| # Module Mirror and Checksum Database Launched |
| 29 Aug 2019 |
| Tags: tools, versioning |
| Summary: The Go module mirror and checksum database provide faster, verified downloads of your Go dependencies. |
| |
| Katie Hockman |
| |
| ## |
| |
| We are excited to share that our module [mirror](https://proxy.golang.org), |
| [index](https://index.golang.org), and |
| [checksum database](https://sum.golang.org) are now production ready! The `go` command |
| will use the module mirror and checksum database by default for |
| [Go 1.13 module users](https://golang.org/doc/go1.13#introduction). See |
| [proxy.golang.org/privacy](https://proxy.golang.org/privacy) for privacy |
| information about these services and the |
| [go command documentation](https://golang.org/cmd/go/#hdr-Module_downloading_and_verification) |
| for configuration details, including how to disable the use of these servers or |
| use different ones. If you depend on non-public modules, see the |
| [documentation for configuring your environment](https://golang.org/cmd/go/#hdr-Module_configuration_for_non_public_modules). |
| |
| This post will describe these services and the benefits of using them, and |
| summarizes some of the points from the |
| [Go Module Proxy: Life of a Query](https://youtu.be/KqTySYYhPUE) talk at Gophercon 2019. |
| See the [recording](https://youtu.be/KqTySYYhPUE) if you are interested in the full talk. |
| |
| ## Module Mirror |
| |
| [Modules](https://blog.golang.org/versioning-proposal) are sets of Go packages |
| that are versioned together, and the contents of each version are immutable. |
| That immutability provides new opportunities for caching and authentication. |
| When `go get` runs in module mode, it must fetch the module containing the |
| requested packages, as well as any new dependencies introduced by that module, |
| updating your |
| [go.mod](https://golang.org/cmd/go/#hdr-The_go_mod_file) and |
| [go.sum](https://golang.org/cmd/go/#hdr-Module_downloading_and_verification) |
| files as needed. Fetching modules from version control can be expensive in terms |
| of latency and storage in your system: the `go` command may be forced to pull down |
| the full commit history of a repository containing a transitive dependency, even |
| one that isn’t being built, just to resolve its version. |
| |
| The solution is to use a module proxy, which speaks an API that is better suited |
| to the `go` command’s needs (see `go help goproxy`). When `go get` runs in |
| module mode with a proxy, it will work faster by only asking for the specific |
| module metadata or source code it needs, and not worrying about the rest. Below is |
| an example of how the `go` command may use a proxy with `go get` by requesting the list |
| of versions, then the info, mod, and zip file for the latest tagged version. |
| |
| .image module-mirror-launch/proxy-protocol.png _ 800 |
| |
| A module mirror is a special kind of module proxy that caches metadata and |
| source code in its own storage system, allowing the mirror to continue to serve |
| source code that is no longer available from the original locations. This can |
| speed up downloads and protect you from disappearing dependencies. See |
| [Go Modules in 2019](https://blog.golang.org/modules2019) for more information. |
| |
| The Go team maintains a module mirror, served at |
| [proxy.golang.org](https://proxy.golang.org), which the `go` command will use by |
| default for module users as of Go 1.13. If you are running an earlier version of the `go` |
| command, then you can use this service by setting |
| `GOPROXY=https://proxy.golang.org` in your local environment. |
| |
| ## Checksum Database |
| |
| Modules introduced the `go.sum` file, which is a list of SHA-256 hashes of the |
| source code and `go.mod` files of each dependency when it was first downloaded. |
| The `go` command can use the hashes to detect misbehavior by an origin server or |
| proxy that gives you different code for the same version. |
| |
| The limitation of this `go.sum` file is that it works entirely by trust on _your_ |
| first use. When you add a version of a dependency that you’ve never seen before |
| to your module (possibly by upgrading an existing dependency), the `go` command |
| fetches the code and adds lines to the `go.sum` file on the fly. The problem is |
| that those `go.sum` lines aren’t being checked against anyone else’s: they might |
| be different from the `go.sum` lines that the `go` command just generated for |
| someone else, perhaps because a proxy intentionally served malicious code |
| targeted to you. |
| |
| Go's solution is a global source of `go.sum` lines, called a |
| [checksum database](https://go.googlesource.com/proposal/+/master/design/25530-sumdb.md#checksum-database), |
| which ensures that the `go` command always adds the same lines to everyone's |
| `go.sum` file. Whenever the `go` command receives new source code, it can verify the |
| hash of that code against this global database to make sure the hashes match, |
| ensuring that everyone is using the same code for a given version. |
| |
| The checksum database is served by [sum.golang.org](https://sum.golang.org), and |
| is built on a [Transparent Log](https://research.swtch.com/tlog) (or “Merkle |
| tree”) of hashes backed by [Trillian](https://github.com/google/trillian). The |
| main advantage of a Merkle tree is that it is tamper proof and has properties |
| that don’t allow for misbehavior to go undetected, which makes it more |
| trustworthy than a simple database. The `go` command uses this tree to check |
| “inclusion” proofs (that a specific record exists in the log) and “consistency” |
| proofs (that the tree hasn’t been tampered with) before adding new `go.sum` lines |
| to your module’s `go.sum` file. Below is an example of such a tree. |
| |
| .image module-mirror-launch/tree.png _ 800 |
| |
| The checksum database supports |
| [a set of endpoints](https://go.googlesource.com/proposal/+/master/design/25530-sumdb.md#checksum-database) |
| used by the `go` command to request and verify `go.sum` lines. The `/lookup` |
| endpoint provides a “signed tree head” (STH) and the requested `go.sum` lines. The |
| `/tile` endpoint provides chunks of the tree called _tiles_ which the `go` command |
| can use for proofs. Below is an example of how the `go` command may |
| interact with the checksum database by doing a `/lookup` of a module version, then |
| requesting the tiles required for the proofs. |
| |
| .image module-mirror-launch/sumdb-protocol.png _ 800 |
| |
| This checksum database allows the `go` command to safely use an otherwise |
| untrusted proxy. Because there is an auditable security layer sitting on top of |
| it, a proxy or origin server can’t intentionally, arbitrarily, or accidentally |
| start giving you the wrong code without getting caught. Even the author of a |
| module can’t move their tags around or otherwise change the bits associated with |
| a specific version from one day to the next without the change being detected. |
| |
| If you are using Go 1.12 or earlier, you can manually check a `go.sum` file |
| against the checksum database with |
| [gosumcheck](https://godoc.org/golang.org/x/mod/gosumcheck): |
| |
| $ go get golang.org/x/mod/gosumcheck |
| $ gosumcheck /path/to/go.sum |
| |
| In addition to verification done by the `go` command, third-party |
| auditors can hold the checksum database accountable by iterating over the log |
| looking for bad entries. They can work together and gossip about the state of |
| the tree as it grows to ensure that it remains uncompromised, and we hope that |
| the Go community will run them. |
| |
| ## Module Index |
| |
| The module index is served by [index.golang.org](https://index.golang.org), and |
| is a public feed of new module versions that become available through |
| [proxy.golang.org](https://proxy.golang.org). This is particularly useful for |
| tool developers that want to keep their own cache of what’s available in |
| [proxy.golang.org](https://proxy.golang.org), or keep up-to-date on some of the |
| newest modules that people are using. |
| |
| ## Feedback or bugs |
| |
| We hope these services improve your experience with modules, and encourage you |
| to [file issues](https://github.com/golang/go/issues/new?title=proxy.golang.org) if you run into |
| problems or have feedback! |