THE MONKEYSPHERE ================ AGENDA ====== [x] clowning [ ] work [x] jrollins will talk and gesture - in progress MONKEYNAMES =========== rhesus, marmoset, howler, langur, tamarin, barbary COMPONENTS ========== (names in "" are code names until we think of better ones.) common components ----------------- * "rhesus": update known_hosts/authorized_keys files: - be responsible for removing keys from the file as key revocation happens - be responsible for updating a key in the file where there is a key replacement - must result in a file that is parsable by the existing ssh client without errors - manual management must be allowed without stomping on it - provide a simple, intelligible, clear policy for key acceptance * "langur": policy-editor for viewing/editing policies * gpg2ssh: utility to convert gpg keys to ssh known_hosts/authorized_keys lines * ssh2gpg: create openpgp keypair from ssh keypair server-side components ---------------------- * "howler": server gpg maintainer - generates gpg keys for the server - publishes server gpg keys - used to specify userids to trust for user authentication * "tamarin": script to trigger rhesus during attempt to initiate connection from client client-side components ---------------------- * "marmoset": script to trigger rhesus during attempt to initiate connection to server - runs on connection to a certain host - triggers update to known_hosts file then makes connection - proxy-command | pre-hook script | wrapper script - (ssh_config "LocalCommand" is only run *after* connection) USE CASE ======== Dramatis Personae: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alice_and_Bob Backstory: http://www.conceptlabs.co.uk/alicebob.html Bob wants to sign on to the computer "mangabey.example.org" via monkeysphere framework. He doesn't yet have access to the machine, but he knows Alice, who is the admin of magabey. Alice and Bob, being the conscientious netizens that they are, have already published their personal gpg keys to the web of trust, and being good friends, have both signed each other's keys and marked each others keys with "full" trust. Alice uses howler to publish a gpg key for magabey with the special userid of "ssh://mangabey.example.org". Alice signs mangabey's gpg key and publishes this signature as a certification. Alice then creates a user "bob" on mangabey, and puts Bob's userid in the auth_user_ids file for user bob on magabey. tamarin triggers on mangabey, which invokes rhesus. rhesus takes all userids in bob's auth_user_ids file, looks on a keyserver to find the public keys for each user, converts the gpg public keys into ssh public keys if the key validity is acceptable, and finally inserts those keys into an authorized_keys file for bob. Bob now adds the "ssh://mangabey.example.org" userid to the auth_host_ids file in his account on his localhost. Bob now goes to connect to bob@mangabey.example.org. Bob's monkeysphere-enabled ssh client triggers marmoset, which invokes rhesus on Bob's computer. rhesus takes all server userids in his auth_host_ids file, looks on a keyserver to find the public key for each server (based on the server's URI), converts the gpg public keys into ssh public keys if the key validity is acceptable, and finally insert those keys into Bob's known_hosts file. On Bob's side, since mangabey's key had "full" validity (since it was signed by Alice whom he fully trusts), Bob's ssh client deems mangabey "known" and no further host key checking is required. On mangabey's side, since Bob's key has "full" validity (since it had also been signed by Alice, mangabey's trusted administrator), Bob is authenticated and authorized to log into bob@mangabey. NOTES ===== * Daniel and Elliot lie. * We will use a distributed VCS, each developer will create their own git repository and publish it publicly for others to pull from, mail out * public project page doesn't perhaps make sense yet * approximate goal - using the web of trust to authenticate ppl for SSH * outline of various components of monkeysphere * M: what does it mean to be in the monkeysphere? not necessarily a great coder. * J: interested in seeing project happen, not in actually doing it. anybody can contribute as much as they want. * J: if we put the structure in place to work on monkeysphere then we don't have to do anything * D: we are not creating * understand gpg's keyring better, understanding tools better, building scripts * Some debian packages allow automated configuration of config files. * GENERAL GOAL - use openpgp web-of-trust to authenticate ppl for SSH * SPECIFIC GOAL - allow openssh to tie into pgp web-of-trust without modifying either openpgp and openssh * DESIGN GOALS - authentication, use the existing generic OpenSSH client, the admin can make it default, although end-user should be decide to use monkeysphere or not * DESIGN GOAL - use of monkeysphere should not radically change connecting-to-server experience * GOAL - pick a monkey-related name for each component Host identity piece of monkeysphere could be used without buying into the authorization component. Monkeysphere is authentication layer that allows the sysadmin to perform authorization on user identities instead of on keys, it additionally allows the sysadmin also to authenticate the server to the end-user. see doc/git-init for more detail on how to pull from the distributed repositories.