Hyperledger Fabric Private Chaincode (FPC) enables the execution of chaincodes using Intel SGX for Hyperledger Fabric.
The transparency and resilience gained from blockchain protocols ensure the integrity of blockchain applications and yet contradicts the goal to keep application state confidential and to maintain privacy for its users.
To remedy this problem, this project uses Trusted Execution Environments (TEEs), in particular Intel Software Guard Extensions (SGX), to protect the privacy of chaincode data and computation from potentially untrusted peers.
Intel SGX is the most prominent TEE today and available with commodity CPUs. It establishes trusted execution contexts called enclaves on a CPU, which isolate data and programs from the host operating system in hardware and ensure that outputs are correct.
This project provides a framework to develop and execute Fabric chaincode within an enclave. It allows to write chaincode applications where the data is encrypted on the ledger and can only be accessed in clear by authorized parties. Furthermore, Fabric extensions for chaincode enclave registration and transaction verification are provided.
Fabric Private Chaicode is based on the work in the paper:
- Marcus Brandenburger, Christian Cachin, Rüdiger Kapitza, Alessandro Sorniotti: Blockchain and Trusted Computing: Problems, Pitfalls, and a Solution for Hyperledger Fabric. https://arxiv.org/abs/1805.08541
This project was accepted via a Hyperledger Fabric RFC and is now under development. We provide an initial proof-of-concept implementation of the proposed architecture. Note that the code provided in this repository is still prototype code and not yet meant for production use!
For up to date information about our community meeting schedule, past presentations, and info on how to contact us please refer to our wiki page.
This project extends a Fabric peer with the following components: A chaincode enclave that executes a particular chaincode, running inside SGX. In the untrusted part of the peer, an enclave registry maintains the identities of all chaincode enclaves and an enclave transaction validator that is responsible for validating transactions executed by a chaincode enclave before committing them to the ledger.
The following diagram shows the architecture:
The system consists of the following components:
-
Chaincode enclave: The chaincode enclave executes one particular chaincode, and thereby isolates it from the peer and from other chaincodes. A chaincode library acts as intermediary between the chaincode in the enclave and the peer. The chaincode enclave exposes the Fabric chaincode interface and extends it with additional support for state encryption, attestation, and secure blockchain state access. This code is executed inside an Intel SGX enclave.
-
Enclave Endorsement validation: The enclave endorsement validation complements the peer’s validation system and is responsible for validating transactions produced by a chaincode enclave. In particular, the validator checks that a transaction contains a valid signature issued by a registered chaincode enclave. Iff the validation is successful, it causes the state-updates of the transaction to be committed to the ledger. This code is a normal Fabric transaction, i.e., executed and endorsed on multiple peers as required by the organization trust.
-
FPC Chaincode Pkg: This component bundles together the chaincode enclave and the enclave endorsement validation logic into a fabric chaincode. It also includes a shim component which (a) proxies the chaincode enclave shim functionality, e.g., access to ledger, to the fabric peer, and (b) dispatches FPC flows to either the chaincode enclave (via
__invoke
queries) or to the enclave endorsement validation logic (via__endorse
transactions). -
Enclave registry: The enclave registry (
ercc
) is a chaincode that runs outside SGX and maintains a list of all existing chaincode enclaves in the network. It performs attestation with the chaincode enclave and stores the attestation result on the blockchain. The attestation demonstrates that a specific chaincode executes in an actual enclave. This enables the peers and the clients to inspect the attestation of a chaincode enclave before invoking chaincode operations or committing state changes.
More detailed architectural information and overview of the protocols can be found in the Fabric Private Chaincode RFC.
The full detailed operation of FPC is documented in a series of UML
Sequence Diagrams. Note that FPC version 1.x corresponds to FPC Lite
in documents and code.
