Home

Awesome

fero

fero is a secure signing server built around the YubiHSM2. fero maintains a set of private RSA keys in the YubiHSM and uses them to produce PGP (or PKCS#1v1.5) signatures when an authorized signing request is received. It is designed to be a replacement for manual signing processes with gpg or openssl rsautl -sign.

Model

fero makes a distinction between private keys it manages (called "secrets") and public keys which can be used to manage and use secrets (called "users"). Each secret has its own numerical threshold for performing signing or management operations, and each user has a weight for each individual secret. Thus, signing permissions can be controlled highly granularly - each user is explicitly granted fractional control over any secrets they may have access to. This level of granularity can also be used to build a signing hierarchy - a project with artifacts produced by several different teams but signed by a single secret can assign weights for the top-level secret only to team-level secrets which are also stored in fero. Individual team members are then assigned weight for their team's secret only, and when all teams have individually signed an artifact, the top-level secret can then be used to re-sign the artifact.

Signing and online management operations with fero all follow the same basic workflow:

Deployment

Structure and requirements

fero is intended to be deployed on a machine which is not directly connected to the Internet. To that end, there are three components to fero:

The fero server requires a system with libyubihsm.so from the YubiHSM2 SDK installed, and a YubiHSM2 device attached to the system.

Setup

Both of these methods assume you are starting with a YubiHSM2 in the factory-default configuration. If not, you should reset your YubiHSM2.

Containerized setup (recommended)

On the fero-server host:

  1. Preload the fero-server and yubihsm-connector Docker images onto the host. These can be built from fero-server/Dockerfile and fero-server/Dockerfile.connector, respectively.
  2. Configure a Docker bridge network over which the connector and server can communicate:
docker network create --driver bridge fero
  1. Create a container for the connector:
docker create --name yubihsm-connector --network fero -v /dev:/dev --privileged=true yubihsm-connector
docker start yubihsm-connector
  1. Provision the YubiHSM2 via fero-server's provision command:
docker run -it --rm --network fero -v ${FERO_DATA_PATH}:/fero fero-server provision -y

You will be prompted for two passwords, one for the new administrative AuthKey that will be created on the YubiHSM2 and one for the application AuthKey that fero-server will use.

  1. Create and run the fero-server container:
docker create --name fero-server --network fero -v ${FERO_DATA_PATH}:/fero -t fero-server serve -k 3 -w $YOUR_APP_PASSWORD
docker start fero-server
  1. Add secrets and users as desired (see "Management" section).

On the fero-bastion host:

  1. Preload the fero-bastion Docker image onto the host. This can be built from fero-bastion/Dockerfile.
  2. Create and run the fero-bastion container:
docker create --name fero-bastion -t fero-bastion --server-address $FERO_SERVER_ADDRESS
docker start fero-bastion

Non-containerized setup

On the fero-server host:

  1. Configure yubihsm-connector. Make a note of its settings, as you'll need to tell fero-server about them.
  2. If you haven't already configured your YubiHSM2, do so now with fero-server -d /path/to/fero.db provision -y. Make a note of both passwords you enter here; you'll need the administrative AuthKey if you ever need to reconfigure the YubiHSM2, and you'll need the application AuthKey to use fero.
  3. Start fero-server with the options you've noted from the previous steps, and the desired address/port to listen on: fero-server -d /path/to/fero.db serve -a ${LISTEN_ADDR} -k 3 -w ${APPLICATION_PASSWORD} -c ${CONNECTOR_URL} -p ${LISTEN_PORT}

On the fero-bastion host:

  1. Run fero-bastion -a ${BASTION_LISTEN_ADDRESS} -p ${BASTION_LISTEN_PORT} -s ${SERVER_LISTEN_ADDRESS} -r ${SERVER_LISTEN_PORT}.

Management

The examples given are for use with the containerized setup listed above. If you're not using the containerized setup, just drop the Docker portions of the examples and run fero-server directly. You will also need to provide the connector URL and database path.

