github.com/akashshinde/docker@v1.9.1/docs/security/trust/content_trust.md (about) 1 <!--[metadata]> 2 +++ 3 title = "Content trust in Docker" 4 description = "Enabling content trust in Docker" 5 keywords = ["content, trust, security, docker, documentation"] 6 [menu.main] 7 parent= "smn_content_trust" 8 weight=-1 9 +++ 10 <![end-metadata]--> 11 12 # Content trust in Docker 13 14 When transferring data among networked systems, *trust* is a central concern. In 15 particular, when communicating over an untrusted medium such as the internet, it 16 is critical to ensure the integrity and publisher of all the data a system 17 operates on. You use Docker to push and pull images (data) to a registry. Content trust 18 gives you the ability to both verify the integrity and the publisher of all the 19 data received from a registry over any channel. 20 21 Content trust is currently only available for users of the public Docker Hub. It 22 is currently not available for the Docker Trusted Registry or for private 23 registries. 24 25 ## Understand trust in Docker 26 27 Content trust allows operations with a remote Docker registry to enforce 28 client-side signing and verification of image tags. Content trust provides the 29 ability to use digital signatures for data sent to and received from remote 30 Docker registries. These signatures allow client-side verification of the 31 integrity and publisher of specific image tags. 32 33 Currently, content trust is disabled by default. You must enabled it by setting 34 the `DOCKER_CONTENT_TRUST` environment variable. 35 36 Once content trust is enabled, image publishers can sign their images. Image consumers can 37 ensure that the images they use are signed. publishers and consumers can be 38 individuals alone or in organizations. Docker's content trust supports users and 39 automated processes such as builds. 40 41 ### Image tags and content trust 42 43 An individual image record has the following identifier: 44 45 ``` 46 [REGISTRY_HOST[:REGISTRY_PORT]/]REPOSITORY[:TAG] 47 ``` 48 49 A particular image `REPOSITORY` can have multiple tags. For example, `latest` and 50 `3.1.2` are both tags on the `mongo` image. An image publisher can build an image 51 and tag combination many times changing the image with each build. 52 53 Content trust is associated with the `TAG` portion of an image. Each image 54 repository has a set of keys that image publishers use to sign an image tag. 55 Image publishers have discretion on which tags they sign. 56 57 An image repository can contain an image with one tag that is signed and another 58 tag that is not. For example, consider [the Mongo image 59 repository](https://hub.docker.com/r/library/mongo/tags/). The `latest` 60 tag could be unsigned while the `3.1.6` tag could be signed. It is the 61 responsibility of the image publisher to decide if an image tag is signed or 62 not. In this representation, some image tags are signed, others are not: 63 64 ![Signed tags](images/tag_signing.png) 65 66 Publishers can choose to sign a specific tag or not. As a result, the content of 67 an unsigned tag and that of a signed tag with the same name may not match. For 68 example, a publisher can push a tagged image `someimage:latest` and sign it. 69 Later, the same publisher can push an unsigned `someimage:latest` image. This second 70 push replaces the last unsigned tag `latest` but does not affect the signed `latest` version. 71 The ability to choose which tags they can sign, allows publishers to iterate over 72 the unsigned version of an image before officially signing it. 73 74 Image consumers can enable content trust to ensure that images they use were 75 signed. If a consumer enables content trust, they can only pull, run, or build 76 with trusted images. Enabling content trust is like wearing a pair of 77 rose-colored glasses. Consumers "see" only signed images tags and the less 78 desirable, unsigned image tags are "invisible" to them. 79 80 ![Trust view](images/trust_view.png) 81 82 To the consumer who does not enabled content trust, nothing about how they 83 work with Docker images changes. Every image is visible regardless of whether it 84 is signed or not. 85 86 87 ### Content trust operations and keys 88 89 When content trust is enabled, `docker` CLI commands that operate on tagged images must 90 either have content signatures or explicit content hashes. The commands that 91 operate with content trust are: 92 93 * `push` 94 * `build` 95 * `create` 96 * `pull` 97 * `run` 98 99 For example, with content trust enabled a `docker pull someimage:latest` only 100 succeeds if `someimage:latest` is signed. However, an