A tool for signing Python package distributions
Project description
sigstore-python
sigstore
is a Python tool for generating and verifying Sigstore signatures.
You can use it to sign and verify Python package distributions, or anything
else!
Index
- Features
- Installation
- Usage
- Example uses
- Licensing
- Community
- Contributing
- Code of Conduct
- Security
- SLSA Provenance
Features
- Support for keyless signature generation and verification with Sigstore
- Support for signing with "ambient" OpenID Connect identities
- A comprehensive CLI and corresponding importable Python API
Installation
sigstore
requires Python 3.8 or newer, and can be installed directly via pip
:
python -m pip install sigstore
Optionally, to install sigstore
and all its dependencies with hash-checking mode enabled, run the following:
python -m pip install -r https://raw.githubusercontent.com/sigstore/sigstore-python/main/install/requirements.txt
This installs the requirements file located here, which is kept up-to-date.
GitHub Actions
sigstore-python
has an official GitHub Action!
You can install it from the GitHub Marketplace, or add it to your CI manually:
jobs:
sigstore-python:
steps:
- uses: sigstore/gh-action-sigstore-python@v0.2.0
with:
inputs: foo.txt
See the action documentation for more details and usage examples.
Usage
For Python API usage, see our documentation.
You can run sigstore
as a standalone program, or via python -m
:
sigstore --help
python -m sigstore --help
Top-level:
usage: sigstore [-h] [-v] [-V] [--staging | --trust-config FILE] COMMAND ...
a tool for signing and verifying Python package distributions
positional arguments:
COMMAND the operation to perform
sign sign one or more inputs
verify verify one or more inputs
get-identity-token
retrieve and return a Sigstore-compatible OpenID
Connect token
plumbing developer-only plumbing operations
optional arguments:
-h, --help show this help message and exit
-v, --verbose run with additional debug logging; supply multiple
times to increase verbosity (default: 0)
-V, --version show program's version number and exit
--staging Use sigstore's staging instances, instead of the
default production instances (default: False)
--trust-config FILE The client trust configuration to use (default: None)
Signing
usage: sigstore sign [-h] [-v] [--identity-token TOKEN] [--oidc-client-id ID]
[--oidc-client-secret SECRET]
[--oidc-disable-ambient-providers] [--oidc-issuer URL]
[--oauth-force-oob] [--no-default-files]
[--signature FILE] [--certificate FILE] [--bundle FILE]
[--output-directory DIR] [--overwrite]
FILE [FILE ...]
positional arguments:
FILE The file to sign
optional arguments:
-h, --help show this help message and exit
-v, --verbose run with additional debug logging; supply multiple
times to increase verbosity (default: 0)
OpenID Connect options:
--identity-token TOKEN
the OIDC identity token to use (default: None)
--oidc-client-id ID The custom OpenID Connect client ID to use during
OAuth2 (default: sigstore)
--oidc-client-secret SECRET
The custom OpenID Connect client secret to use during
OAuth2 (default: None)
--oidc-disable-ambient-providers
Disable ambient OpenID Connect credential detection
(e.g. on GitHub Actions) (default: False)
--oidc-issuer URL The OpenID Connect issuer to use (conflicts with
--staging) (default: https://oauth2.sigstore.dev/auth)
--oauth-force-oob Force an out-of-band OAuth flow and do not
automatically start the default web browser (default:
False)
Output options:
--no-default-files Don't emit the default output files
({input}.sigstore.json) (default: False)
--signature FILE, --output-signature FILE
Write a single signature to the given file; does not
work with multiple input files (default: None)
--certificate FILE, --output-certificate FILE
Write a single certificate to the given file; does not
work with multiple input files (default: None)
--bundle FILE Write a single Sigstore bundle to the given file; does
not work with multiple input files (default: None)
--output-directory DIR
Write default outputs to the given directory
(conflicts with --signature, --certificate, --bundle)
(default: None)
--overwrite Overwrite preexisting signature and certificate
outputs, if present (default: False)
Verifying
Generic identities
This is the most common verification done with sigstore
, and therefore
the one you probably want: you can use it to verify that a signature was
produced by a particular identity (like hamilcar@example.com
), as attested
to by a particular OIDC provider (like https://github.com/login/oauth
).
