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NAME

       containers-policy.json - syntax for the signature verification policy file

DESCRIPTION

       Signature  verification  policy  files  are  used  to  specify  policy, e.g. trusted keys,
       applicable when deciding whether to accept an image,  or  individual  signatures  of  that
       image, as valid.

       By  default,  the  policy is read from $HOME/.config/containers/policy.json, if it exists,
       otherwise from  /etc/containers/policy.json;   applications  performing  verification  may
       allow using a different policy instead.

FORMAT

       The  signature  verification  policy file, usually called policy.json, uses a JSON format.
       Unlike some other JSON files, its parsing is fairly strict:  unrecognized,  duplicated  or
       otherwise  invalid  fields  cause the entire file, and usually the entire operation, to be
       rejected.

       The purpose of the policy file is to define a set of policy requirements for  a  container
       image,  usually  depending  on  its  location (where it is being pulled from) or otherwise
       defined identity.

       Policy requirements can be defined for:

              • An individual scope in a transport.  The transport values are  the  same  as  the
                transport prefixes when pushing/pulling images (e.g. docker:, atomic:), and scope
                values are defined by each transport; see below for more details.

       Usually, a scope can be defined to match a single image, and various prefixes of
         such a most specific scope define namespaces of matching images.  - A default policy for
       a single transport, expressed using an empty string as a scope - A global default policy.

       If  multiple  policy requirements match a given image, only the requirements from the most
       specific match apply, the more general policy requirements definitions are ignored.

       This is expressed in JSON using the top-level syntax

              {
                  "default": [/* policy requirements: global default */]
                  "transports": {
                      transport_name: {
                          "": [/* policy requirements: default for transport $transport_name */],
                          scope_1: [/* policy requirements: default for $scope_1 in $transport_name */],
                          scope_2: [/*…*/]
                          /*…*/
                      },
                      transport_name_2: {/*…*/}
                      /*…*/
                  }
              }

       The global default set of policy requirements  is  mandatory;  all  of  the  other  fields
       (transports  itself,  any  specific  transport,  the transport-specific default, etc.) are
       optional.

Supported transports and their scopes

   atomic:
       The atomic: transport refers to images in an Atomic Registry.

       Supported scopes  use  the  form  hostname[:port][/namespace[/imagestream  [:tag]]],  i.e.
       either   specifying   a   complete   name   of  a  tagged  image,  or  prefix  denoting  a
       host/namespace/image stream or a wildcarded expression for matching  all  subdomains.  For
       wildcarded subdomain matching, *.example.com is a valid case, but example*.*.com is not.

       Note:  The  hostname  and port refer to the container registry host and port (the one used
       e.g. for docker pull), not to the OpenShift API host and port.

   dir:
       The dir: transport refers to images stored in local directories.

       Supported  scopes  are  paths  of  directories  (either  containing  a  single  image   or
       subdirectories possibly containing images).

       Note:  The  paths  must  be  absolute  and  contain  no  symlinks.  Paths  violating these
       requirements may be silently ignored.

       The top-level scope "/" is forbidden; use the transport default scope "", for  consistency
       with other transports.

   docker:
       The  docker:  transport  refers  to images in a registry implementing the "Docker Registry
       HTTP API V2".

       Scopes matching individual images are named Docker references in the fully expanded  form,
       either   using  a  tag  or  digest.  For  example,  docker.io/library/busybox:latest  (not
       busybox:latest).

       More general scopes are prefixes of individual-image scopes, and specify a repository  (by
       omitting  the  tag  or  digest),  a  repository  namespace,  or  a  registry host (by only
       specifying the host name) or a wildcarded expression  for  matching  all  subdomains.  For
       wildcarded subdomain matching, *.example.com is a valid case, but example*.*.com is not.

   oci:
       The  oci:  transport  refers to images in directories compliant with "Open Container Image
       Layout Specification".

       Supported scopes use the form  directory:tag,  and  directory  referring  to  a  directory
       containing one or more tags, or any of the parent directories.