Specifically:
- The
fpc-lifecycle-v2
(puml) diagram describes the normal lifecycle of a chaincode in FPC, focusing in particular on those elements that change in FPC vs. regular Fabric. - The
fpc-registration
(puml) diagram describes how an FPC Chaincode Enclave is created on a Peer and registered in the FPC Registry, including the Remote Attestation process. - The
fpc-key-dist
(puml) diagram describes the process by which chaincode-unique cryptographic keys are created and distributed among enclaves running identical chaincodes. Note that in the current version of FPC, key generation is performed, but the key distribution protocol has not yet been implemented. - The
fpc-cc-invocation
(puml) diagram illustrates the invocation process at the beginning of the chaincode lifecycle in detail, focusing on the cryptographic operations between the Client and Peer leading up to submission of a transaction for Ordering. - The
fpc-cc-execution
(puml) diagram provides further detail of the execution phase of an FPC chaincode, focusing in particular on thegetState
andputState
interactions with the Ledger. - The
fpc-validation
(puml) diagram describes the FPC-specific process of validation. - The
fpc-components
(puml) diagram shows the important data structures of FPC components and messages exchanged between components. - The detailed message definitions can be found as protobufs.
- The interfaces document defines the interfaces exposed by the FPC components and their internal state.
Additional Google documents provide details on FPC 1.0:
- The FPC for Health use case describes how FPC 1.0 enables a health care use case. The document also gives more details on the FPC 1.0-enabled application domains and related constraints. Lastly, it provides a security analysis why these constraints are sufficient for security.
- The FPC externalized endorsement validation describes the FPC 1.0 enclave endorsement validation mechanism.
client_sdk
: The FPC Go Client SDKcmake
: CMake build rules shared across the projectcommon
: Shared C/C++ codeconfig
: SGX configurationdocs
: Documentation and design documentsecc_enclave
: C/C++ code for chaincode enclave (including the trusted code running inside an enclave)ecc
: Go code for FPC chaincode package, including dispatcher and (high-level code for) enclave endorsement validation.ercc
: Go code for Enclave Registry Chaincodesamples
: FPC Samplesfabric
: FPC wrapper for Fabric peer and utilities to start and stop a simple Fabric test network with FPC enabled, used by integration tests.integration
: FPC integration tests.internal
: Shared Go codeprotos
: Protobuf definitionsscripts
: Scripts used in build process.utils/docker
: Docker images and their build process.utils/fabric
: Various Fabric helpers.
For all releases go to the Github Release Page.
WARNING: This project is in continous development and the main
branch will not always be stable. Unless you want to actively
contribute to the project itself, we advise you to use the latest release.
The following steps guide you through the build phase and configuration, for deploying and running an example private chaincode.
We assume that you are familiar with Hyperledger Fabric; otherwise we recommend the Fabric documentation as your starting point. Moreover, we assume that you are familiar with the Intel SGX SDK.
This README is structure as follows. We start by cloning the FPC repository and explain how to prepare your development environment for FPC in Setup your FPC Development Environment. In Build Fabric Private Chaincode we guide you through the building process and elaborate on common issues. Finally, we give you a starting point for Developing with Fabric Private Chaincode by introducing the FPC Hello World Tutorial.
Clone the code and make sure it is on your $GOPATH
. (Important: we assume in this documentation and default configuration that your $GOPATH
has a single root-directoy!)
We use $FPC_PATH
to refer to the Fabric Private Chaincode repository in your filesystem.
export FPC_PATH=$GOPATH/src/github.com/hyperledger/fabric-private-chaincode
git clone --recursive https://github.com/hyperledger/fabric-private-chaincode.git $FPC_PATH
There are two different ways to develop Fabric Private Chaincode. Using our preconfigured Docker container development environment or setting up your local system with all required software dependencies to build and develop chaincode locally.
In this section we explain how to set up a Docker-based development environment that allows you to develop and test FPC chaincode. The docker images come with all necessary software dependencies and allow you a quick start. We recommend to set privileges to manage docker as a non-root user. See the official docker documentation for more details.
First make sure your host has
- Docker 18.09 (or higher).
It also should use
/var/run/docker.sock
as socket to interact with the daemon (or you will have to override in$FPC_PATH/config.override.mk
the default definition in make ofDOCKER_DAEMON_SOCKET
) - GNU make
Once you have cloned the repository, to pull the docker image and start the development container execute the following:
cd $FPC_PATH/utils/docker
make pull-dev
make run-dev
This will fetch the FPC development image and then opens a shell inside the FPC development container, with environment variables like $FPC_PATH
appropriately defined and all
dependencies like the Intel SGX SDK, ready to build and run FPC.
