distribution/storage/manifeststore.go
Stephen J Day 14fb80d6c3 Add payload and signatures method to SignedManifest
To provide easier access to digestible content, the paylaod has been made
accessible on the signed manifest type. This hides the specifics of the
interaction with libtrust with the caveat that signatures may be parsed twice.

We'll have to have a future look at the interface for manifest as we may be
making problematic architectural decisions. We'll visit this after the initial
release.

Signed-off-by: Stephen J Day <stephen.day@docker.com>
2015-02-03 13:30:20 -08:00

182 lines
4.9 KiB
Go

package storage
import (
"fmt"
"strings"
"github.com/docker/distribution/digest"
"github.com/docker/distribution/manifest"
"github.com/docker/libtrust"
)
// ErrUnknownRepository is returned if the named repository is not known by
// the registry.
type ErrUnknownRepository struct {
Name string
}
func (err ErrUnknownRepository) Error() string {
return fmt.Sprintf("unknown respository name=%s", err.Name)
}
// ErrUnknownManifest is returned if the manifest is not known by the
// registry.
type ErrUnknownManifest struct {
Name string
Tag string
}
func (err ErrUnknownManifest) Error() string {
return fmt.Sprintf("unknown manifest name=%s tag=%s", err.Name, err.Tag)
}
// ErrUnknownManifestRevision is returned when a manifest cannot be found by
// revision within a repository.
type ErrUnknownManifestRevision struct {
Name string
Revision digest.Digest
}
func (err ErrUnknownManifestRevision) Error() string {
return fmt.Sprintf("unknown manifest name=%s revision=%s", err.Name, err.Revision)
}
// ErrManifestUnverified is returned when the registry is unable to verify
// the manifest.
type ErrManifestUnverified struct{}
func (ErrManifestUnverified) Error() string {
return fmt.Sprintf("unverified manifest")
}
// ErrManifestVerification provides a type to collect errors encountered
// during manifest verification. Currently, it accepts errors of all types,
// but it may be narrowed to those involving manifest verification.
type ErrManifestVerification []error
func (errs ErrManifestVerification) Error() string {
var parts []string
for _, err := range errs {
parts = append(parts, err.Error())
}
return fmt.Sprintf("errors verifying manifest: %v", strings.Join(parts, ","))
}
type manifestStore struct {
repository *repository
revisionStore *revisionStore
tagStore *tagStore
}
var _ ManifestService = &manifestStore{}
// func (ms *manifestStore) Repository() Repository {
// return ms.repository
// }
func (ms *manifestStore) Tags() ([]string, error) {
return ms.tagStore.tags()
}
func (ms *manifestStore) Exists(tag string) (bool, error) {
return ms.tagStore.exists(tag)
}
func (ms *manifestStore) Get(tag string) (*manifest.SignedManifest, error) {
dgst, err := ms.tagStore.resolve(tag)
if err != nil {
return nil, err
}
return ms.revisionStore.get(dgst)
}
func (ms *manifestStore) Put(tag string, manifest *manifest.SignedManifest) error {
// TODO(stevvooe): Add check here to see if the revision is already
// present in the repository. If it is, we should merge the signatures, do
// a shallow verify (or a full one, doesn't matter) and return an error
// indicating what happened.
// Verify the manifest.
if err := ms.verifyManifest(tag, manifest); err != nil {
return err
}
// Store the revision of the manifest
revision, err := ms.revisionStore.put(manifest)
if err != nil {
return err
}
// Now, tag the manifest
return ms.tagStore.tag(tag, revision)
}
// Delete removes all revisions of the given tag. We may want to change these
// semantics in the future, but this will maintain consistency. The underlying
// blobs are left alone.
func (ms *manifestStore) Delete(tag string) error {
revisions, err := ms.tagStore.revisions(tag)
if err != nil {
return err
}
for _, revision := range revisions {
if err := ms.revisionStore.delete(revision); err != nil {
return err
}
}
return ms.tagStore.delete(tag)
}
// verifyManifest ensures that the manifest content is valid from the
// perspective of the registry. It ensures that the name and tag match and
// that the signature is valid for the enclosed payload. As a policy, the
// registry only tries to store valid content, leaving trust policies of that
// content up to consumers.
func (ms *manifestStore) verifyManifest(tag string, mnfst *manifest.SignedManifest) error {
var errs ErrManifestVerification
if mnfst.Name != ms.repository.Name() {
// TODO(stevvooe): This needs to be an exported error
errs = append(errs, fmt.Errorf("repository name does not match manifest name"))
}
if mnfst.Tag != tag {
// TODO(stevvooe): This needs to be an exported error.
errs = append(errs, fmt.Errorf("tag does not match manifest tag"))
}
if _, err := manifest.Verify(mnfst); err != nil {
switch err {
case libtrust.ErrMissingSignatureKey, libtrust.ErrInvalidJSONContent, libtrust.ErrMissingSignatureKey:
errs = append(errs, ErrManifestUnverified{})
default:
if err.Error() == "invalid signature" { // TODO(stevvooe): This should be exported by libtrust
errs = append(errs, ErrManifestUnverified{})
} else {
errs = append(errs, err)
}
}
}
for _, fsLayer := range mnfst.FSLayers {
exists, err := ms.repository.Layers().Exists(fsLayer.BlobSum)
if err != nil {
errs = append(errs, err)
}
if !exists {
errs = append(errs, ErrUnknownLayer{FSLayer: fsLayer})
}
}
if len(errs) != 0 {
// TODO(stevvooe): These need to be recoverable by a caller.
return errs
}
return nil
}