- Introduction
- Build Quick Start
- Code Layout
- Building the code
- Build Troubleshooting
- Testing the code
- Deploying a Log
- Operating a Log
This repository holds open-source code for functionality related to certificate transparency (CT). The main areas covered are:
- A collection of client tools and libraries for interacting with a CT Log, in various programming languages.
The supported platforms are:
- Linux: tested on Ubuntu 14.04; other variants (Fedora 22, CentOS 7) may require tweaking of compiler options.
- OS X: version 10.10
- FreeBSD: version 10.*
The CT log server implementation which used to be in this repository is no longer under active development. We recommend that new deployments use the new Go based server, which can handle much larger Merkle trees:
CT Personality Generic Backend
For more information on why we recommend this see the Deprecation Notes
N.B. This notice refers to the servers only, not the other client code in this repository.
First, ensure that the build machine has all of the required build dependencies.
Then use
gclient to
retrieve and build the other software needed by the Log,
and then use (GNU) make
to build and test the CT code:
export CXX=clang++ CC=clang
mkdir ct # or whatever directory you prefer
cd ct
gclient config --name="certificate-transparency" https://github.com/google/certificate-transparency.git
gclient sync --disable-syntax-validation # retrieve and build dependencies
# substitute gmake or gnumake below if that's what your platform calls it:
make -C certificate-transparency check # build the CT software & self-test
The source code is generally arranged according to implementation language, in
the cpp
and python
subdirectories. (Java
and Go
code are in separate repositories.)
The key subdirectories are:
- For the main distributed CT Log itself:
cpp/log
: Main distributed CT Log implementation.cpp/merkletree
: Merkle tree implementation.cpp/monitoring
: Code to export operation statistics from CT Log.
- Client code for accessing a CT Log instance:
cpp/client
: CT Log client code in C++python/ct
: CT Log client code in Python
The CT software in this repository relies on a number of other open-source projects, and we recommend that:
- The CT software should be built using local copies of these dependencies rather than installed packages, to prevent version incompatibilities.
- The dependent libraries should be statically linked into the CT binaries, rather than relying on dynamically linked libraries that may be different in the deployed environment.
The supported build system uses the gclient tool from the Chromium project to handle these requirements and to ensure a reliable, reproducible build. Older build instructions for using Ubuntu or Fedora packages and for manually building dependencies from source are no longer supported.
Within a main top-level directory, gclient handles the process of:
- generating subdirectories for each dependency
- generating a subdirectory for for the CT Log code itself
- building all of the dependencies
- installing the built dependencies into an
install/
subdirectory - configuring the CT build to reference the built dependencies.
Under the covers, this gclient build process is controlled by:
- The master DEPS file, which configures the locations and versions of the source code needed for the dependencies, and which hooks onto ...
- The makefiles in the build/ subdirectory, which govern the build
process for each dependency, ensuring that:
- Static libraries are built.
- Built code is installed into the local
install/
directory, where it is available for the build of the CT code itself.
The following tools are needed to build the CT software and its dependencies.
- depot_tools
- autoconf/automake etc.
- libtool
- shtool
- clang++ (>=3.4)
- cmake (>=v3.1.2)
- git
- GNU make
- Tcl
- pkg-config
- Python 2.7
The exact packages required to install these tools depends on the platform.
For a Debian-based system, the relevant packages are:
autoconf automake libtool shtool cmake clang git make tcl pkg-config python2.7
The following collections of additional software are used by the main CT Log codebase.
- Google utility libraries:
- gflags: command-line flag handling
- glog: logging infrastructure, which also requires libunwind.
- Google Mock: C++ test framework
- Google Test: C++ mocking framework
- Protocol Buffers: language-neutral data serialization library
- tcmalloc:
efficient
malloc
replacement optimized for multi-threaded use
- Other utility libraries:
The CT C++ codebase is built with the Clang -Werror
flag so that the
codebase stays warning-free. However, this can cause build errors when
newer/different versions of the C++ compiler are used, as any newly created
warnings are treated as errors. To fix this, add the appropriate
-Wno-error=<warning-name>
option to CXXFLAGS
.
For example, on errors involving unused variables try using:
CXXFLAGS="-O2 -Wno-error=unused-variable" gclient sync
If an error about an unused typedef in a glog
header file occurs, try this:
CXXFLAGS="-O2 -Wno-error=unused-variable -Wno-error=unused-local-typedefs" gclient sync
When changing CXXFLAGS
it's safer to remove the existing build directories
in case not all dependencies are properly accounted for and rebuilt. If
problems persist, check that the Makefile in certificate-transparency
contains the options that were passed in CXXFLAGS
.
If you're trying to clone from a branch on the CT repository then you'll need
to substitute the following command for the gclient config
command
above, replacing branch
as appropriate
gclient config --name="certificate-transparency" https://github.com/google/certificate-transparency.git@branch
Then continue the build process with the gclient sync
step.
The unit tests for the CT code can be run with the make check
target of
certificate-transparency/Makefile
.
Note that several tests write files on disk. The default directory for
storing temporary testdata is /tmp
. You can change this by setting
TMPDIR=<tmpdir>
for make.
End-to-end tests also create temporary certificate and server files in
test/tmp
. All these files are cleaned up after a successful test
run.
For logging options, see the glog documentation.
By default, unit tests log to stderr
, and log only messages with a FATAL
level (i.e., those that result in abnormal program termination). You can
override the defaults with command-line flags.