Note that by default the dev container mounts your local cloned FPC project as a volume to /project/src/github.com/hyperledger/fabric-private-chaincode
within the docker container.
This allows you to edit the content of the repository using your favorite editor in your system and the changes inside the docker container. Additionally, you are also not loosing changes inside the container when you reboot or the container gets stopped for other reasons.
In order to build the development image manually you can use the following commands. Note that this process may take some time.
cd $FPC_PATH/utils/docker
make build-dev
make run-dev
A few more notes:
- We use Ubuntu 20.04 by default.
To build also docker images based on Ubuntu 18.04, add the following to
$FPC_PATH/config.override.mk
.DOCKER_BUILD_OPTS=--build-arg UBUNTU_VERSION=18.04 --build-arg UBUNTU_NAME=bionic
- If you run behind a proxy, you will have to configure the proxy,
e.g., for docker (
~/.docker/config.json
). See Working from behind a proxy below for more information. - If your local host is SGX enabled, i.e., there is a device
/dev/sgx/enclave
or/dev/isgx
and your PSW daemon listens to/var/run/aesmd
, then the docker image will be sgx-enabled and your settings from./config/ias
will be used. You will have to manually setSGX_MODE=HW
before building anything to use HW mode. - If you want additional apt packages to be automatically added to your
container images, you can do so by modifying
$FPC_PATH/config.override.mk
file in the fabric-private-chaincode directory. In that file, defineDOCKER_BASE_RT_IMAGE_APT_ADD_PKGS
,DOCKER_BASE_DEV_IMAGE_APT_ADD_PKGS'
and/orDOCKER_DEV_IMAGE_APT_ADD_PKGS
with a list of packages you want to be added to you all images, all images where fabric/fpc is built from source and the dev(eloper) container, respectively. They will then be automatically added to the docker image. - Due to the way the peer's port for chaincode connection is managed, you will be able to run only a single FPC development container on a particular host.
Now you are ready to start development within the container. Continue with building FPC as described in the Build Fabric Private Chaincode Section and then write your first Private Chaincode.
As an alternative to the Docker-based FPC development environment you can install and manage all necessary software dependencies which are required to compile and run FPC.
Make sure that you have the following required dependencies installed:
-
Linux (OS) (we recommend Ubuntu 20.04, see list supported OS)
-
CMake v3.5.1 or higher
-
Go 1.16.7 or higher
-
Docker 18.09 (or higher) and docker-compose 1.25.x (or higher) Note that version from Ubuntu 18.04 is not recent enough! To upgrade, install a recent version following the instructions from docker.com, e.g., for version 1.25.4 execute
sudo curl -L "https://github.com/docker/compose/releases/download/1.25.4/docker-compose-$(uname -s)-$(uname -m)" -o /usr/local/bin/docker-compose sudo chmod +x /usr/local/bin/docker-compose
To install docker-componse 1.25.4 from docker.com, execute
sudo curl -L "https://github.com/docker/compose/releases/download/1.25.4/docker-compose-$(uname -s)-$(uname -m)" -o /usr/local/bin/docker-compose sudo chmod +x /usr/local/bin/docker-compose
-
yq v3.x (newer versions, v4.x and higher, are currently not supported!) You can install
yq
v3 viago get
.GO111MODULE=on go get github.com/mikefarah/yq/v3
-
Protocol Buffers
- Protocol Buffers 3.0.x needed for the Intel SGX SDK
- Protocol Buffers 3.11.x or higher and Nanopb 0.4.3
-
SGX PSW & SDK v2.12 for Linux (alternatively, you could also install it from the source
-
Credentials for Intel Attestation Service, read here (for hardware-mode SGX)
-
Intel Software Guard Extensions SSL (we recommend using branch
lin_2.10_1.1.1g
OpenSSL1.1.1g
) -
Hyperledger Fabric v2.3.3
-
Clang-format 6.x or higher
-
jq
-
hex (for Ubuntu, found in package basez)
-
A recent version of PlantUML, including Graphviz, for building documentation. See Documentation for our recommendations on installing. The version available in common package repositories may be out of date.
