/shavar

Tracking Protection update service for Firefox based on Safe Browsing protocol

Primary LanguagePythonMozilla Public License 2.0MPL-2.0

shavar - a service that speaks Google's safe browsing protocol

For more information on safe browsing and the wire protocol this code speaks, see:

https://developers.google.com/safe-browsing/developers_guide

Running locally

For dev testing, create and activate a virtual environment:

virtualenv -p python3.7 shavar
source shavar/bin/activate

Install the necessary dependencies:

pip install -r requirements-test.txt

Run code style check:

flake8 --exclude ./shavar/lib,./shavar/bin,./build,./deactivate,./.local

Run unit tests:

nosetests -s --nologcapture ./shavar/tests

Configure for running locally in a development environment:

python setup.py develop

Run the service locally:

pserve shavar.testing.ini

By default the service listens on port the loopback interface, port 6543. If you want to change this, modify the values in the INI file's [server:main] section.

Configuration

The shavar service serves changes to a set of hashes of canonicalized URLs. Basic configuration consists of specifying the names of the lists to be served and a section for each of those lists declaring at least the two minimum required configuration directives for each list. Read shavar-server-list-config for more examples of Shavar configurations.

Since the tracking protection files (AKA block lists and entity lists) are hosted in S3 by shavar-list-creation, your Shavar dev environment will need to setup AWS keys to retrieve those files. For more information on configuration for boto see:

https://github.com/boto/boto/#getting-started-with-boto

When an update is needed on a tracking protection file, Shavar responds with a CDN link to download the latest files. You will need to setup a CDN in front of your S3 bucket using AWS's CloudFront. For more information on setting up CloudFront on your S3 bucket see:

https://docs.aws.amazon.com/AmazonCloudFront/latest/DeveloperGuide/GettingStarted.SimpleDistribution.html

A commented example configuration:

[shavar]
# A newline separated list of the lists to be served.  The names given
# here will be used to locate the list specific configuration stanzas
# elsewhere in the INI file.
lists_served = mozpub-track-digest256
               moz-abp-shavar
               moz-bananas-shavar
# The default protocol version to speak.  As yet, we only speak version
# 2 of the protocol even though it has been superceded by Google.
# Default value: 2
default_proto_ver = 2.0
# The root directory for the data files for lists if absolute path names
# are not provided in the list specific stanzas.  Not necessary if you
# provide absolute paths.
lists_root = tests
sentry_dsn = ""
# The DSN from the "Client Keys" section in the project settings in Sentry
sentry_env = ""
# The environment to use for sentry, e.g. dev, stage, or prod

# This is the public host and scheme to reach the service
# like https://shavar.stage.mozaws.net
# when not provided, uses X-Forwarded-Host then fallsback to HTTP_HOST
# and X-Forwarded-Proto for the scheme
host = shavar.in.production.mozilla.com
scheme = https

[mozpub-track-digest256]
# The type of list data that will be shipped.  Presumably this has some
# greater impact on the client side but as yet, it isn't used for much
# other than making sure the list's name and type match.
#
# The technical difference between the shavar and digest256 list types
# is that digest256 formatted lists use the entire 32 byte SHA256 hash
# in the list data while shavar formatted list only send the first 4
# bytes of the 32 byte hash.  The client then queries the service if it
# encounters a match for a given hash prefix(the first 4 bytes) to
# retrieve the entire hash for a given prefix.
type = digest256
# URL or relative path to the source data for this list.  Possibilities
# at the moment include:
#
# relative/path/to/the/file
# /absolute/path/to/the/file
# file:///absolute/path/to/the/file
# s3+file:///s3_bucket_name/s3_key_name_which_can_include_slashes
#
# In this usage, "my_s3_bukkit" is the S3 bucket name and
# "faux/path/to/file/moz-abp-shavar.data" is the full key name.  This
# just permits slight simulation of a file name.
source = s3+file:///my_s3_bukkit/faux/path/to/file/mozpub-track-digest256.data

[moz-abp-shavar]
# Firefox currently (as of 2015-07-13) allows digest256 lists to get away
# with breaking the safe browsing wire protocol slightly.  The protocol
# actually states that the service's response to a client request for
# updated data be formatted as a list of URLs to data files to be
# downloaded.
#
# With Firefox, digest256 changes can be served inline in the initial
# response.  Naughty Firefox.  No cookie.
#
type = shavar
# delta_chunk_source is part of the unit test suite and should always be
# available to test against.
source = shavar/tests/delta_chunk_source
# As a result of this use of URLs(referred to as redirects in the protocol
# specification document given at the top of the README), it is necessary
# for the service to know where the data files will be publicly reachable.
# This setting provides the base URL that, when combined with the path
# portion of the URL given in the `source` directive above, will be the
# redirect served in the response.
#
# Best practice: make sure it ends in a /
redirect_url_base = http://localhost:6543/data/