usage: sigstore verify identity [-h] [-v] [--certificate FILE]
[--signature FILE] [--bundle FILE] [--offline]
--cert-identity IDENTITY --cert-oidc-issuer
URL
FILE [FILE ...]
optional arguments:
-h, --help show this help message and exit
-v, --verbose run with additional debug logging; supply multiple
times to increase verbosity (default: 0)
Verification inputs:
--certificate FILE, --cert FILE
The PEM-encoded certificate to verify against; not
used with multiple inputs (default: None)
--signature FILE The signature to verify against; not used with
multiple inputs (default: None)
--bundle FILE The Sigstore bundle to verify with; not used with
multiple inputs (default: None)
FILE The file to verify
Verification options:
--offline Perform offline verification; requires a Sigstore
bundle (default: False)
--cert-identity IDENTITY
The identity to check for in the certificate's Subject
Alternative Name (default: None)
--cert-oidc-issuer URL
The OIDC issuer URL to check for in the certificate's
OIDC issuer extension (default: None)
Signatures from GitHub Actions
If your signatures are coming from GitHub Actions (e.g., a workflow
that uses its ambient credentials),
then you can use the sigstore verify github
subcommand to verify
claims more precisely than sigstore verify identity
allows:
usage: sigstore verify github [-h] [-v] [--certificate FILE]
[--signature FILE] [--bundle FILE] [--offline]
[--cert-identity IDENTITY] [--trigger EVENT]
[--sha SHA] [--name NAME] [--repository REPO]
[--ref REF]
FILE [FILE ...]
optional arguments:
-h, --help show this help message and exit
-v, --verbose run with additional debug logging; supply multiple
times to increase verbosity (default: 0)
Verification inputs:
--certificate FILE, --cert FILE
The PEM-encoded certificate to verify against; not
used with multiple inputs (default: None)
--signature FILE The signature to verify against; not used with
multiple inputs (default: None)
--bundle FILE The Sigstore bundle to verify with; not used with
multiple inputs (default: None)
FILE The file to verify
Verification options:
--offline Perform offline verification; requires a Sigstore
bundle (default: False)
--cert-identity IDENTITY
The identity to check for in the certificate's Subject
Alternative Name (default: None)
--trigger EVENT The GitHub Actions event name that triggered the
workflow (default: None)
--sha SHA The `git` commit SHA that the workflow run was invoked
with (default: None)
--name NAME The name of the workflow that was triggered (default:
None)
--repository REPO The repository slug that the workflow was triggered
under (default: None)
--ref REF The `git` ref that the workflow was invoked with
(default: None)
Advanced usage
Configuring a custom root of trust ("BYO PKI")
Apart from the default and "staging" Sigstore instances, sigstore
also
supports "BYO PKI" setups, where a user maintains their own Sigstore
instance services.
These are supported via the --trust-config
flag, which accepts a
JSON-formatted file conforming to the ClientTrustConfig
message
in the Sigstore protobuf specs.
This file configures the entire Sigstore instance state, including the URIs
used to access the CA and artifact transparency services as well as the
cryptographic root of trust itself.
To use a custom client config, prepend --trust-config
to any sigstore
command:
$ sigstore --trust-config custom.trustconfig.json sign foo.txt
$ sigstore --trust-config custom.trustconfig.json verify identity foo.txt ...
Example uses
sigstore
supports a wide variety of workflows and usages. Some common ones are
provided below.
Signing with ambient credentials
For environments that support OpenID Connect, natively sigstore
supports ambient credential
detection. This includes many popular CI platforms and cloud providers. See the full list of
supported environments here.
