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Reproducible builds for c-lightning

This document describes the steps involved to build c-lightning in a reproducible way. Reproducible builds close the final gap in the lifecycle of open-source projects by allowing maintainers to verify and certify that a given binary was indeed produced by compiling an unmodified version of the publicly available source. In particular the maintainer certifies that the binary corresponds a) to the exact version of the and b) that no malicious changes have been applied before or after the compilation.

c-lightning has provided a manifest of the binaries included in a release, along with signatures from the maintainers since version 0.6.2.

The steps involved in creating reproducible builds are:

  • Creation of a known environment in which to build the source code
  • Removal of variance during the compilation (randomness, timestamps, etc)
  • Packaging of binaries
  • Creation of a manifest (SHA256SUMS file containing the crytographic hashes of the binaries and packages)
  • Signing of the manifest by maintainers and volunteers that have reproduced the files in the manifest starting from the source.

The bulk of these operations is handled by the repro-build.sh script, but some manual operations are required to setup the build environment. Since a binary is built against platorm specific libraries we also need to replicate the steps once for each OS distribution and architecture, so the majority of this guide will describe how to set up those starting from a minimal trusted base. This minimal trusted base in most cases is the official installation medium from the OS provider.

Note: Since your signature certifies the integrity of the resulting binaries, please familiarize youself with both the repro-build.sh script, as well as with the setup instructions for the build environments before signing anything.

Build Environment Setup

The build environments are a set of docker images that are created directly from the installation mediums and repositories from the OS provider. The following sections describe how to create those images. Don't worry, you only have to create each image once and can then reuse the images for future builds.

Base image creation

Depending on the distribution that we want to build for the instructions to create a base image can vary. In the following sections we discuss the specific instructions for each distribution, whereas the instructions are identical again once we have the base image.

Debian / Ubuntu and derivative OSs

For operating systems derived from Debian we can use the debootstrap tool to build a minimal OS image, that can then be transformed into a docker image. The packages for the minimal OS image are directly downloaded from the installation repositories operated by the OS provider.

We cannot really use the debian and ubuntu images from the docker hub, mainly because it'd be yet another trusted third party, but it is also complicated by the fact that the images have some of the packages updated. The latter means that if we disable the updates and security repositories for apt we find ourselves in a situation where we can't install any additional packages (wrongly updated packages depending on the versions not available in the non-updated repos).

The following will create that base image:

sudo debootstrap bionic bionic
sudo tar -C bionic -c . | sudo docker import - bionic

bionic in this case is the codename for Ubuntu 18.04 LTS. The following table lists the codenames of distributions that we currently support:

Distribution Version Codename
Ubuntu 18.04 bionic
Ubuntu 20.04 focal

Notice that you migh not have debootstrap manifests for versions newer than your host OS. If one of the debootstrap command above complains about a script not existing you might need to run debootstrap in a docker container itself:

sudo docker run --rm -v $(pwd):/build ubuntu:20.04 \
	bash -c "apt update && apt-get install -y debootstrap && debootstrap focal /build/focal"
sudo tar -C focal -c . | sudo docker import - focal

Verify that the image corresponds to our expectation and is runnable:

sudo docker run bionic cat /etc/lsb-release

Which should result in the following output for bionic:

DISTRIB_ID=Ubuntu
DISTRIB_RELEASE=18.04
DISTRIB_CODENAME=bionic
DISTRIB_DESCRIPTION="Ubuntu 18.04 LTS"

Builder image setup

Once we have the clean base image we need to customize it to be able to build c-lightning. This includes disabling the update repositories, downloading the build dependencies and specifying the steps required to perform the build.

For this purpose we have a number of Dockerfiles in the contrib/reprobuild directory that have the specific instructions for each base image.

We can then build the builder image by calling docker build and passing it the Dockerfile:

sudo docker build -t cl-repro-bionic - < Dockerfile.bionic

Since we pass the Dockerfile through stdin the build command will not create a context, i.e., the current directory is not passed to docker and it'll be independent of the currently checked out version. This also means that you will be able to reuse the docker image for future builds, and don't have to repeat this dance every time. Verifying the Dockerfile therefore is sufficient to ensure that the resulting cl-repro-<codename> image is reproducible.

The dockerfiles assume that the base image has the codename as its image name.

