Skip to main content

Python library for handling containerized PHT trains

Project description

Documentation Status CodeQL main-ci codecov PyPI - Python Version PyPI - Downloads Code style: black

🚆 Train Container Library

Python library for validating and interacting with pht-train images/containers.

Installation

pip install pht-train-container-library

Setup development environment

Make sure you have poetry and pre-commit installed.

Install the dependencies and pre-commit hooks:

poetry install --with dev
poetry run pre-commit install

Run tests

poetry run pytest

Linting and formatting

These commands are also run as pre-commit hooks.

Linting with ruff:

poetry run ruff . --fix

Formatting with black:

poetry run black .

Security Protocol

The pht security protocol adapted from docs/Secure_PHT_latest__official.pdf performs two main tasks:

  1. Before executing a train-image on the local machine, unless the station is the first station on the route, the previous results need to be decrypted and the content of the image needs to be validated based on the configuration of the individual train -> pre-run.
  2. After executing the train the updated results need to be encrypted and the train configuration needs to be updated to reflect the current state ->post-run.

Train image structure

To ensure the protocol is working correctly train docker images are required to keep the following structure:

  • /opt/train_config.json: Stores the configuration file of the train.
  • /opt/pht_train/: Stores all the files containing code or other things required for the train algorithm to run. The contents of this directory can never change and is validated by the pre-run step.
  • /opt/pht_results/: Stores the results of the train. Which will be decrypted in the pre-run step and encrypted in the post-run step.

No files in the image outside the /opt/pht_results/ directory should change during the execution of the algorithm.

Usage - Python Script

To use the protocol in your own python application, after installing the library with pip install pht-train-container-library an instance of the protocol can be to validate docker images as follows:

from train_lib.security.protocol import SecurityProtocol
from train_lib.docker_util.docker_ops import extract_train_config

image_name = '<image-repo>:<image-tag>'
station_id = '<station-id>'

# Get the train configuration from the image
config = extract_train_config(image_name)
# Initialize the protocol with the extracted config and station_id
protocol = SecurityProtocol(station_id=station_id, config=config)

# execute one of the protocol steps
protocol.pre_run_protocol(image_name, private_key_path='<path-to-private-key>')
# protocol.post_run_protocol(image_name, private_key_path='<path-to-private-key>')

Usage - Container

A containerized version of the protocol is also available it can be used with the following command:

docker run -e STATION_ID=<station_id> -e PRIVATE_KEY_PATH=/opt/private_key.pem -v /var/run/docker.sock:/var/run/docker.sock -v <path_to_your_key>:/opt/private_key.pem ghcr.io/pht-medic/protocol <pre-run/post-run> <image-repo>:<image-tag>

STATION_ID and PRIVATE_KEY_PATH are required to be set in the environment variables. As well as passing the docker socket /var/run/docker.sock to the container as a volume to enable docker-in-docker functionality.

Pre-run protocol

The pre-run protocol consists of the following steps

  1. The train files are decrypted using an encrypted symmetric key that is decrypted using the provided station private key
  2. The hash of the immutable files (train definition) is verified making sure that the executable files did not change during the train definition.
  3. The build signature is verified ensuring that this image was build by the given user
  4. The digital signature is verified ensuring the correctness of the results at each stop of the train.
  5. The symmetric key is decrypted using the provided station private key
  6. The mutable files in /opt/pht_results are decrypted using the symmetric key obtained in the previous step
  7. The decrypted files are hashed and the hash is compared to the one stored in the train configuration file.

Once these steps have been completed the image is ready to be executed.

Post-run protocol

  1. Calculate the hash of the newly generated results
  2. Sign the hash of the results using the provided PRIVATE_KEY_PATH
  3. Update the the train signature using the session id that is randomly generated at each execution step
  4. Encrypt the resulting files using a newly generated symmetric key
  5. Encrypt the generated symmetric key with the public keys of the train participants
  6. Encrypt the train files using the symmetric key
  7. Update the train configuration file and train image

With the completion of these steps the train is ready to be pushed into the registry for further processing

Tests

Run the tests to validate the security protocol is working as intended. From this projects root directory run poetry run pytest train_lib

Project details


Download files

Download the file for your platform. If you're not sure which to choose, learn more about installing packages.

Source Distribution

pht_train_container_library-2.0.0a6.tar.gz (65.0 kB view details)

Uploaded Source

Built Distribution

File details

Details for the file pht_train_container_library-2.0.0a6.tar.gz.

File metadata

File hashes

Hashes for pht_train_container_library-2.0.0a6.tar.gz
Algorithm Hash digest
SHA256 95e6e2d3a9afb0732dd244b49fefa4abeacaf1365a394cac67dcc6fdca1fd25f
MD5 8e0c6a841d1cdbe6429cb47ab9295ca9
BLAKE2b-256 fcdfda6f4e9e27ab5394ad488d4e307281daebfe05888d5046dc5c536c6e95c7

See more details on using hashes here.

File details

Details for the file pht_train_container_library-2.0.0a6-py3-none-any.whl.

File metadata

File hashes

Hashes for pht_train_container_library-2.0.0a6-py3-none-any.whl
Algorithm Hash digest
SHA256 bbfee0db62c40d50dcac8205ea0ec8ded32a33a7183321167e2f0598e093266b
MD5 2b2f1d08cc28f8576545def28acd9086
BLAKE2b-256 b638aa72819fb294a19053aad964f7cc83222b5eb15bb14f4c2ef51670fbac8d

See more details on using hashes here.

Supported by

AWS AWS Cloud computing and Security Sponsor Datadog Datadog Monitoring Fastly Fastly CDN Google Google Download Analytics Microsoft Microsoft PSF Sponsor Pingdom Pingdom Monitoring Sentry Sentry Error logging StatusPage StatusPage Status page