A GitHub Action that uses sigstore-python
to generate Sigstore signatures.
Simply add sigstore/gh-action-sigstore-python
to one of your workflows:
jobs:
selftest:
runs-on: ubuntu-latest
permissions:
id-token: write
steps:
- uses: actions/checkout@v3
- name: install
run: python -m pip install .
- uses: sigstore/gh-action-sigstore-python@v3.0.0
with:
inputs: file.txt
Note: Your workflow must have permission to request the OIDC token to authenticate with.
This can be done by setting id-token: write
on your job (as above) or workflow.
More information about permission settings can be found here.
gh-action-sigstore-python
takes a variety of configuration inputs, most of which are
optional.
inputs
The inputs
setting controls what files sigstore-python
signs. At least one input must be
provided unless release-signing-artifacts is set to true
on release events.
To sign one or more files:
- uses: sigstore/gh-action-sigstore-python@v3.0.0
with:
inputs: file0.txt file1.txt file2.txt
The inputs
argument also supports file globbing:
- uses: sigstore/gh-action-sigstore-python@v3.0.0
with:
inputs: ./path/to/inputs/*.txt
Multiple lines are fine, and whitespace in filenames can also be escaped using POSIX shell lexing rules:
- uses: sigstore/gh-action-sigstore-python@v3.0.0
with:
inputs: |
./path/to/inputs/*.txt
./another/path/foo\ bar.txt
./a/third/path/"easier to quote than to escape".txt
[!NOTE]\ In versions of this action before 2.0.0, the
inputs
setting allowed for shell expansion. This was unintentional, and was removed with 2.0.0.
identity-token
Default: Empty (the GitHub Actions credential will be used)
The identity-token
setting controls the OpenID Connect token provided to Fulcio. By default, the
workflow will use the credentials found in the GitHub Actions environment.
- uses: sigstore/gh-action-sigstore-python@v3.0.0
with:
inputs: file.txt
identity-token: ${{ IDENTITY_TOKEN }} # assigned elsewhere
oidc-client-id
Default: sigstore
The oidc-client-id
setting controls the OpenID Connect client ID to provide to the OpenID Connect
Server during OAuth2.
Example:
- uses: sigstore/gh-action-sigstore-python@v3.0.0
with:
inputs: file.txt
oidc-client-id: alternative-sigstore-id
oidc-client-secret
Default: Empty (no OpenID Connect client secret provided by default)
The oidc-client-secret
setting controls the OpenID Connect client secret to provide to the OpenID
Connect Server during OAuth2.
Example:
- uses: sigstore/gh-action-sigstore-python@v3.0.0
with:
inputs: file.txt
oidc-client-secret: alternative-sigstore-secret
staging
Default: false
The staging
setting controls whether or not sigstore-python
uses sigstore's staging instances,
instead of the default production instances.
Example:
- uses: sigstore/gh-action-sigstore-python@v3.0.0
with:
inputs: file.txt
staging: true
verify
Default: false
The verify
setting controls whether or not the generated signatures and certificates are
verified with the sigstore verify
subcommand after all files have been signed.
This is not strictly necessary but can act as a smoke test to ensure that all signing artifacts were generated properly and the signature was properly submitted to Rekor.
If verify
is enabled, then you must also pass the verify-cert-identity
and verify-oidc-issuer
settings. Failing to pass these will produce an error.
Example:
- uses: sigstore/gh-action-sigstore-python@v3.0.0
with:
inputs: file.txt
verify: true
verify-oidc-issuer: https://some-oidc-issuer.example.com
verify-cert-identity: some-identity
verify-cert-identity
Default: Empty
The verify-cert-identity
setting controls whether to verify the Subject Alternative Name (SAN) of the
signing certificate after signing has taken place. If it is set, sigstore-python
will compare the
certificate's SAN against the provided value.
This setting only applies if verify
is set to true
. Supplying it without verify: true
will produce an error.
This setting may only be used in conjunction with verify-oidc-issuer
.
Supplying it without verify-oidc-issuer
will produce an error.
- uses: sigstore/gh-action-sigstore-python@v3.0.0
with:
inputs: file.txt
verify: true
verify-cert-identity: john.hancock@example.com
verify-oidc-issuer: https://oauth2.sigstage.dev/auth
verify-oidc-issuer
Default: https://oauth2.sigstore.dev/auth
The verify-oidc-issuer
setting controls whether to verify the issuer extension of the signing
certificate after signing has taken place. If it is set, sigstore-python
will compare the
certificate's issuer extension against the provided value.
This setting only applies if verify
is set to true
. Supplying it without verify: true
will produce an error.
This setting may only be used in conjunction with verify-cert-identity
.
Supplying it without verify-cert-identity
will produce an error.
Example:
- uses: sigstore/gh-action-sigstore-python@v3.0.0
with:
inputs: file.txt
verify: true
verify-cert-identity: john.hancock@example.com
verify-oidc-issuer: https://oauth2.sigstage.dev/auth
upload-signing-artifacts
Default: false
The upload-signing-artifacts
setting controls whether or not sigstore-python
creates
workflow artifacts
for the outputs produced by signing operations.
By default, no workflow artifacts are uploaded. When enabled, the default workflow artifact retention period is used.
Example:
- uses: sigstore/gh-action-sigstore-python@v3.0.0
with:
inputs: file.txt
upload-signing-artifacts: true
release-signing-artifacts
Default: true
The release-signing-artifacts
setting controls whether or not sigstore-python
uploads signing artifacts to the release publishing event that triggered this run.
This setting has no effect on non-release
events.
If enabled, this setting also re-uploads and signs GitHub's default source code artifacts, as they are not guaranteed to be stable.
Requires the contents: write
permission.
Example:
permissions:
contents: write
# ...
- uses: sigstore/gh-action-sigstore-python@v3.0.0
with:
inputs: file.txt
release-signing-artifacts: true
On release events, it is also valid to have no explicit inputs. When used on release events, this action will sign any pre-existing release artifacts:
permissions:
contents: write
# ...
# no explicit settings needed, signs all pre-existing release artifacts
- uses: sigstore/gh-action-sigstore-python@v3.0.0
gh-action-sigstore-python
is licensed under the Apache 2.0 License.
Everyone interacting with this project is expected to follow the sigstore Code of Conduct
Should you discover any security issues, please refer to sigstore's security process.
gh-action-sigstore-python
is developed as part of the sigstore
project.
We also use a slack channel! Click here for the invite link.