - Add minimal doc header with TODO notes - Make attributes that correspond to fields in TUF JSON metadata public again. There doesn't seem to be a good reason to protect them with leading underscores and use setters/getters instead, it just adds more code. - Generally try to reduce code. - Remove keyring and consistent_snapshot attributes from metadata class. As discussed in #1060 they are a better fit for extra management code (also see #660) - Remove sslib schema checks (see TODO notes about validation in doc header) - Drop usage of build_dict_conforming_to_schema, it seems a lot simpler and more explicit to just code this here. - ... same goes for make_metadata_fileinfo - Adapt tests accordingly TODO: Document!!! Signed-off-by: Lukas Puehringer <[email protected]>
Add metadata module with container classes for TUF role metadata, including methods to read/serialize/write from and to JSON, perform TUF-compliant metadata updates, and create and verify signatures. The 'Metadata' class provides a container for inner TUF metadata objects (Root, Timestamp, Snapshot, Targets) (i.e. OOP composition) The 'Signed' class provides a base class to aggregate common attributes (i.e. version, expires, spec_version) of the inner metadata classes. (i.e. OOP inheritance). The name of the class also aligns with the 'signed' field of the outer metadata container. Based on prior observations in TUF's sister project in-toto, this architecture seems to well represent the metadata model as it is defined in the specification (see in-toto/in-toto#98 and in-toto/in-toto#142 for related discussions). This commits also adds tests. **Some more design considerations** (also in regards to prior sketches of this module) - Aims at simplicity, brevity and recognizability of the wireline metadata format. - All attributes that correspond to fields in TUF JSON metadata are public. There doesn't seem to be a good reason to protect them with leading underscores and use setters/getters instead, it just adds more code, and impedes recognizability of the wireline metadata format. - Although, it might be convenient to have short-cuts on the Metadata class that point to methods and attributes that are common to all subclasses of the contained Signed class (e.g. Metadata.version instead of Metadata.signed.version, etc.), this also conflicts with goal of recognizability of the wireline metadata. Thus we won't add such short-cuts for now. See: theupdateframework#1060 (comment) - Signing keys and a 'consistent_snapshot' boolean are not on the targets metadata class. They are a better fit for management code. See: theupdateframework#1060 (comment), and theupdateframework#660. - Does not use sslib schema checks (see TODO notes about validation in doc header) - Does not use existing tuf utils, such as make_metadata_fileinfo, build_dict_conforming_to_schema, if it is easy and more explicit to just re-implement the desired behavior on the metadata classes. - All datetime's are treated as UTC. Since timezone info is not captured in the wireline metadata format it should not be captured in the internal representation either. - Does not use 3rd-party dateutil package, in order to minimize dependency footprint, which is especially important for update clients which often have to vendor their dependencies. However, compatibility between the more advanced dateutil.relativedelta (e.g handles leap years automatically) and timedelta is tested. - Uses PEP8 indentation (4 space) and Google-style doc string instead of sslab-style. See secure-systems-lab/code-style-guidelines#20 - Does not support Python2 **TODO:** See doc header TODO list
Add metadata module with container classes for TUF role metadata, including methods to read/serialize/write from and to JSON, perform TUF-compliant metadata updates, and create and verify signatures. The 'Metadata' class provides a container for inner TUF metadata objects (Root, Timestamp, Snapshot, Targets) (i.e. OOP composition) The 'Signed' class provides a base class to aggregate common attributes (i.e. version, expires, spec_version) of the inner metadata classes. (i.e. OOP inheritance). The name of the class also aligns with the 'signed' field of the outer metadata container. Based on prior observations in TUF's sister project in-toto, this architecture seems to well represent the metadata model as it is defined in the specification (see in-toto/in-toto#98 and in-toto/in-toto#142 for related discussions). This commits also adds tests. **Additional design considerations** (also in regards to prior sketches of this module) - Aims at simplicity, brevity and recognizability of the wireline metadata format. - All attributes that correspond to fields in TUF JSON metadata are public. There doesn't seem to be a good reason to protect them with leading underscores and use setters/getters instead, it just adds more code, and impedes recognizability of the wireline metadata format. - Although, it might be convenient to have short-cuts on the Metadata class that point to methods and attributes that are common to all subclasses of the contained Signed class (e.g. Metadata.version instead of Metadata.signed.version, etc.), this also conflicts with goal of recognizability of the wireline metadata. Thus we won't add such short-cuts for now. See: theupdateframework#1060 (comment) - Signing keys and a 'consistent_snapshot' boolean are not on the targets metadata class. They are a better fit for management code. See: theupdateframework#1060 (comment), and theupdateframework#660. - Does not use sslib schema checks (see TODO notes about validation in doc header) - Does not