Attach a secret to your app

In this tutorial, you will learn how to leverage an application developer secret by using the IEXEC_APP_DEVELOPER_SECRET environment variable in your application code.

Before going any further, make sure you managed to Build your first application with Scone framework.

Prerequisites:

Trusted Execution Environments offer a huge advantage from a security perspective. They guarantee that the behavior of execution does not change even when launched on an untrusted remote machine. The data inside this type of environment is also protected, which allows its monetization while preventing leakage.

With iExec, it is possible to securely associate an application developer secret to the runtime of an application. This association is performed through the usage of environment variables which cannot leak outside of the enclave memory.

The app developer secret is only exposed to your app inside authorized enclaves and never leaves them.

Your secrets are transferred with the SDK from your machine to the SMS over a TLS channel.

Let's see how to do all of that!

Prepare your application

For demo purposes, we omitted some development best practices in these examples.

Make sure to check your field's best practices before going to production.

Let's develop an application designed to evaluate the function: f(x)=ax3+bx2+cx+df(x) = ax^3 + bx^2 + cx + d

where the coefficients a, b, c and d are kept confidential using an application secret, and the input x is given as argument of the app.

Let's create a directory tree for this app in ~/iexec-projects/.

cd ~/iexec-projects
mkdir tee-developer-secret-app && cd tee-developer-secret-app
iexec init --skip-wallet
mkdir src
touch Dockerfile
touch sconify.sh
chmod +x sconify.sh

Make sure your chain.json content is correct.

Copy the following content in src/ .

src/app.js
const fsPromises = require("fs").promises;

(async () => {
  try {
    const iexecOut = process.env.IEXEC_OUT;
    // get the secret endpoint from app developer secret
    const secret = process.env.IEXEC_APP_DEVELOPER_SECRET;

    let a = 1,
      b = 1,
      c = 1,
      d = 1; // Default values
    if (!secret) {
      console.log("missing IEXEC_APP_DEVELOPER_SECRET");
    } else {
      // Split the secret into coefficients
      let coefficients = secret.split(";");
      if (coefficients.length !== 4) {
        console.log("problem length IEXEC_APP_DEVELOPER_SECRET");
      } else {
        [a, b, c, d] = coefficients.map(parseFloat);
      }
    }

    // Function to compute f(x)
    function cubicPolynomial(x) {
      return a * Math.pow(x, 3) + b * Math.pow(x, 2) + c * x + d;
    }

    // Get the value of x from command-line arguments
    let x;
    if (process.argv.length !== 3) {
      console.log(
        "Usage: exactly one argument required for this dapp: x ; to compute f(x)=a.x^3 + b.x^2 + c.x + d , x=1 by default"
      );
      x = 1;
    } else {
      x = parseFloat(process.argv[2]);
    }

    // Compute f(x)
    let result = cubicPolynomial(x);

    // Create result object
    const resultObj = {
      x: x,
      result: result,
    };
    // Convert result object to JSON string
    const resultJson = JSON.stringify(resultObj);
    // Write result to file
    await fsPromises.writeFile(`${iexecOut}/result.txt`, resultJson);

    // Declare everything is computed
    const computedJsonObj = {
      "deterministic-output-path": `${iexecOut}/result.txt`,
    };
    await fsPromises.writeFile(
      `${iexecOut}/computed.json`,
      JSON.stringify(computedJsonObj)
    );
  } catch (e) {
    // do not log anything that could reveal the app developer secret!
    console.log(e);
    process.exit(1);
  }
})();

As seen above, a single slot is dedicated to store the application developer secret. If you want to use multiple secrets, feel free to pack your secrets into a single one and unpack them when reading the IEXEC_APP_DEVELOPER_SECRET environment variable from the application code.

Build a Confidential Computing application

Build the docker image

In this section, you will:

Create the Dockerfile

For a Javascript application:

# Starting from a base image supported by SCONE
FROM node:14-alpine3.11
# install your dependencies
RUN mkdir /app && cd /app
COPY ./src /app
ENTRYPOINT [ "node", "/app/app.js"]

For a Python application:

FROM python:3.7.3-alpine3.10
### install python dependencies if you have some
COPY ./src /app
ENTRYPOINT ["python3", "/app/app.py"]

Build the docker image.

docker build . --tag <docker-hub-user>/secret-function:1.0.0

Follow the steps described in Build Scone app > Build the TEE docker image.

Update the sconify.sh script with the variables as follow:

# Declare image related variables
IMG_NAME=tee-scone-secret-function
IMG_FROM=<docker-hub-user>/secret-function:1.0.0
IMG_TO=<docker-hub-user>/${IMG_NAME}:1.0.0-debug

Run the sconify.sh script to build the Scone TEE application:

./sconify.sh

Push the image on Docker Hub

docker push <docker-hub-user>/tee-scone-secret-function:1.0.0-debug

Test your app on iExec

At this stage, your application is ready to be tested on iExec with the following steps:

Deploy the TEE app on iExec

Deploy your application

Push an application developer secret to the SMS

iexec app push-secret

In this example, the app developer's secret must be strictly defined in the following format a;b;c;d.

For example set your secret to 1;1;1;1 for coeficients a,b,c,d.

For Secret Management Service security reasons, the app secret cannot be updated. Use with caution.

Check the secret exists in the SMS

iexec app check-secret

Run the TEE app

Run your application

Next step?

Thanks to the explained confidential computing workflow, you now know how to use an app developer secret in a Confidential Computing application.

To go further, check out how to:

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