Crates.io | sig-proxy |
lib.rs | sig-proxy |
version | 0.5.0 |
source | src |
created_at | 2021-04-21 20:26:58.576877 |
updated_at | 2021-06-09 21:41:25.284738 |
description | Signature-Based (Web3) Authenticating Proxy |
homepage | |
repository | https://github.com/colstrom/sig-proxy/ |
max_upload_size | |
id | 387859 |
size | 6,023,934 |
sig-proxy
is a proxy for HTTP services, that validates signatures, providing
an AuthN layer for those services. It also has functionality for clients,
automatically injecting signatures into requests.
As of 0.2
, Smart Contracts are supported. These allow using tokens as transferrable licenses to gated services.
Some examples:
This is really two questions, so let's break that down...
Signature-based authentication avoids many of the pitfalls of password-based authentication. The server only needs to know public keys, and if those are leaked... who cares? They're public keys.
Assuming a reasonable UI in both cases, users can rotate keys just as easily as passwords. They can delegate a subset of permissions to other keys (just as we do with access tokens elsewhere).
Keys are things users generate, not things users memorize. This removes problems like password reuse entirely.
Implementing this in the form of a proxy allows it to be applied to most existing HTTP(S) applications without modification.
Separating the signing from the verification allows more fine-grained control over what has access to private keys. It also means the proxy can be used only where needed. If a client application can handle signing natively, then it should.
Implementing this as a set of composable middleware makes it simple to extend, and (responsibly) experiment with new features.
It can be deployed as a sidecar container, if you're into that sort of thing.
cargo install sig-proxy
Or, if you prefer Docker:
docker pull colstrom/sig-proxy:0.3.1
First, you'll need some sort of service you want to put the proxy in front of.
For demonstration and development purposes, sig-proxy
includes an embedded
sample service that prints the request headers in the response body.
$ sig-proxy demo
tide::log Logger started
level DEBUG
tide::server Server listening on http://127.0.0.1:8080
Next, you'll need to have an Ethereum JSON-RPC (Web3) service available for
sig-proxy
to interact with. Ganache
is an excellent option for local use, so the rest of this document assumes that.
First, pick the address you want to use for signing requests:
Then, find the private key for this address:
Add this private key to the environment:
Using fish
:
set -x SECRET_KEY_DATA PUT_THE_DATA_HERE
Using vintage shells like bash
:
export SECRET_KEY_DATA=PUT_THE_DATA_HERE
Now you're ready to run it! Let's have a look at the help:
$ sig-proxy web3 --help
sig-proxy-web3 0.1.0
Runs the proxy service
USAGE:
sig-proxy web3 [FLAGS] [OPTIONS]
FLAGS:
-h, --help Prints help information
-V, --provides-account-verification verify signatures and provide account addresses
-B, --provides-balances provide account balances
-S, --provides-signatures provide signatures
--version Prints version information
OPTIONS:
--address-header <name> [env: ADDRESS_HEADER=] [default: X-Web3-Account-Address]
-b, --backend <url> [env: BACKEND=] [default: http://127.0.0.1:8080]
--balance-header <name> [env: BALANCE_HEADER=] [default: X-Web3-Account-Balance]
--balance-maximum <amount> [env: BALANCE_MAXIMUM=]
--balance-minimum <amount> [env: BALANCE_MINIMUM=]
-u, --balance-scale <unit> [env: BALANCE_SCALE=] [default: Wei]
-c, --challenge <phrase> [env: CHALLENGE=] [default: totes-legit]
-l, --listen <address> [env: LISTEN=] [default: 0.0.0.0:8000]
-K, --secret-key-data <hex> [env: SECRET_KEY_DATA=]
-k, --secret-key-file <path> [env: SECRET_KEY_FILE=]
--signature-header <name> [env: SIGNATURE_HEADER=] [default: X-Web3-Signature]
-w, --web3-rpc-url <url> [env: WEB3_RPC_URL=] [default: ws://127.0.0.1:7545]
All of those options are optional, though it doesn't do anything unless you enable at least one of them. Let's focus on two scenarios.
In this mode, sig-proxy
adds a signature to every request it handles.
$ sig-proxy web3 --provides-signatures
tide::log Logger started
level DEBUG
tracing::span new
tracing::span build
isahc::agent agent waker listening on 127.0.0.1:61558
isahc::agent agent_thread; port=61558
isahc::agent agent took 409.705µs to start up
tide::server Server listening on http://0.0.0.0:8000
A secret (private) key is needed to sign these requests, though. It can be given
as a file (--secret-key-file
), or a hex string (--secret-key-data
). If both
are given, --secret-key-file
is ignored. These can also be given via
environment, which is exactly what we did above.