use existing tuf utils, such as make_metadata_fileinfo, build_dict_conforming_to_schema, if it is easy and more explicit to just re-implement the desired behavior on the metadata classes. - All datetime's are treated as UTC. Since timezone info is not captured in the wireline metadata format it should not be captured in the internal representation either. - Does not use 3rd-party dateutil package, in order to minimize dependency footprint, which is especially important for update clients which often have to vendor their dependencies. However, compatibility between the more advanced dateutil.relativedelta (e.g handles leap years automatically) and timedelta is tested. - Uses PEP8 indentation (4 space) and Google-style doc string instead of sslab-style. See secure-systems-lab/code-style-guidelines#20 - Does not support Python =< 3.5 **TODO: See doc header TODO list** Co-authored-by: Trishank Karthik Kuppusamy <[email protected]> Co-authored-by: Joshua Lock <[email protected]> Co-authored-by: Teodora Sechkova <[email protected]> Signed-off-by: Lukas Puehringer <[email protected]>
Add metadata module with container classes for TUF role metadata, including methods to read/serialize/write from and to JSON, perform TUF-compliant metadata updates, and create and verify signatures. The 'Metadata' class provides a container for inner TUF metadata objects (Root, Timestamp, Snapshot, Targets) (i.e. OOP composition) The 'Signed' class provides a base class to aggregate common attributes (i.e. version, expires, spec_version) of the inner metadata classes. (i.e. OOP inheritance). The name of the class also aligns with the 'signed' field of the outer metadata container. Based on prior observations in TUF's sister project in-toto, this architecture seems to well represent the metadata model as it is defined in the specification (see in-toto/in-toto#98 and in-toto/in-toto#142 for related discussions). This commits also adds tests. **TODO: See doc header TODO list** **Additional design considerations** (also in regards to prior sketches of this module) - Aims at simplicity, brevity and recognizability of the wireline metadata format. - All attributes that correspond to fields in TUF JSON metadata are public. There doesn't seem to be a good reason to protect them with leading underscores and use setters/getters instead, it just adds more code, and impedes recognizability of the wireline metadata format. - Although, it might be convenient to have short-cuts on the Metadata class that point to methods and attributes that are common to all subclasses of the contained Signed class (e.g. Metadata.version instead of Metadata.signed.version, etc.), this also conflicts with goal of recognizability of the wireline metadata. Thus we won't add such short-cuts for now. See: theupdateframework#1060 (comment) - Signing keys and a 'consistent_snapshot' boolean are not on the targets metadata class. They are a better fit for management code. See: theupdateframework#1060 (comment), and theupdateframework#660. - Does not use sslib schema checks (see TODO notes about validation in doc header) - Does not use existing tuf utils, such as make_metadata_fileinfo, build_dict_conforming_to_schema, if it is easy and more explicit to just re-implement the desired behavior on the metadata classes. - All datetime's are treated as UTC. Since timezone info is not captured in the wireline metadata format it should not be captured in the internal representation either. - Does not use 3rd-party dateutil package, in order to minimize dependency footprint, which is especially important for update clients which often have to vendor their dependencies. However, compatibility between the more advanced dateutil.relativedelta (e.g handles leap years automatically) and timedelta is tested. - Uses PEP8 indentation (4 space) and Google-style doc string instead of sslab-style. See secure-systems-lab/code-style-guidelines#20 - Does not support Python =< 3.5 Co-authored-by: Trishank Karthik Kuppusamy <[email protected]> Co-authored-by: Joshua Lock <[email protected]> Co-authored-by: Teodora Sechkova <[email protected]> Signed-off-by: Lukas Puehringer <[email protected]>
Add metadata module with container classes for TUF role metadata, including methods to read/serialize/write from and to JSON, perform TUF-compliant metadata updates, and create and verify signatures. The 'Metadata' class provides a container for inner TUF metadata objects (Root, Timestamp, Snapshot, Targets) (i.e. OOP composition) The 'Signed' class provides a base class to aggregate common attributes (i.e. version, expires, spec_version) of the inner metadata classes. (i.e. OOP inheritance). The name of the class also aligns with the 'signed' field of the outer metadata container. Based on prior observations in TUF's sister project in-toto, this architecture seems to well represent the metadata model as it is defined in the specification (see in-toto/in-toto#98 and in-toto/in-toto#142 for related discussions). This commits also adds tests. **TODO: See doc header TODO list** **Additional design considerations** (also in regards to prior sketches of this module) - Aims at simplicity, brevity and recognizability of the wireline metadata format. - All attributes that correspond to fields in TUF JSON metadata are public. There doesn't seem to be a good reason to protect them with leading underscores and use setters/getters instead, it just adds more code, and impedes recognizability of the wireline metadata format. - Although, it might be convenient to have short-cuts on the Metadata class that point to methods and attributes that are