operation with an explicit 101 content hash always succeeds as long as the hash exists: 102 103 ```bash 104 $ docker pull someimage@sha256:d149ab53f8718e987c3a3024bb8aa0e2caadf6c0328f1d9d850b2a2a67f2819a 105 ``` 106 107 Trust for an image tag is managed through the use of signing keys. A key set is 108 created when an operation using content trust is first invoked. Docker's content 109 trust makes use of four different keys: 110 111 | Key | Description | 112 |---------------------|---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------| 113 | root key | Root of content trust for a image tag. When content trust is enabled, you create the root key once. | 114 | target and snapshot | These two keys are known together as the "repository" key. When content trust is enabled, you create this key when you add a new image repository. If you have the root key, you can export the repository key and allow other publishers to sign the image tags. | 115 | timestamp | This key applies to a repository. It allows Docker repositories to have freshness security guarantees without requiring periodic content refreshes on the client's side. | 116 117 With the exception of the timestamp, all the keys are generated and stored locally 118 client-side. The timestamp is safely generated and stored in a signing server that 119 is deployed alongside the Docker registry. All keys are generated in a backend 120 service that isn't directly exposed to the internet and are encrypted at rest. 121 122 The following image depicts the various signing keys and their relationships: 123 124 ![Content trust components](images/trust_components.png) 125 126 >**WARNING**: Loss of the root key is **very difficult** to recover from. 127 >Correcting this loss requires intervention from [Docker 128 >Support](https://support.docker.com) to reset the repository state. This loss 129 >also requires **manual intervention** from every consumer that used a signed 130 >tag from this repository prior to the loss. 131 132 You should backup the root key somewhere safe. Given that it is only required 133 to create new repositories, it is a good idea to store it offline. Make sure you 134 read [Manage keys for content trust](trust_key_mng.md) information 135 for details on securing, and backing up your keys. 136 137 ## Survey of typical content trust operations 138 139 This section surveys the typical trusted operations users perform with Docker 140 images. 141 142 ### Enable and disable content trust per-shell or per-invocation 143 144 In a shell, you can enable content trust by setting the `DOCKER_CONTENT_TRUST` 145 environment variable. Enabling per-shell is useful because you can have one 146 shell configured for trusted operations and another terminal shell for untrusted 147 operations. You can also add this declaration to your shell profile to have it 148 turned on always by default. 149 150 To enable content trust in a `bash` shell enter the following command: 151 152 ```bash 153 export DOCKER_CONTENT_TRUST=1 154 ``` 155 156 Once set, each of the "tag" operations requires a key for a trusted tag. 157 158 In an environment where `DOCKER_CONTENT_TRUST` is set, you can use the 159 `--disable-content-trust` flag to run individual operations on tagged images 160 without content trust on an as-needed basis. 161 162 ```bash 163 $ docker pull --disable-content-trust docker/trusttest:untrusted 164 ``` 165 166 To invoke a command with content trust enabled regardless of whether or how the `DOCKER_CONTENT_TRUST` variable is set: 167 168 ```bash 169 $ docker build --disable-content-trust=false -t docker/trusttest:testing . 170 ``` 171 172 All of the trusted operations support the `--disable-content-trust` flag. 173 174 175 ### Push trusted content 176 177 To create signed content for a specific image tag, simply enable content trust 178 and push a tagged image. If this is the first time you have pushed an image 179 using content trust on your system, the session looks like this: 180 181 ```bash 182 $ docker push docker/trusttest:latest 183 The push refers to a repository [docker.io/docker/trusttest] (len: 1) 184 9a61b6b1315e: Image already exists 185 902b87aaaec9: Image already exists 186 latest: digest: sha256:d02adacee0ac7a5be140adb94fa1dae64f4e71a68696e7f8e7cbf9db8dd49418 size: 3220 187 Signing and pushing trust metadata 188 You are about to create a new root signing key passphrase. This passphrase 189 will be used to protect the most sensitive key in your signing system. Please 190 choose a long, complex passphrase and be careful to keep the password and the 191 key file itself secure and backed up. It is highly recommended that you use a 192 password manager to generate the passphrase and keep it safe. There will be no 193 way to recover this key. You can find the key in your config directory. 