Conclusions from CVE-2024-3094 (libxz disaster)
Felix Fietkau
nbd at nbd.name
Sat Mar 30 23:00:11 PDT 2024
On 31.03.24 01:07, Elliott Mitchell wrote:
> On Sat, Mar 30, 2024 at 03:30:49PM +0000, Daniel Golle wrote:
>>
>> unchanged. Git has a lot of security built-in, and by using tarballs
>> as a base for our package builds we are basically throwing all that
>> away, for the sake of saving a negligible amount of resources on
>> the build infrastructure.
>
> I sort of agree, sort of disagree with this. Having a cryptographic hash
> at the center of everything provides security comparable to the security
> of the hash. Alas, this means replacing that hash is a bit difficult.
>
> The design is good, but SHA-1 is no longer appropriately secure.
> Replacing SHA-1 is a work in progress, but until that completes SHA-1 is
> still the core of *everything*. I've been monitoring the situation and
> early work started in 2017, but it still isn't usable yet. Until it is
> ready there is this rather oversize elephant in the room.
>
> https://git-scm.com/docs/hash-function-transition
>
> (SHA-1 collisions aren't known to have been used for anything /yet/,
> but it is only a matter of time; this *really* worries me)
Assuming that generating SHA1 collisions become much easier to create,
what attack scenarios are you worried about?
> On Sat, Mar 30, 2024 at 03:30:49PM +0000, Daniel Golle wrote:
>>
>> However, after reading up about the details of this backdoored release
>> tarball, I believe that the current tendency to use tarballs rather
>> than (reproducible!) git checkouts is also problematic to begin with.
>>
>> Stuff like 'make dist' seems like a weird relic nowadays, creates more
>> problems than it could potentially solve, bandwidth is ubiquitous, and
>> we already got our own tarball mirror of git checkouts done by the
>> buildbots (see PKG_MIRROR_HASH). So why not **always** use that
>> instead of potentially shady and hard to verify tarballs?
I think Daniel's proposal is a very good idea. It reduces points of
failure while adding very little cost in terms of dev/maintainer resources.
> I don't think the issue is so much that tarballs are archiac, but that
> *everyone* is using Git now. One proposed patch from a pull:
>
> https://github.com/openwrt/openwrt/pull/14280/commits/1b29aadbbf07cb77498a0eb92fe7c171c65dab2e
>
> I don't see a single reference to a version control system besides Git
> anywhere in OpenWRT at this point. Tarballs were a reasonable choice
> when there were >4 source code handling systems in use, yet now Git is
> also a common point. So if everything is in Git, how does handling
> tarballs help builds?
Several ways:
- significantly faster download compared to git clone
- relying less on SHA1, since we use SHA256 for the tarballs
- proper mirror support for more reliable builds
- makes it easier to create a tarball of a specific OpenWrt version
which does not need to download any extra files
Also, if SHA1-collision based repository manipulation ever becomes
practical, failure to deterministically reproduce our tarballs can make
it more visible.
>> Always using git checkouts instead of tarballs would also makes it
>> much easier for maintainers to at least have a quick look at the
>> changes made in an upstream project between versions (a quick scroll
>> over 'git diff oldtag..newtag' or even just 'git log --stat
>> oldtag..newtag' doesn't take much more time than manually validating a
>> release tarball GPG signature in most cases, if there even is any...).
>
> I see several issues with your argument, but I mostly agree with your
> conclusion. Git is *everywhere*, so why use tarballs?
>
> I disagree with your approach though. Git already has two tools for
> handling this situation and I think one of them should be chosen.
>
> The first is `git submodule`. My understanding it is pretty similar to
> OpenWRT's current approach. Difference is this lets `git` handle
> downloading other repositories instead of doing it in a Makefile. Since
> Git is already designed to handle this sort of task, I suspect this will
> be rather more reliable than the existing system.
>
> Second is `git subtree`. This is a tool for including other projects
> into a repository. The end result is the other project's history becomes
> merged into local history. One advantage is you download everything all
> at *once*, rather than individually grabbing tools. Other is their full
> history will make upgrades easier since differences will be more obvious.
>
> These will need major changes to the build system.
Here are several downsides to this approach:
- significantly slower downloads
- no download mirror support
- if somebody uses submodules in a downstream fork, they can't easily
rely on git submodule update anymore without having to pull in tons of
potentially unused stuff
What are the benefits we would be getting from all this rework churn?
- Felix
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