Before, in #19732, the old home directory is not correct. This PR introduces a new config option for git home: git.HOME_PATH, which is default to %(APP_DATA_PATH)/home And pass env GNUPGHOME to git command, force Gitea to use a stable GNUPGHOME directory
5.8 KiB
date | title | slug | weight | toc | draft | menu | ||||||||||
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2019-08-17T10:20:00+01:00 | GPG Commit Signatures | signing | 20 | false | false |
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GPG Commit Signatures
Table of Contents
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Gitea will verify GPG commit signatures in the provided tree by checking if the commits are signed by a key within the Gitea database, or if the commit matches the default key for Git.
Keys are not checked to determine if they have expired or revoked. Keys are also not checked with keyservers.
A commit will be marked with a grey unlocked icon if no key can be found to verify it. If a commit is marked with a red unlocked icon, it is reported to be signed with a key with an id.
Please note: The signer of a commit does not have to be an author or committer of a commit.
This functionality requires Git >= 1.7.9 but for full functionality this requires Git >= 2.0.0.
Automatic Signing
There are a number of places where Gitea will generate commits itself:
- Repository Initialisation
- Wiki Changes
- CRUD actions using the editor or the API
- Merges from Pull Requests
Depending on configuration and server trust you may want Gitea to sign these commits.
Installing and generating a GPG key for Gitea
It is up to a server administrator to determine how best to install
a signing key. Gitea generates all its commits using the server git
command at present - and therefore the server gpg
will be used for
signing (if configured.) Administrators should review best-practices
for GPG - in particular it is probably advisable to only install a
signing secret subkey without the master signing and certifying secret
key.
General Configuration
Gitea's configuration for signing can be found with the
[repository.signing]
section of app.ini
:
...
[repository.signing]
SIGNING_KEY = default
SIGNING_NAME =
SIGNING_EMAIL =
INITIAL_COMMIT = always
CRUD_ACTIONS = pubkey, twofa, parentsigned
WIKI = never
MERGES = pubkey, twofa, basesigned, commitssigned
...
SIGNING_KEY
The first option to discuss is the SIGNING_KEY
. There are three main
options:
none
- this prevents Gitea from signing any commitsdefault
- Gitea will default to the key configured withingit config
KEYID
- Gitea will sign commits with the gpg key with the IDKEYID
. In this case you should provide aSIGNING_NAME
andSIGNING_EMAIL
to be displayed for this key.
The default
option will interrogate git config
for
commit.gpgsign
option - if this is set, then it will use the results
of the user.signingkey
, user.name
and user.email
as appropriate.
Please note: by adjusting Git's config
file within Gitea's
repositories, SIGNING_KEY=default
could be used to provide different
signing keys on a per-repository basis. However, this is clearly not an
ideal UI and therefore subject to change.
Since 1.17, Gitea runs git in its own home directory [git].HOME_PATH
(default to %(APP_DATA_PATH)/home
)
and uses its own config {[git].HOME_PATH}/.gitconfig
.
If you have your own customized git config for Gitea, you should set these configs in system git config (aka /etc/gitconfig
)
or the Gitea internal git config {[git].HOME_PATH}/.gitconfig
.
Related home files for git command (like .gnupg
) should also be put in Gitea's git home directory [git].HOME_PATH
.
INITIAL_COMMIT
This option determines whether Gitea should sign the initial commit when creating a repository. The possible values are:
never
: Never signpubkey
: Only sign if the user has a public keytwofa
: Only sign if the user logs in with two factor authenticationalways
: Always sign
Options other than never
and always
can be combined as a comma
separated list. The commit will be signed if all selected options are true.
WIKI
This options determines if Gitea should sign commits to the Wiki. The possible values are:
never
: Never signpubkey
: Only sign if the user has a public keytwofa
: Only sign if the user logs in with two-factor authenticationparentsigned
: Only sign if the parent commit is signed.always
: Always sign
Options other than never
and always
can be combined as a comma
separated list. The commit will be signed if all selected options are true.
CRUD_ACTIONS
This option determines if Gitea should sign commits from the web editor or API CRUD actions. The possible values are:
never
: Never signpubkey
: Only sign if the user has a public keytwofa
: Only sign if the user logs in with two-factor authenticationparentsigned
: Only sign if the parent commit is signed.always
: Always sign
Options other than never
and always
can be combined as a comma
separated list. The change will be signed if all selected options are true.
MERGES
This option determines if Gitea should sign merge commits from PRs. The possible options are:
never
: Never signpubkey
: Only sign if the user has a public keytwofa
: Only sign if the user logs in with two-factor authenticationbasesigned
: Only sign if the parent commit in the base repo is signed.headsigned
: Only sign if the head commit in the head branch is signed.commitssigned
: Only sign if all the commits in the head branch to the merge point are signed.approved
: Only sign approved merges to a protected branch.always
: Always sign
Options other than never
and always
can be combined as a comma
separated list. The merge will be signed if all selected options are true.
Obtaining the Public Key of the Signing Key
The public key used to sign Gitea's commits can be obtained from the API at:
/api/v1/signing-key.gpg
In cases where there is a repository specific key this can be obtained from:
/api/v1/repos/:username/:reponame/signing-key.gpg