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								Makefile
									
									
									
									
									
								
							
							
						
						
									
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								Makefile
									
									
									
									
									
								
							@ -10,3 +10,6 @@ compile: $(PROTOC_GEN_GO)
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clean:
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	rm -rfv proto/*.pb.go
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fmt:
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	prettier -w .
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								README.md
									
									
									
									
									
								
							
							
						
						
									
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								README.md
									
									
									
									
									
								
							@ -10,11 +10,11 @@ Currently, the solution that people are using are sidecar files in the format of
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Real issues I face:
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* when I plug in an ExFAT hard drive, I don't know if any files on the filesystem are corrupted or missing
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    * current ad-hoc solution are `SHASUMS`/`SHASUMS.asc` files
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* when I want to mirror an HTTP archive, I have to use special tools like debmirror that understand the archive format
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    * the debian repository metadata structure is hot garbage
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* when I download a large file via HTTP, I have no way of knowing if the file content is what it's supposed to be
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- when I plug in an ExFAT hard drive, I don't know if any files on the filesystem are corrupted or missing
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  - current ad-hoc solution are `SHASUMS`/`SHASUMS.asc` files
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- when I want to mirror an HTTP archive, I have to use special tools like debmirror that understand the archive format
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  - the debian repository metadata structure is hot garbage
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- when I download a large file via HTTP, I have no way of knowing if the file content is what it's supposed to be
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# Proposed Solution
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@ -24,76 +24,78 @@ The manifest file would be called `index.mf`, and the tool for generating such w
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The manifest file would do several important things:
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* have a standard filename, so if given `https://example.com/downloadpackage/` one could fetch `https://example.com/downloadpackage/index.mf` to enumerate the full directory listing.
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* contain a version field for extensibility
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* contain structured data (protobuf, json, or cbor)
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* provide an inner signed container, so that the manifest file itself can embed a signature and a public key alongside in a single file
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* contain a list of files, each with a relative path to the manifest
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* contain manifest timestamp
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* contain ctime/mtime information for files so that file metadata can be preserved
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* contain cryptographic checksums in several different algorithms for each file
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    * probably encoded with multihash to indicate algo + hash
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    * sha256 at the minimum
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    * would be nice to include an IPFS/IPLD CIDv1 root hash for each file, which likely involves doing an ipfs file object chunking
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    * maybe even including the complete IPFS/IPLD directory tree objects and chunklists?
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        * this is because generating an `index.mf` does not imply publishing on ipfs at that time
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    * maybe a bittorrent chunklist for torrent client compatibility? perhaps a top-level infohash for the whole manifest?
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- have a standard filename, so if given `https://example.com/downloadpackage/` one could fetch `https://example.com/downloadpackage/index.mf` to enumerate the full directory listing.
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- contain a version field for extensibility
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- contain structured data (protobuf, json, or cbor)
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- provide an inner signed container, so that the manifest file itself can embed a signature and a public key alongside in a single file
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- contain a list of files, each with a relative path to the manifest
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- contain manifest timestamp
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- contain ctime/mtime information for files so that file metadata can be preserved
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- contain cryptographic checksums in several different algorithms for each file
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  - probably encoded with multihash to indicate algo + hash
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  - sha256 at the minimum
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  - would be nice to include an IPFS/IPLD CIDv1 root hash for each file, which likely involves doing an ipfs file object chunking
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  - maybe even including the complete IPFS/IPLD directory tree objects and chunklists?
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    - this is because generating an `index.mf` does not imply publishing on ipfs at that time
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  - maybe a bittorrent chunklist for torrent client compatibility? perhaps a top-level infohash for the whole manifest?
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# Design Goals
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* Replace SHASUMS/SHASUMS.asc files
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* be easy to download/resume a whole directory tree published via HTTP
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* be easy to use across protocols (given an HTTPS url, fetch manifest, then download file contents via bittorrent or ipfs)
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* not strongly coupled to HTTP use case, should not require special hosting, content types, or HTTP headers being sent
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- Replace SHASUMS/SHASUMS.asc files
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- be easy to download/resume a whole directory tree published via HTTP
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- be easy to use across protocols (given an HTTPS url, fetch manifest, then download file contents via bittorrent or ipfs)
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- not strongly coupled to HTTP use case, should not require special hosting, content types, or HTTP headers being sent
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# Non-Goals
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* Manifest generation speed
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    * likely involves IPFS chunking, bittorrent chunking, and several different cryptographic hash functions over the entirety of each and every file
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* Small manifest file size (within reason)
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    * 30MiB files are "small" these days, given modern storage/bandwidth
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    * metadata size should not be used as an excuse to sacrifice utility (such as providing checksums over each chunk of a large file)
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- Manifest generation speed
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  - likely involves IPFS chunking, bittorrent chunking, and several different cryptographic hash functions over the entirety of each and every file