This key is used to sign a challenge phrase (currently given by --challenge
),
which should be known to both client and server. It does not need to be private.
This signature is added to the request using the header given by --signature-header
.
In this mode, sig-proxy
expects requests to contain a signature header, and
will reject requests that do not contain one. These headers will be verified,
and the address used to sign them will be added to each request it handles.
Note that the client does not explicitly provide an address. They sign a challenge phrase that is known to both signer and verifier, and the signing address is recoverable from a valid signature.
$ sig-proxy web3 --provides-account-verification
tide::log Logger started
level DEBUG
tracing::span new
tracing::span build
isahc::agent agent waker listening on 127.0.0.1:56181
isahc::agent agent_thread; port=56181
isahc::agent agent took 312.747µs to start up
tide::server Server listening on http://0.0.0.0:8000
If the signature is valid, the address is added to the request using the header
given by --address-header
. It is assumed that the backend knows what to do
with this header. For instance, you could use the X-Remote-User
header to
integrate sig-proxy
with Dex.
In this mode, sig-proxy
expects requests to contain an account header, and
will reject requests that to not contain one. The balance of the address given
in this header will be added to each request it handles.
$ sig-proxy web3 --provides-balances
tide::log Logger started
level DEBUG
tracing::span new
tracing::span build
isahc::agent agent waker listening on 127.0.0.1:54608
isahc::agent agent_thread; port=54608
isahc::agent agent took 313.524µs to start up
tide::server Server listening on http://0.0.0.0:8000
By default, this doesn't care what the balance is, it just adds it to the
header given by --balance-header
. However, there are a few options to restrict
access based on the balance.
The --balance-minimum
option can be used to require a minimum balance. This
can be used as a form of "skin in the game", by requiring a non-zero balance
(which may be useful in to prevent bots or assist rate limiting), or to gate
access to only high rollers if you wanted to do that for some reason.
The --balance-maximum
option can be used to reject accounts with a balance
over a given amount. This can be used to limit risk, or gate access to only the
common folk if you were so inclined.
The --balance-unit
option can be used to conveniently scale the above limits.
How many zeroes are there in a Gwei? No need to remember, just set
--balance-unit=Gwei
and sig-proxy
will do the scaling internally. The
balance header will still be given in Wei, though.
The examples above show demonstrate using the features independently, but they are all implemented as composable middleware. You can enable all of them in a single process. It seems a bit silly to use both signing and verifying in the same process, but there's no reason you can't do it.
Assuming you've enabled all the features, and the proxy is in front of the demo
application, if you were to query each with curl
, you'd see something like the
following:
Querying the demo app directly:
$ curl -s http://127.0.0.1:8080 | sort
accept: ["*/*"]
host: ["127.0.0.1:8080"]
user-agent: ["curl/7.64.1"]
Querying through the proxy:
$ curl -s http://127.0.0.1:8000 | sort
accept-encoding: ["deflate, gzip"]
accept: ["*/*"]
content-length: ["0"]
content-type: ["application/octet-stream"]
forwarded: ["by=127.0.0.1:8000;for=\"127.0.0.1:52698\";host=127.0.0.1:8000;proto=http"]
host: ["127.0.0.1:8000"]
user-agent: ["curl/7.64.1"]
x-web3-address: ["24f9f97c9e540fed57ef81f6c9aeabdb6fc73acd"]
x-web3-balance: ["100000000000000000000"]
x-web3-signature: ["krpQZO9WpgAEso2uk6eAKDy29QjeVtr+gdDZ7iG4bFkYiTfNvTvU5l4bb2iod5F4Ab8a8tJqzXHSXLkyz9U/gRs="]
To help you get started, sig-proxy
embeds a set presets from the OpenZeppelin
project. These address some of the more common use cases, and are (according to
the OpenZeppelin documentation) production-ready.
Currently, there are five presets included, along with utilities for deploying
and interacting with each. These can be found under the contract
subcommand.
To help you figure out which contract is appropriate, check the guide
subcommand. There you'll find an interactive program that will ask you a few
simple questions, and present you with a recommendation.
TLS Support
Support for RFC-7486 (HTTP Origin-Bound Authentication)
Optional endpoint to serve an embedded script for in-browser support.
X509 Support
PGP Support
sig-proxy
is available under the MIT License. See LICENSE.txt
for the full text.
sig-proxy
embeds contract ABI specs, and documentation excerpts from OpenZeppelin Contracts.
These are also distributed under the terms of the MIT License here.