common to all subclasses of the contained Signed class (e.g. Metadata.version instead of Metadata.signed.version, etc.), this also conflicts with goal of recognizability of the wireline metadata. Thus we won't add such short-cuts for now. See: theupdateframework#1060 (comment) - Signing keys and a 'consistent_snapshot' boolean are not on the targets metadata class. They are a better fit for management code. See: theupdateframework#1060 (comment), and theupdateframework#660. - Does not use sslib schema checks (see TODO notes about validation in doc header) - Does not use existing tuf utils, such as make_metadata_fileinfo, build_dict_conforming_to_schema, if it is easy and more explicit to just re-implement the desired behavior on the metadata classes. - All datetime's are treated as UTC. Since timezone info is not captured in the wireline metadata format it should not be captured in the internal representation either. - Does not use 3rd-party dateutil package, in order to minimize dependency footprint, which is especially important for update clients which often have to vendor their dependencies. However, compatibility between the more advanced dateutil.relativedelta (e.g handles leap years automatically) and timedelta is tested. - Uses PEP8 indentation (4 space) and Google-style doc string instead of sslab-style. See secure-systems-lab/code-style-guidelines#20 - Does not support Python =< 3.5 Co-authored-by: Trishank Karthik Kuppusamy <[email protected]> Co-authored-by: Joshua Lock <[email protected]> Co-authored-by: Teodora Sechkova <[email protected]> Signed-off-by: Lukas Puehringer <[email protected]>
Add metadata module with container classes for TUF role metadata, including methods to read/serialize/write from and to JSON, perform TUF-compliant metadata updates, and create and verify signatures. The 'Metadata' class provides a container for inner TUF metadata objects (Root, Timestamp, Snapshot, Targets) (i.e. OOP composition) The 'Signed' class provides a base class to aggregate common attributes (i.e. version, expires, spec_version) of the inner metadata classes. (i.e. OOP inheritance). The name of the class also aligns with the 'signed' field of the outer metadata container. Based on prior observations in TUF's sister project in-toto, this architecture seems to well represent the metadata model as it is defined in the specification (see in-toto/in-toto#98 and in-toto/in-toto#142 for related discussions). This commits also adds tests. **TODO: See doc header TODO list** **Additional design considerations** (also in regards to prior sketches of this module) - Aims at simplicity, brevity and recognizability of the wireline metadata format. - All attributes that correspond to fields in TUF JSON metadata are public. There doesn't seem to be a good reason to protect them with leading underscores and use setters/getters instead, it just adds more code, and impedes recognizability of the wireline metadata format. - Although, it might be convenient to have short-cuts on the Metadata class that point to methods and attributes that are common to all subclasses of the contained Signed class (e.g. Metadata.version instead of Metadata.signed.version, etc.), this also conflicts with goal of recognizability of the wireline metadata. Thus we won't add such short-cuts for now. See: theupdateframework#1060 (comment) - Signing keys and a 'consistent_snapshot' boolean are not on the targets metadata class. They are a better fit for management code. See: theupdateframework#1060 (comment), and theupdateframework#660. - Does not use sslib schema checks (see TODO notes about validation in doc header) - Does not use existing tuf utils, such as make_metadata_fileinfo, build_dict_conforming_to_schema, if it is easy and more explicit to just re-implement the desired behavior on the metadata classes. - All datetime's are treated as UTC. Since timezone info is not captured in the wireline metadata format it should not be captured in the internal representation either. - Does not use 3rd-party dateutil package, in order to minimize dependency footprint, which is especially important for update clients which often have to vendor their dependencies. However, compatibility between the more advanced dateutil.relativedelta (e.g handles leap years automatically) and timedelta is tested. - Uses PEP8 indentation (4 space) and Google-style doc string instead of sslab-style. See secure-systems-lab/code-style-guidelines#20 - Does not support Python =< 3.5 Co-authored-by: Trishank Karthik Kuppusamy <[email protected]> Co-authored-by: Joshua Lock <[email protected]> Co-authored-by: Teodora Sechkova <[email protected]> Signed-off-by: Lukas Puehringer <[email protected]>
Add metadata module with container classes for TUF role metadata, including methods to read/serialize/write from and to JSON, perform TUF-compliant metadata updates, and create and verify signatures. The 'Metadata' class provides a container for inner TUF metadata objects (Root, Timestamp, Snapshot, Targets) (i.e. OOP composition) The 'Signed' class provides a base class to aggregate common attributes (i.e. version, expires, spec_version) of the inner metadata classes. (i.e. OOP inheritance). The name of the class also aligns with the 'signed' field of the outer metadata container. Based on prior observations in TUF's sister project in-toto, this architecture seems to well represent the metadata model as it is defined in the specification (see in-toto/in-toto#98 and in-toto/in-toto#142 for related discussions). This commits also adds tests. **TODO: See doc header TODO list** **Additional design