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- Small manifest file size (within reason)
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  - 30MiB files are "small" these days, given modern storage/bandwidth
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  - metadata size should not be used as an excuse to sacrifice utility (such as providing checksums over each chunk of a large file)
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# Open Questions
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* Should the manifest file include checksums of individual file chunks, or just for the whole assembled file?
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    * If so, should the chunksize be fixed or dynamic?
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- Should the manifest file include checksums of individual file chunks, or just for the whole assembled file?
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* Should the manifest signature format be GnuPG signatures, or those from
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  - If so, should the chunksize be fixed or dynamic?
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- Should the manifest signature format be GnuPG signatures, or those from
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  OpenBSD's signify (of which there is a good [golang
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  implementation](https://github.com/frankbraun/gosignify)?
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* Should the on-disk serialization format be proto3 or json?
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- Should the on-disk serialization format be proto3 or json?
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# Tool Examples
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* `mfer gen` / `mfer gen .`
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    * recurses under current directory and writes out an `index.mf`
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* `mfer check` / `mfer check .`
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    * verifies checksums of all files in manifest, displaying error and exiting nonzero if any files are missing or corrupted
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* `mfer fetch https://example.com/stuff/`
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    * fetches `/stuff/index.mf` and downloads all files listed in manifest, optionally resuming any that already exist locally, and assures cryptographic integrity of downloaded files.
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- `mfer gen` / `mfer gen .`
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  - recurses under current directory and writes out an `index.mf`
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- `mfer check` / `mfer check .`
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  - verifies checksums of all files in manifest, displaying error and exiting nonzero if any files are missing or corrupted
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- `mfer fetch https://example.com/stuff/`
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  - fetches `/stuff/index.mf` and downloads all files listed in manifest, optionally resuming any that already exist locally, and assures cryptographic integrity of downloaded files.
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# Implementation Plan
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## Phase One:
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* golang module for reusability/embedding
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* golang module client providing `mfer` CLI
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- golang module for reusability/embedding
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- golang module client providing `mfer` CLI
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## Phase Two:
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* ES6 or TypeScript module for reusability/embedding
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* ES6/TypeScript module client providing `mfer.js` CLI
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- ES6 or TypeScript module for reusability/embedding
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- ES6/TypeScript module client providing `mfer.js` CLI
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# Hopes And Dreams
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* `aria2c https://example.com/manifestdirectory/`
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    * (fetches `https://example.com/manifestdirectory/index.mf`, downloads and checksums all files, resumes any that exist locally already)
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* `mfer fetch https://example.com/manifestdirectory/`
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* a command line option to zero/omit mtime/ctime, as well as manifest timestamp, and sort all directory listings so that manifest file generation is deterministic/reproducible
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* URL format `mfer fetch https://exmaple.com/manifestdirectory/?key=5539AD00DE4C42F3AFE11575052443F4DF2A55C2` to assert in the URL which PGP signing key should be used in the manifest, so that shared URLs have a cryptographic trust root
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* a "well-known" key in the manifest that maps well known keys (could reuse the http spec) to specific file paths in the manifest.
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    * example: a `berlin.sneak.app.slideshow` key that maps to a json slideshow config listing what image paths to show, and for how long, and in what order
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- `aria2c https://example.com/manifestdirectory/`
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  - (fetches `https://example.com/manifestdirectory/index.mf`, downloads and checksums all files, resumes any that exist locally already)
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- `mfer fetch https://example.com/manifestdirectory/`
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- a command line option to zero/omit mtime/ctime, as well as manifest timestamp, and sort all directory listings so that manifest file generation is deterministic/reproducible
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- URL format `mfer fetch https://exmaple.com/manifestdirectory/?key=5539AD00DE4C42F3AFE11575052443F4DF2A55C2` to assert in the URL which PGP signing key should be used in the manifest, so that shared URLs have a cryptographic trust root
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- a "well-known" key in the manifest that maps well known keys (could reuse the http spec) to specific file paths in the manifest.
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  - example: a `berlin.sneak.app.slideshow` key that maps to a json slideshow config listing what image paths to show, and for how long, and in what order
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# Use Cases
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@ -114,6 +116,7 @@ I use filesystems that don't include data checksums, and I would like a cryptogr
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I would like to be able to plug in a hard drive or flash drive and, if there is an `index.mf` in the root, automatically detect missing/corrupted files, regardless of filesystem format.
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# Collaboration
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Please email [`sneak@sneak.berlin`](mailto:sneak@sneak.berlin) with your desired username for an account on this Gitea instance.
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I am currently interested in hiring a contractor skilled with the Go standard library interfaces to specify this tool in full and develop a prototype implementation.
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@ -28,8 +28,9 @@ message MFFile {
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message MFFilePath {
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    string path = 1;
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    uint64 size = 2;
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    // when verifying, count(hashes) must be > 0.
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    optional repeated MFFileChecksum hashes = 2;
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    optional repeated MFFileChecksum hashes = 201;
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    optional string mimeType = 101;
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    optional string mtime = 102;
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    optional string ctime = 103;
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