Sign a single file (foo.txt
) using an ambient OpenID Connect credential,
saving the bundle to foo.txt.sigstore
:
$ python -m sigstore sign foo.txt
Signing with an email identity
sigstore
can use an OAuth2 + OpenID flow to establish an email identity,
allowing you to request signing certificates that attest to control over
that email.
Sign a single file (foo.txt
) using the OAuth2 flow, saving the
bundle to foo.txt.sigstore
:
$ python -m sigstore sign foo.txt
By default, sigstore
attempts to do
ambient credential detection, which may preempt
the OAuth2 flow. To force the OAuth2 flow, you can explicitly disable ambient detection:
$ python -m sigstore sign --oidc-disable-ambient-providers foo.txt
Signing with an explicit identity token
If you can't use an ambient credential or the OAuth2 flow, you can pass a pre-created
identity token directly into sigstore sign
:
$ python -m sigstore sign --identity-token YOUR-LONG-JWT-HERE foo.txt
Note that passing a custom identity token does not circumvent Fulcio's requirements, namely the Fulcio's supported identity providers and the claims expected within the token.
Verifying against a signature and certificate
By default, sigstore verify identity
will attempt to find a <filename>.sigstore
in the
same directory as the file being verified:
# looks for foo.txt.sigstore
$ python -m sigstore verify identity foo.txt \
--cert-identity 'hamilcar@example.com' \
--cert-oidc-issuer 'https://github.com/login/oauth'
Multiple files can be verified at once:
# looks for {foo,bar}.txt.sigstore
$ python -m sigstore verify identity foo.txt bar.txt \
--cert-identity 'hamilcar@example.com' \
--cert-oidc-issuer 'https://github.com/login/oauth'
Verifying signatures from GitHub Actions
sigstore verify github
can be used to verify claims specific to signatures coming from GitHub
Actions. sigstore-python
signs releases via GitHub Actions, so the examples below are working
examples of how you can verify a given sigstore-python
release.
When using sigstore verify github
, you must pass --cert-identity
or --repository
, or both.
Unlike sigstore verify identity
, --cert-oidc-issuer
is not required (since it's
inferred to be GitHub Actions).
Verifying with --cert-identity
:
$ python -m sigstore verify github sigstore-0.10.0-py3-none-any.whl \
--bundle sigstore-0.10.0-py3-none-any.whl.bundle \
--cert-identity https://github.com/sigstore/sigstore-python/.github/workflows/release.yml@refs/tags/v0.10.0
Verifying with --repository
:
$ python -m sigstore verify github sigstore-0.10.0-py3-none-any.whl \
--bundle sigstore-0.10.0-py3-none-any.whl.bundle \
--repository sigstore/sigstore-python
Additional GitHub Actions specific claims can be verified like so:
$ python -m sigstore verify github sigstore-0.10.0-py3-none-any.whl \
--bundle sigstore-0.10.0-py3-none-any.whl.bundle \
--cert-identity https://github.com/sigstore/sigstore-python/.github/workflows/release.yml@refs/tags/v0.10.0 \
--trigger release \
--sha 66581529803929c3ccc45334632ccd90f06e0de4 \
--name Release \
--repository sigstore/sigstore-python \
--ref refs/tags/v0.10.0
Licensing
sigstore
is licensed under the Apache 2.0 License.
Community
sigstore-python
is developed as part of the Sigstore project.
We also use a Slack channel! Click here for the invite link.
Contributing
See the contributing docs for details.
Code of Conduct
Everyone interacting with this project is expected to follow the sigstore Code of Conduct.
Security
Should you discover any security issues, please refer to sigstore's security process.
SLSA Provenance
This project emits a SLSA provenance on its release! This enables you to verify the integrity of the downloaded artifacts and ensured that the binary's code really comes from this source code.
To do so, please follow the instructions here.
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