Fabric Private Chaincode requires the Intel SGX SDK and SGX SSL to build the main components of our framework and to develop and build your first private chaincode.
Install the Intel SGX software stack for Linux by following the official documentation. Please make sure that you use the SDK version as denoted above in the list of requirements.
For SGX SSL, just follow the instructions on the corresponding github page. In case you are building for simulation mode only and do not have HW support, you might also want to make sure that simulation mode is set when building and installing it.
Once you have installed the SGX SDK and SSL for SGX SDK please double check that SGX_SDK
and SGX_SSL
variables
are set correctly in your environment.
We use nanopb, a lightweight implementation of Protocol Buffers, inside the enclaves to parse blocks of
transactions. Install nanopb by following the instruction below. For this you need a working Google Protocol Buffers
compiler with python bindings (e.g. via apt-get install protobuf-compiler python-protobuf libprotobuf-dev
).
For more detailed information consult the official nanopb documentation http://github.com/nanopb/nanopb.
export NANOPB_PATH=/path-to/install/nanopb/
git clone https://github.com/nanopb/nanopb.git $NANOPB_PATH
cd $NANOPB_PATH
git checkout nanopb-0.4.3
cd generator/proto && make
Make sure that you set $NANOPB_PATH
as it is needed to build Fabric Private Chaincode.
Moreover, in order to build Fabric protobufs we also require a newer Protobuf compiler than what is provided as standard Ubuntu package and is used to build the
Intel SGX SDK. For this reason you will have to download and install another version and use it together with Nanopb. Do not install the new protobuf, though, such that it is not found in your standard PATH but instead define the PROTOC_CMD
, either as environment variable or via config.override.mk
to point to the new protoc
binary
wget https://github.com/protocolbuffers/protobuf/releases/download/v3.11.4/protoc-3.11.4-linux-x86_64.zip
unzip protoc-3.11.4-linux-x86_64.zip -d /usr/local/proto3
export PROTOC_CMD=/usr/local/proto3/bin/protoc
Our project fetches the latest supported Fabric binaries during the build process automatically. However, if you want to use your own Fabric binaries, please checkout Fabric 2.3.3 release using the following commands:
export FABRIC_PATH=$GOPATH/src/github.com/hyperledger/fabric
git clone https://github.com/hyperledger/fabric.git $FABRIC_PATH
cd $FABRIC_PATH; git checkout tags/v2.3.3
Note that Fabric Private Chaincode may not work with the Fabric main
branch.
Therefore, make sure you use the Fabric v2.3.3
tag.
Make sure the source of Fabric is in your $GOPATH
.
Once you have your development environment up and running (i.e., using our docker-based setup or install all dependencies on your machine) you can build FPC and start developing your own FPC application. Note by default we build FPC with SGX simulation mode. For SGX hardware-mode support please also read the Intel SGX Attestation Support Section below.
To build all required FPC components and run the integration tests run the following:
cd $FPC_PATH
make
Besides the default target, there are also following make targets:
build
: build all FPC build artifactstest
: run unit and integration testsclean
: remove most build artifacts (but no docker images)clobber
: remove all build artifacts including built docker imageschecks
: do license and linting checks on source
Also note that the file config.mk
contains various defaults which
can all be redefined in an optional file config.override.mk
.
See also below on how to build the documentation.
To run Fabric Private Chaincode in hardware mode (secure mode), you need an SGX-enabled
hardware as well corresponding OS support. However, even if you don't
have SGX hardware available, you still can run FPC in simulation mode by
setting SGX_MODE=SIM
in your environment.
Note that the simulation mode is for developing purpose only and does not provide any security guarantees.
As mentioned before, by default the project builds in SGX simulation mode, SGX_MODE=SIM
as defined in $FPC_PATH/config.mk
and you can
explicitly opt for building in hardware-mode SGX, SGX_MODE=HW
. In order to set non-default values for install
location, or for building in hardware-mode SGX, you can create the file $FPC_PATH/config.override.mk
and override the default
values by defining the corresponding environment variable.