Building using the builder image

Finally, after this rather lengthy setup we can perform the actual build. At this point we have a container image that has been prepared to build reproducibly. As you can see from the Dockerfile above we assume the source git repository gets mounted as /repo in the docker container. The container will clone the repository to an internal path, in order to keep the repository clean, build the artifacts there, and then copy them back to /repo/release. We can simply execute the following command inside the git repository (remember to checkout the tag you are trying to build):

sudo docker run --rm -v $(pwd):/repo -ti cl-repro-bionic

The last few lines of output also contain the sha256sum hashes of all artifacts, so if you're just verifying the build those are the lines that are of interest to you:

ee83cf4948228ab1f644dbd9d28541fd8ef7c453a3fec90462b08371a8686df8  /repo/release/clightning-v0.9.0rc1-Ubuntu-18.04.tar.xz
94bd77f400c332ac7571532c9f85b141a266941057e8fe1bfa04f054918d8c33  /repo/release/clightning-v0.9.0rc1.zip

Repeat this step for each distribution and each architecture you wish to sign. Once all the binaries are in the release/ subdirectory we can sign the hashes:

(Co-)Signing the release manifest

The release captain is in charge of creating the manifest, whereas contributors and interested bystanders may contribute their signatures to further increase trust in the binaries.

The release captain creates the manifest as follows:

cd release/
sha256sum *v0.9.0* > SHA256SUMS
gpg -sb --armor SHA256SUMS

Co-maintainers and contributors wishing to add their own signature verify that the SHA256SUMS and SHA256SUMS.asc files created by the release captain matches their binaries before also signing the manifest:

cd release/
gpg --verify SHA256SUMS.asc
sha256sum -c SHA256SUMS
cat SHA256SUMS | gpg -sb --armor > SHA256SUMS.new

Then send the resulting SHA256SUMS.new file to the release captain so it can be merged with the other signatures into SHASUMS.asc.

Verifying a reproducible build

You can verify the reproducible build in two ways:

  • Repeating the entire reproducible build, making sure from scratch that the binaries match. Just follow the instructions above for this.
  • Verifying that the downloaded binaries match match the hashes in SHA256SUMS and that the signatures in SHA256SUMS.asc are valid.

Assuming you have downloaded the binaries, the manifest and the signatures into the same directory, you can verify the signatures with the following:

gpg --verify SHA256SUMS.asc

And you should see a list of messages like the following:

gpg: assuming signed data in 'SHA256SUMS'
gpg: Signature made Fr 08 Mai 2020 07:46:38 CEST
gpg:                using RSA key 15EE8D6CAB0E7F0CF999BFCBD9200E6CD1ADB8F1
gpg: Good signature from "Rusty Russell <rusty@rustcorp.com.au>" [full]
gpg: Signature made Fr 08 Mai 2020 12:30:10 CEST
gpg:                using RSA key B7C4BE81184FC203D52C35C51416D83DC4F0E86D
gpg: Good signature from "Christian Decker <decker.christian@gmail.com>" [ultimate]
gpg: Signature made Fr 08 Mai 2020 21:35:28 CEST
gpg:                using RSA key 30DE693AE0DE9E37B3E7EB6BBFF0F67810C1EED1
gpg: Good signature from "Lisa Neigut <niftynei@gmail.com>" [full]

If there are any issues gpg will print Bad signature, it might be because the signatures in SHA256SUMS.asc do not match the SHA256SUMS file, and could be the result of a filename change. Do not continue using the binaries, and contact the maintainers, if this is not the case, a failure here means that the verification failed.

Next we verify that the binaries match the ones in the manifest:

sha256sum -c SHA256SUMS

Producing output similar to the following:

sha256sum: clightning-v0.9.0-Fedora-28-amd64.tar.gz: No such file or directory
clightning-v0.9.0-Fedora-28-amd64.tar.gz: FAILED open or read
clightning-v0.9.0-Ubuntu-18.04.tar.xz: OK
clightning-v0.9.0.zip: OK
sha256sum: WARNING: 1 listed file could not be read

Notice that the two files we downloaded are marked as OK, but we're missing one file. If you didn't download that file this is to be expected, and is nothing to worry about. A failure to verify the hash would give a warning like the following:

sha256sum: WARNING: 1 computed checksum did NOT match

If both the signature verification and the manifest checksum verification succeeded, then you have just successfully verified a reproducible build and, assuming you trust the maintainers, are good to install and use the binaries. Congratulations! 🎉🥳