Secrets

Fero supports both PGP and raw RSA private keys. Secrets can be added with either add-pgp-secret or add-pem-secret, depending on the type of secret you wish to add. Each also requires the AuthKey and database path. For PGP secrets, you will also need to specify which subkey you wish to store.

Important: Fero does not support ASCII-armored PGP data, so if your private key is ASCII-armored you will need to dearmor it (gpg2 --dearmor armored_key.gpg > dearmored_key.gpg).

docker run -it --rm --network fero \
    -v ${FERO_DATA_PATH}:/fero -v $(pwd):/data fero-server add-pem-secret \
    -k 3 -w $YOUR_APP_PASSWORD \
    --name $SECRET_NAME \
    --threshold $SECRET_THRESHOLD \
    --file path/to/some.pem
docker run -it --rm --network fero \
    -v ${FERO_DATA_PATH}:/fero -v $(pwd):/data fero-server add-pgp-secret \
    -k 3 -w $YOUR_APP_PASSWORD \
    --name $SECRET_NAME \
    --threshold $SECRET_THRESHOLD \
    --subkey $DESIRED_SUBKEY \
    --file path/to/some_private_key.pgp

Users

Adding users can be done with the add-user subcommand.

Important: Fero does not support ASCII-armored PGP data, so if your public key is ASCII-armored you will need to dearmor it (gpg2 --dearmor armored_key.gpg > dearmored_key.gpg).

docker run -it --rm --network fero \
    -v ${FERO_DATA_PATH}:/fero -v $(pwd):/data fero-server add-user \
    -k 3 -w $YOUR_APP_PASSWORD \
    --file path/to/some_public_key.pgp

Setting a user's weight for a key can be done with the set-user-weight subcommand:

docker run -it --rm --network fero \
    -v ${FERO_DATA_PATH}:/fero fero-server set-user-weight \
    --name $SECRET_NAME
    --user $USER_PGP_FINGERPRINT \
    --weight $NEW_WEIGHT

Usage

Signing

Once you've populated the server with your secrets and users, and set the appropriate weights and thresholds, signing is relatively straightforward. Simply use the sign subcommand of fero-client along with each user's signature:

fero-client -a $BASTION_ADDRESS sign \
    -f myfile.txt \
    -o myfile.txt.sig \
    -k mysecret \
    -s myfile.txt.sig.1 -s myfile.txt.sig.2 -s myfile.txt.sig.3

For PKCS signatures, there's a little more work to do. Fero expects the "file" for PKCS signatures to be the actual SHA256 hash of the content you're signing:

openssl dgst -sha256 -out myfile.txt.hash myfile.txt
# Sign myfile.txt.hash as normal
fero-client -a $BASTION_ADDRESS sign \
    -f myfile.txt.hash \
    -o myfile.txt.sig \
    -k mysecret \
    -s myfile.txt.sig.1 -s myfile.txt.sig.2 -s myfile.txt.sig.3

User/secret management

Key management operations use the same authentication method as signing operations, so any set of users which can sign with a given key can also manage it. fero-client includes subcommands for generating the appropriate payloads to sign for the various key management operations.

Setting secret thresholds

fero-client -a $BASTION_ADDRESS threshold-payload -f threshold_payload -k mysecret -t 1000
# Sign threshold_payload
fero-client -a $BASTION_ADDRESS threshold -k mysecret -t 1000 \
    -s threshold_payload.sig.1 -s threshold_payload.sig.2 -s threshold_payload.sig.3

Updating users' weights

fero-client -a $BASTION_ADDRESS weight-payload -f weight_payload -k mysecret -u $USERID -w 300
# Sign weight_payload
fero-client -a $BASTION_ADDRESS weight -k mysecret -u $USERID -w 300 \
    -s weight_payload.sig.1 -s weight_payload.sig.2 -s weight_payload.sig.3