signal-desktop/reproducible-builds
automated-signal 64e54aed86
[signalapp/Signal-Desktop#7008] Readme, reproducible builds: update chmod command
Co-authored-by: ayumi-signal <143036029+ayumi-signal@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: Chad Dougherty <crd@acm.org>
2024-09-05 10:30:44 -07:00
..
docker Linux: Fix reproducible build for ubuntu 20 2024-08-29 19:46:07 -07:00
build.sh Linux builds: Default SOURCE_DATE_EPOCH to 1 2024-08-21 11:01:33 -07:00
docker-entrypoint.sh
Dockerfile Linux: Fix reproducible build for ubuntu 20 2024-08-29 19:46:07 -07:00
README.md [signalapp/Signal-Desktop#7008] Readme, reproducible builds: update chmod command 2024-09-05 10:30:44 -07:00

Reproducible builds

In order to verify that Signal's official apps are correctly built from the open source code, we need reproducible builds.

Reproducible builds help ensure that anyone, including you, can build Signal Desktop in a way that is completely identical to the official downloads available to all users.

This provides an extra security layer to ensure that the builds aren't tampered with, corrupted, and built with the free open source code.

Reproduce and verify the Windows/macOS build

Reproducible builds for macOS and Windows are not available yet.

Reproduce and verify the Linux build

Experimental notice

Important

We are in the process of rolling out and verifying reproducible builds. As such, reproducibility is still experimental and may not work on public releases yet. If you notice any inconsistencies then please file an issue on the Github Issues page. Thanks for your patience while we set it up!

Pre-requisites

  • Docker Engine is installed and running on your computer
  • You need git.
  • This guide assumes you are running a Unix-based system, but should otherwise work on any platform that runs Docker Engine.

Building

First, grab the source code by using git:

$ git clone https://github.com/signalapp/Signal-Desktop.git
$ cd Signal-Desktop/

This will download Signal Desktop's source code under the Signal-Desktop directory.

Now, select the version/branch you would like to verify. For instance, if you are trying to build 7.22.0, then do:

$ git checkout tags/v7.22.0

Note

This guide uses v7.22.0 as the placeholder version. You may want to change this version to the most recent one. All the versions are available here: https://github.com/signalapp/Signal-Desktop/tags. Older versions may however not be reproducible.

At this point we are now on the branch of the source code used to build version v7.22.0. Before continuing, make sure your shell is in the reproducible-builds directory:

$ cd reproducible-builds/
$ pwd
[...]/Signal-Desktop/reproducible-builds

The last step is to run the ./build.sh script, passing the public arg because you are verifying a public production or beta build.

Note

If your user is not in Docker's docker group, then you may need to run the script as sudo.

$ chmod +x ./build.sh
$ ./build.sh public

This bash script will create the Docker container where Signal Desktop will be built, then download the required dependencies and start the build inside the container.

After the build is completed, the resulting file will be available in the Signal-Desktop/release folder. In our case, the file is named signal-desktop_7.22.0_amd64.deb.

Verifying the build

Downloading the official release

Note

For this step you will require a distro using the apt package manager, such as Debian, Ubuntu, Linux Mint, etc.

If you have followed the official Linux instructions to install Signal Desktop at https://signal.org/download/, then you will have the signal-desktop app available in your apt repositories. You can then simply grab the latest release build by typing:

$ apt download signal-desktop

This will automatically download the .deb package into the shell's working directory.

Tip

If you would like to download the latest beta version instead of the release version, then use signal-desktop-beta instead.

Comparing your build against the official build

To verify the official .deb package against your build, make sure that your version is the same as the official version, and use sha256sum on both files to calculate the SHA-256 digest. Then compare/verify the output and verify that they match.

If the checksums from the official build and your own build match, then the two builds are exactly the same, and you have successfully reproduced Signal Desktop!

Tip

Make sure your build is on the same version as the official build, otherwise they will not have the same checksum.

Warning

Do not compare your output against the checksums given below! They only serve as a visual example of what the output would look like. Yours will look different!

$ sha256sum ../release/signal-desktop_7.22.0_amd64-OUR_BUILD.deb signal-desktop_7.22.0_amd64_OFFICIAL_BUILD.deb

0df3d06f74c6855559ef079b368326ca18e144a28ede559fd76648a62ec3eed7  ../release/signal-desktop_7.22.0_amd64-OUR_BUILD.deb
0df3d06f74c6855559ef079b368326ca18e144a28ede559fd76648a62ec3eed7  signal-desktop_7.22.0_amd64_OFFICIAL_BUILD.deb

What to do if the checksums don't match

  • Double check you have followed the instructions correctly and are comparing the right versions.
  • File an issue on the Github Issues page.