194 Enter passphrase for new root key with id a1d96fb: 195 Repeat passphrase for new root key with id a1d96fb: 196 Enter passphrase for new repository key with id docker.io/docker/trusttest (3a932f1): 197 Repeat passphrase for new repository key with id docker.io/docker/trusttest (3a932f1): 198 Finished initializing "docker.io/docker/trusttest" 199 ``` 200 When you push your first tagged image with content trust enabled, the `docker` 201 client recognizes this is your first push and: 202 203 - alerts you that it will create a new root key 204 - requests a passphrase for the key 205 - generates a root key in the `~/.docker/trust` directory 206 - generates a repository key for in the `~/.docker/trust` directory 207 208 The passphrase you chose for both the root key and your content key-pair 209 should be randomly generated and stored in a *password manager*. 210 211 > **NOTE**: If you omit the `latest` tag, content trust is skipped. This is true 212 even if content trust is enabled and even if this is your first push. 213 214 ```bash 215 $ docker push docker/trusttest 216 The push refers to a repository [docker.io/docker/trusttest] (len: 1) 217 9a61b6b1315e: Image successfully pushed 218 902b87aaaec9: Image successfully pushed 219 latest: digest: sha256:a9a9c4402604b703bed1c847f6d85faac97686e48c579bd9c3b0fa6694a398fc size: 3220 220 No tag specified, skipping trust metadata push 221 ``` 222 223 It is skipped because as the message states, you did not supply an image `TAG` 224 value. In Docker content trust, signatures are associated with tags. 225 226 Once you have a root key on your system, subsequent images repositories 227 you create can use that same root key: 228 229 ```bash 230 $ docker push docker.io/docker/seaside:latest 231 The push refers to a repository [docker.io/docker/seaside] (len: 1) 232 a9539b34a6ab: Image successfully pushed 233 b3dbab3810fc: Image successfully pushed 234 latest: digest: sha256:d2ba1e603661a59940bfad7072eba698b79a8b20ccbb4e3bfb6f9e367ea43939 size: 3346 235 Signing and pushing trust metadata 236 Enter key passphrase for root key with id a1d96fb: 237 Enter passphrase for new repository key with id docker.io/docker/seaside (bb045e3): 238 Repeat passphrase for new repository key with id docker.io/docker/seaside (bb045e3): 239 Finished initializing "docker.io/docker/seaside" 240 ``` 241 242 The new image has its own repository key and timestamp key. The `latest` tag is signed with both of 243 these. 244 245 246 ### Pull image content 247 248 A common way to consume an image is to `pull` it. With content trust enabled, the Docker 249 client only allows `docker pull` to retrieve signed images. 250 251 ``` 252 $ docker pull docker/seaside 253 Using default tag: latest 254 Pull (1 of 1): docker/trusttest:latest@sha256:d149ab53f871 255 ... 256 Tagging docker/trusttest@sha256:d149ab53f871 as docker/trusttest:latest 257 ``` 258 259 The `seaside:latest` image is signed. In the following example, the command does not specify a tag, so the system uses 260 the `latest` tag by default again and the `docker/cliffs:latest` tag is not signed. 261 262 ```bash 263 $ docker pull docker/cliffs 264 Using default tag: latest 265 no trust data available 266 ``` 267 268 Because the tag `docker/cliffs:latest` is not trusted, the `pull` fails. 269 270 271 ### Disable content trust for specific operations 272 273 A user that wants to disable content trust for a particular operation can use the 274 `--disable-content-trust` flag. **Warning: this flag disables content trust for 275 this operation**. With this flag, Docker will ignore content-trust and allow all 276 operations to be done without verifying any signatures. If we wanted the 277 previous untrusted build to succeed we could do: 278 279 ``` 280 $ cat Dockerfile 281 FROM docker/trusttest:notrust 282 RUN echo 283 $ docker build --disable-content-trust -t docker/trusttest:testing . 284 Sending build context to Docker daemon 42.84 MB 285 ... 286 Successfully built f21b872447dc 287 ``` 288 289 The same is true for all the other commands, such as `pull` and `push`: 290 291 ``` 292 $ docker pull --disable-content-trust docker/trusttest:untrusted 293 ... 294 $ docker push --disable-content-trust docker/trusttest:untrusted 295 ... 296 ``` 297 298 ## Related information 299 300 * [Manage keys for content trust](trust_key_mng.md) 301 * [Automation with content trust](trust_automation.md) 302 * [Play in a content trust sandbox](trust_sandbox.md)