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Chapter 2. Trusted Artifact Signer’s implementation of The Update Framework
Starting with Red Hat Trusted Artifact Signer (RHTAS) version 1.1, we implemented The Update Framework (TUF) as a trust root to store public keys, and certificates used by RHTAS services. The Update Framework is a sophisticated framework for securing software update systems, and this makes it ideal for securing shipped artifacts. The Update Framework refers to the RHTAS services as trusted root targets. There are four trusted targets, one for each RHTAS service: Fulcio, Certificate Transparency (CT) log, Rekor, and Timestamp Authority (TSA). Client software, such as cosign
, use the RHTAS trust root targets to sign and verify artifact signatures. A simple HTTP server distributes the public keys and certificates to the client software. This simple HTTP server has the TUF repository of the individual targets.
When deploying the RHTAS operator in OpenShift, by default, we create a TUF repository, and prepopulate the individual targets. By default, the expiration date of all metadata files is 52 weeks from the time you deploy a Securesign instance. Red Hat recommends choosing shorter expiration periods, and rotating your public keys and certificates often. Doing these maintenance tasks regularly can help prevent attacks on your code base.