       Note:  See dir: above for semantics and restrictions on the directory paths, they apply to
       oci: equivalently.

   tarball:
       The tarball: transport refers to tarred up container root filesystems.

       Scopes are ignored.

Policy Requirements

       Using the mechanisms above, a set  of  policy  requirements  is  looked  up.   The  policy
       requirements  are  represented  as a JSON array of individual requirement objects.  For an
       image to be accepted, all of the requirements must be satisfied simultaneously.

       The policy requirements can also be used to decide  whether  an  individual  signature  is
       accepted  (=  is  signed  by  a  recognized  key  of  a  known  author); in that case some
       requirements may apply only to some signatures, but each signature must be accepted by  at
       least one requirement object.

       The following requirement objects are supported:

   insecureAcceptAnything
       A simple requirement with the following syntax

              {"type":"insecureAcceptAnything"}

       This  requirement  accepts  any image (but note that other requirements in the array still
       apply).

       When deciding to accept an individual  signature,  this  requirement  does  not  have  any
       effect; it does not cause the signature to be accepted, though.

       This  is  useful  primarily for policy scopes where no signature verification is required;
       because the array of policy requirements must not be empty, this requirement  is  used  to
       represent the lack of requirements explicitly.

   reject
       A simple requirement with the following syntax:

              {"type":"reject"}

       This requirement rejects every image, and every signature.

   signedBy
       This  requirement  requires  an image to be signed with an expected identity, or accepts a
       signature if it is using an expected identity and key.

              {
                  "type":    "signedBy",
                  "keyType": "GPGKeys", /* The only currently supported value */
                  "keyPath": "/path/to/local/keyring/file",
                  "keyData": "base64-encoded-keyring-data",
                  "signedIdentity": identity_requirement
              }

       Exactly one of keyPath and keyData must be present, containing a GPG  keyring  of  one  or
       more public keys.  Only signatures made by these keys are accepted.

       The  signedIdentity  field,  a  JSON  object,  specifies what image identity the signature
       claims about the image.  One of the following alternatives are supported:

              • The identity in the signature must exactly match the image identity.   Note  that
                with  this,  referencing  an  image  by  digest  (with  a  signature  claiming  a
                repository:tag identity) will fail.

                {"type":"matchExact"}

              • If the image identity carries a tag, the identity in the signature  must  exactly
                match;  if  the  image  identity  uses  a  digest  reference, the identity in the
                signature must be in the same repository as the image identity (using any tag).

       (Note that with images identified using digest references, the digest from  the  reference
       is validated even before signature verification starts.)

                {"type":"matchRepoDigestOrExact"}

              • The  identity  in  the  signature  must  be  in  the same repository as the image
                identity.  This is useful e.g. to pull an image using the :latest  tag  when  the
                image is signed with a tag specifying an exact image version.

                {"type":"matchRepository"}

              • The  identity  in the signature must exactly match a specified identity.  This is
                useful e.g. when locally mirroring images signed using their public identity.

                {
                    "type": "exactReference",
                    "dockerReference": docker_reference_value
                }

              • The identity in the signature must be in  the  same  repository  as  a  specified
                identity.  This combines the properties of matchRepository and exactReference.

                {
                    "type": "exactRepository",
                    "dockerRepository": docker_repository_value
                }

              • Prefix remapping:

       If  the  image  identity  matches  the  specified  prefix,  that prefix is replaced by the
       specified “signed prefix”
         (otherwise it is used as unchanged and no remapping takes place);
         matching then follows the matchRepoDigestOrExact semantics documented above
         (i.e. if the image identity carries a tag, the identity in the  signature  must  exactly
       match,
         if it uses a digest reference, the repository must match).

       The prefix and signedPrefix values can be either host[:port] values
         (matching exactly the same host[:port], string),
         repository namespaces, or repositories (i.e. they must not contain tags/digests),
         and match as prefixes of the fully expanded form.
         For example, docker.io/library/busybox (not busybox) to specify that single repository,
         or  docker.io/library  (not  an  empty  string)  to  specify  the  parent  namespace  of
       docker.io/library/busybox==busybox).