Note that you can always come back here when you want a setup with SGX hardware-mode later after having tested with simulation mode.
If you run SGX in simulation mode only, you can skip this section. We currently support EPID-based attestation and use the Intel's Attestation Service to perform attestation with chaincode enclaves.
What you need:
- a Service Provider ID (SPID)
- the (primary) api-key associated with your SPID
In order to use Intel's Attestation Service (IAS), you need to register
with Intel. On the IAS EPID registration page
you can find more details on how to register and obtain your SPID plus corresponding api-key.
We currently support both linkable
and unlinkable
signatures for the attestation.
Place your ias api key and your SPID in the ias
folder as follows:
echo 'YOUR_API_KEY' > $FPC_PATH/config/ias/api_key.txt
echo 'YOUR_SPID_TYPE' > $FPC_PATH/config/ias/spid_type.txt
echo 'YOUR_SPID' > $FPC_PATH/config/ias/spid.txt
where YOUR_SPID_TYPE
must be epid-linkable
or epid-unlinkable
, depending on the type of your subscription.
This section elaborate on common issues with building Fabric Private Chaincode.
Building the project requires docker. We do not recommend to run sudo make
to resolve issues with mis-configured docker environments as this also changes your $GOPATH
. Please see hints on
docker installation above.
The makefiles do not ensure that docker files are always rebuild to
match the latest version of the code in the repo. If you suspect you
have an issue with outdated docker images, you can run make clobber build
which forces a rebuild. It also ensures that all other
download, build or test artifacts are scrubbed from your repo and might
help overcoming other problems. Be advised that that the rebuild can
take a fair amount of time.
The current code should work behind a proxy assuming
- you have defined the corresponding environment variables (i.e.,
http_proxy
,https_proxy
and, potentially,no_proxy
) properly, and - docker (daemon & client) is properly set up for proxies as outlined in the Docker documentation for clients and the daemon.
- the docker version is correct. Otherwise you may run into problems with DNS resolution inside the container.
- the docker-compose version is correct.
For example, the docker-compose from Ubuntu 18.04 (docker-compose 1.17)
is not recent enough to understand
~/.docker/config.json
and related proxy options.
Furthermore, for docker-compose networks to work properly with proxies, the noProxy
variable in your ~/.docker/config.json
should at least contain 127.0.0.1,127.0.1.1,localhost,.org1.example.com,.example.com
.
Another problem you might encounter when running the integration tests
insofar that some '0.0.0.0' in integration/config/core.yaml
used by
clients -- e.g., the peer CLI using the address: 0.0.0.0:7051
config
as part of the peer
section -- result in the client being unable
to find the server. The likely error you will see is
err: rpc error: code = Unavailable desc = transport is closing
.
In that case, you will have to replace the '0.0.0.0' with a concrete
ip address such as '127.0.0.1'.
Our build system requires a few variables to be set in your environment. Missing variables may cause make
to fail.
Below you find a summary of all variables which you should carefully check and add to your environment.
# Path to your SGX SDK and SGX SSL
export SGX_SDK=/opt/intel/sgxsdk
export SGX_SSL=/opt/intel/sgxssl
# Path to nanopb
export NANOPB_PATH=$HOME/nanopb
# SGX simulation mode
export SGX_MODE=SIM
# SGX simulation mode
export SGX_MODE=HW
The file config.mk
contains various defaults for some of these, but
all can be (re)defined also in an optional file config.override.mk
.
Some users may experience problems with clang-format. In particular, the error command not found: clang-format
appears even after installing it via apt-get install clang-format
. See here
for how to fix this.
If, e.g., running the integration tests executed when you run make
,
you get errors of following form:
Error: endorsement failure during invoke. response: status:500 message:"Setup failed: Can not register enclave at ercc: Error while retrieving attestation report: IAS returned error: Code 401 Access Denied"
In case you run in SGX HW mode, check that your files in config/ias
are set properly as explained in Section Intel Attestation Service
(IAS). Note that if you run
initially in simulation mode and these files do not exist, the build
will create dummy files. In case you switch later to HW mode without
configuring these files correctly for HW mode, this will result in
above error.