considerations** (also in regards to prior sketches of this module) - Aims at simplicity, brevity and recognizability of the wireline metadata format. - All attributes that correspond to fields in TUF JSON metadata are public. There doesn't seem to be a good reason to protect them with leading underscores and use setters/getters instead, it just adds more code, and impedes recognizability of the wireline metadata format. - Although, it might be convenient to have short-cuts on the Metadata class that point to methods and attributes that are common to all subclasses of the contained Signed class (e.g. Metadata.version instead of Metadata.signed.version, etc.), this also conflicts with goal of recognizability of the wireline metadata. Thus we won't add such short-cuts for now. See: theupdateframework#1060 (comment) - Signing keys and a 'consistent_snapshot' boolean are not on the targets metadata class. They are a better fit for management code. See: theupdateframework#1060 (comment), and theupdateframework#660. - Does not use sslib schema checks (see TODO notes about validation in doc header) - Does not use existing tuf utils, such as make_metadata_fileinfo, build_dict_conforming_to_schema, if it is easy and more explicit to just re-implement the desired behavior on the metadata classes. - All datetime's are treated as UTC. Since timezone info is not captured in the wireline metadata format it should not be captured in the internal representation either. - Does not use 3rd-party dateutil package, in order to minimize dependency footprint, which is especially important for update clients which often have to vendor their dependencies. However, compatibility between the more advanced dateutil.relativedelta (e.g handles leap years automatically) and timedelta is tested. - Uses PEP8 indentation (4 space) and Google-style doc string instead of sslab-style. See secure-systems-lab/code-style-guidelines#20 - Does not support Python =< 3.5 Co-authored-by: Trishank Karthik Kuppusamy <[email protected]> Co-authored-by: Joshua Lock <[email protected]> Co-authored-by: Teodora Sechkova <[email protected]> Signed-off-by: Lukas Puehringer <[email protected]>
Closing this issue as it was filed against (what is now known as) the legacy codebase: issue seems to not be relevant anymore. Please re-open or file a new issue if you feel that the issue is revelant to current python-tuf. More details Current source code (and upcoming 1.0 release) only contains the modern components
Legacy components (e.g. tuf.client, tuf.repository_tool, tuf.repository_lib as well as the repo and client scripts) are no longer included. See announcement and API reference for more details. |
Several issues are related to this, including at least: #589, #646, #658, #736, spec issue 19.
Summary
The reference implementation continues to try to provide a 1-to-1 mapping of roles to keyids-the-role-should-be-signed-by-in-order-to-be-valid. This is not correct: the same role may need to be validated expecting different sets of keys, based on how the role was reached in the depth-first search while looking for target information.
The bottom line here is that code should be rewritten in places like roledb, to avoid things like get_role_keyids(), or roleinfo['threshold'] or roleinfo['keyids'], etc.
Detailed explanation
I think this all comes from a deeper issue:
Per the design of TUF, roles and delegations should never be regarded as the same thing. While in the last few years, there have emerged a few additional reasons that this separation is important (TAPs 3's multi-role delegations and TAP 5's alternative repository roots, for example), my understanding of the design history is that there was not originally an expectation of a one-to-one mapping of roles to delegations pointing to them.
So let's be pedantic:
The graph of delegations used to be guaranteed -- in the reference implementation -- to be a simple directed graph where Root is a node with an indegree of 0 and all other nodes have an indegree of 1. I.e.: No roles delegate to Root. Root delegates to Targets. Targets can delegate to various roles, but two or more roles never delegate to the same role. The design intention, however, did not guarantee maximum indegree of 1: in the design, delegations could be promiscuous: a single role can be delegated to by multiple roles.
A result of this confusion is that roledb still represents roles as flat in certain ways, when it should not assume this. This flatness resulted in #589, #658, #736, probably #646, and presumably other forgotten issues.
Take the function roledb.get_role_keyids() as an example:
get_role_keyids
takes only the name of a role (and a repository name), purporting to return the keys that that role should be signed by. The trouble, though, is that different roles delegating to that role can expect different keys and validate or reject role C's target information based on those different expectations.Specification / Avoiding Future Issues
The spec itself should be a bit clearer -- see spec issue 19 -- about this, to help prevent these issues from arising in implementations. We may also need materials elsewhere to make the role/delegation distinction clearer. When editing the metadata formats in TAPs and the like, I've tried to make sure not to reinforce this confusion (mixing roles and delegations), and we should be mindful in that way, too.
As a sidenote, note that parallel edges would also cause this issue, not just promiscuous delegations from different origin nodes -- any role with indegree > 1 would have been an issue.
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