       The prefix value is  usually  the  same  as  the  scope  containing  the  parent  signedBy
       requirement.

                {
                    "type": "remapIdentity",
                    "prefix": prefix,
                    "signedPrefix": prefix,
                }

       If the signedIdentity field is missing, it is treated as matchRepoDigestOrExact.

       Note:  matchExact,  matchRepoDigestOrExact  and  matchRepository  can  be  only  used if a
       Docker-like image identity is provided by the transport.  In particular, the dir: and oci:
       transports can be only used with exactReference or exactRepository.

Examples

       It is strongly recommended to set the default policy to reject, and then selectively allow
       individual transports and scopes as desired.

   A reasonably locked-down system
       (Note that the /**/ comments are not valid  in  JSON,  and  must  not  be  used  in  real
       policies.)

              {
                  "default": [{"type": "reject"}], /* Reject anything not explicitly allowed */
                  "transports": {
                      "docker": {
                          /* Allow installing images from a specific repository namespace, without cryptographic verification.
                             This namespace includes images like openshift/hello-openshift and openshift/origin. */
                          "docker.io/openshift": [{"type": "insecureAcceptAnything"}],
                          /* Similarly, allow installing the “official” busybox images.  Note how the fully expanded
                             form, with the explicit /library/, must be used. */
                          "docker.io/library/busybox": [{"type": "insecureAcceptAnything"}]
                          /* Allow installing images from all subdomains */
                          "*.temporary-project.example.com": [{"type": "insecureAcceptAnything"}]
                          /* Other docker: images use the global default policy and are rejected */
                      },
                      "dir": {
                          "": [{"type": "insecureAcceptAnything"}] /* Allow any images originating in local directories */
                      },
                      "atomic": {
                          /* The common case: using a known key for a repository or set of repositories */
                          "hostname:5000/myns/official": [
                              {
                                  "type": "signedBy",
                                  "keyType": "GPGKeys",
                                  "keyPath": "/path/to/official-pubkey.gpg"
                              }
                          ],
                          /* A more complex example, for a repository which contains a mirror of a third-party product,
                             which must be signed-off by local IT */
                          "hostname:5000/vendor/product": [
                              { /* Require the image to be signed by the original vendor, using the vendor's repository location. */
                                  "type": "signedBy",
                                  "keyType": "GPGKeys",
                                  "keyPath": "/path/to/vendor-pubkey.gpg",
                                  "signedIdentity": {
                                      "type": "exactRepository",
                                      "dockerRepository": "vendor-hostname/product/repository"
                                  }
                              },
                              { /* Require the image to _also_ be signed by a local reviewer. */
                                  "type": "signedBy",
                                  "keyType": "GPGKeys",
                                  "keyPath": "/path/to/reviewer-pubkey.gpg"
                              }
                          ],
                          /* A way to mirror many repositories from a single vendor */
                          "private-mirror:5000/vendor-mirror": [
                              { /* Require the image to be signed by the original vendor, using the vendor's repository location.
                                   For example, private-mirror:5000/vendor-mirror/productA/image1:latest needs to be signed as
                                   vendor.example/productA/image1:latest . */
                                  "type": "signedBy",
                                  "keyType": "GPGKeys",
                                  "keyPath": "/path/to/vendor-pubkey.gpg",
                                  "signedIdentity": {
                                      "type": "remapIdentity",
                                      "prefix": "private-mirror:5000/vendor-mirror",
                                      "signedPrefix": "vendor.example.com",
                                  }
                              }
                          ]
                      }
                  }
              }

   Completely disable security, allow all images, do not trust any signatures
              {
                  "default": [{"type": "insecureAcceptAnything"}]
              }

SEE ALSO

       atomic(1)

HISTORY

       August  2018,  Rename to containers-policy.json(5) by Valentin Rothberg vrothberg@suse.commailto:vrothberg@suse.com⟩

       September    2016,    Originally    compiled    by    Miloslav    Trmač    mitr@redhat.commailto:mitr@redhat.com