To build documentation (e.g., images from the PlantUML .puml
files), you will have to install java
and download plantuml.jar
. Either put plantuml.jar
into
in your CLASSPATH
environment variable or override PLANTUML_JAR
or PLANTUML_CMD
in config.override.mk
(see config.mk
for default definition of the two variables). Additionally, you will need the dot
program from the
graphviz package (e.g., via apt-get install graphviz
on Ubuntu).
By running the following command you can generate the documentation.
cd docs
make
In the samples folder you find a few examples how to develop applications using FPC and run them on a Fabric network. In particular, samples/application contains examples of the FPC Client SDK for Go. In samples/chaincode we give illustrate the use of the FPC Chaincode API; and in samples/deployment we show how to deploy and run FPC chaincode on the Fabric-samples test network and with K8s (minikube).
More details about FPC APIs in the Reference Guides Section.
Create, build and test your first private chaincode with the Hello World Tutorial.
While the management API for Fabric is mostly unchanged, some modifications are needed for FPC to work. In particular, FPC extends the Fabric's lifecycle API with additional commands to create an FPC enclave and handle the key provisioning. These are detailed separately in the FPC Management API document
The FPC Shim follows the programming model used in the standard Fabric Go shim and offers a C++ based FPC Shim to FPC chaincode developers. It currently comprises only a subset of the standard Fabric Shim and is complemented in the future.
These details are documented separately in the Shim header file itself: ecc_enclave/enclave/shim.h
Important: The initial version of FPC, FPC 1.0 (aka FPC Lite), has a
few constraints in applicability and programming model. Hence, study carefully the
section discussing this in the FPC RFC
and the comments at the top of shim.h
before designing, implementing and deploying an FPC-based solution.
In order to interact with a FPC chaincode you can use the FPC Client SDK for Go or use the Peer CLI tool provided with FPC. Both make FPC related client-side encryption and decryption transparent to the user, i.e., client-side programming is mostly standard Fabric and agnostic to FPC.
The FPC Client SDK for Go is located in client_sdk/go. See also Godocs.
For the command-line invocations, use the $FPC_PATH/fabric/bin/peer.sh
wrapper script. We refer to our integration tests for usage examples.
Found a bug? Need help to fix an issue? You have a great idea for a new feature? Talk to us! You can reach us on Discord in #fabric-private-chaincode.
We also have a weekly meeting every Tuesday at 3 pm GMT on Zoom. Please see the Hyperledger community calendar for details.
For more information on how to contribute to Fabric Private Chaincode please see our contribution section.
-
Marcus Brandenburger, Christian Cachin, Rüdiger Kapitza, Alessandro Sorniotti: Blockchain and Trusted Computing: Problems, Pitfalls, and a Solution for Hyperledger Fabric. https://arxiv.org/abs/1805.08541
-
Presentation at the Hyperledger Fabric contributor meeting August 21, 2019. Motivation, background and the inital architecture. Slides
-
Presentation of at the Hyperledger Fabric contributor meeting November 11, 2020. The design and rationale for FPC Lite (FPC 1.0). Slides
Hyperledger Fabric Private Chaincode was accepted via a Hyperledger Fabric RFC and is now under development. Before, the project operated as a Hyperledger Labs project. This code is provided solely to demonstrate basic Fabric Private Chaincode mechanisms and to facilitate collaboration to refine the project architecture and define minimum viable product requirements. The code provided in this repository is prototype code and not intended for production use.
- Marcus Brandenburger (bur@zurich.ibm.com)
- Christian Cachin (cca@zurich.ibm.com)
- Rüdiger Kapitza (kapitza@ibr.cs.tu-bs.de)
- Alessandro Sorniotti (aso@zurich.ibm.com)
- Mic Bowman (mic.bowman@intel.com)
- Marcus Brandenburger (bur@zurich.ibm.com)
- Jeb Linton (jrlinton@us.ibm.com)
- Michael Steiner (michael.steiner@intel.com)
- Bruno Vavala (bruno.vavala@intel.com)
Hyperledger Fabric Private Chaincode source code files are made available under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (Apache-2.0), located in the LICENSE file.