Files
attesto-go/README.md
Codex 8781fa57d8 sdk(P1.5): on-chain anchor verification with zero heavy dependencies
verify_anchor_onchain / verifyAnchorOnchain / VerifyAnchorOnchain check an
anchor epoch against the chain itself in all three SDKs: one raw JSON-RPC
eth_call to the anchoring contract's getCommitment(batchId) comparing the
on-chain merkle root with the anchor's merkle_root, plus one
eth_getTransactionReceipt confirming status == 0x1 in the expected block.
The customer chooses the RPC endpoint — nothing asks Attesto to confirm
Attesto, and no web3/ethers dependency is added anywhere.

The getCommitment(string) selector (keccak256 first 4 bytes = a7b09e2a) is
pinned as a constant with the dynamic-string ABI encoding done manually;
a worked calldata example (computed once against web3 keccak) is asserted in
all three test suites, and APSProvenance.abi.json is copied into each SDK's
testdata with a test that flags the pinned selector for review if the ABI's
getCommitment signature ever changes. The contract address is read from the
anchor epoch's hashed payload (payload.contract_address).

Mocked-RPC tests cover match / root-mismatch / failed-tx / wrong-block /
missing-fields in each language with identical problem strings; a live test
against the production contract runs only when ATTESTO_LIVE_RPC_URL is set.
Go CLI gains `attesto anchors verify <id> --rpc-url <url>` (API fetch +
on-chain check in one step; existing get/remote-verify behavior unchanged).
READMEs updated per SDK.

Co-Authored-By: Claude Fable 5 <noreply@anthropic.com>
2026-06-11 18:31:18 +02:00

6.2 KiB
Raw Blame History

Attesto Go SDK

Official Go SDK for Attesto 2.0 Proofstream. The default API base URL is https://verify.attesto.eu. Use it from server-side, infrastructure, security tooling, CI, evidence exporters, and operator automation. Do not embed Attesto API keys in browser bundles, mobile apps, or public artifacts.

Install

go get git.rotz.ai/rotzmediagroup/attesto-v1/sdk/go

The first release is VCS-resolved from the Attesto repository. It intentionally uses only the Go standard library.

Quickstart

package main

import (
	"context"
	"fmt"
	"log"
	"os"
	"time"

	attesto "git.rotz.ai/rotzmediagroup/attesto-v1/sdk/go"
)

func main() {
	ctx := context.Background()
	client, err := attesto.NewClient(os.Getenv("ATTESTO_API_KEY"))
	if err != nil {
		log.Fatal(err)
	}

	stream, err := client.CreateStream(ctx, attesto.StreamCreateInput{
		UseCase:  "ai-governance",
		PolicyID: "policy-main",
	})
	if err != nil {
		log.Fatal(err)
	}

	receipt, err := client.LogEvent(ctx, stream.StreamID, attesto.EventInput{
		SourceRef:  "decision-42",
		OccurredAt: time.Now().UTC().Format(time.RFC3339Nano),
		Payload: attesto.M{
			"model": "risk-classifier",
			"score": 0.92,
		},
	})
	if err != nil {
		log.Fatal(err)
	}

fmt.Println(receipt.StreamEventID, receipt.EventHash)
}

Attesto stores source-system time separately from backend ingest time. OccurredAt must be RFC3339 with a timezone offset. The Go SDK fills it with time.Now().UTC() when omitted, but production integrations should pass the real upstream event timestamp whenever the source system provides one.

Committed payload number rule

When events are committed to a Proofstream, payload and metadata numbers must serialize identically across Python, Go, and JavaScript. Non-integer numbers and integers beyond ±(2^531) are rejected at ingestion (HTTP 422); encode decimals and large integers as strings (e.g. {"score": "0.87"}). This keeps cross-language commitment recomputation byte-exact (CanonicalJSON).

The SDK enforces the same rule locally before sending, so you see it at dev time rather than as a production 422. LogEvent / LogEvents return an *UnsafeNumberError (with .Path, the JSON path to the offending value). Set RequestOptions{SkipPreflight: true} to defer to the server.

// Commitment a Proofstream stores for a payload, byte-identical to the server
// (and to the Python / TypeScript SDKs):
commitment, _ := attesto.PayloadCommitment(map[string]any{"decision": "approve", "score_bp": 8700})
// commitment["canonical_payload_hash"] == server's stored hash

ok, _ := attesto.VerifyPayloadCommitment(myPayload, event) // recompute and compare

Verification

Remote verification uses Attesto's public /v2/verify API. Offline receipt verification uses ATTESTO-PROOFSTREAM-001 canonical JSON, domain-separated hashes, and Ed25519 signature verification locally.

report := attesto.VerifyReceiptOffline(receipt.Receipt, publicKeyHex)
if !report.OK {
	log.Fatalf("receipt failed verification: %v", report.Problems)
}

The offline trust model extends across the whole proof chain — all client-side:

ok, _ := attesto.VerifyInclusionProof(leafHash, proof, windowRoot)   // event in a window root
ok, _ = attesto.VerifyCheckpointRoot(windowHashes, checkpointRoot)   // windows fold to checkpoint root
ext := attesto.VerifyCheckpointExtension(previous, current)          // one checkpoint continues the previous
comp := attesto.VerifyCompleteness(events, 5, 8)                     // no events omitted in [5, 8]

VerifyCompleteness proves no events were omitted in a range: the sequence numbers must be gap-free and each event's prev_event_hash must chain to the previous event's event_hash.

Your SDK is a witness

The client remembers the last accepted (seqNo, eventHash) per stream and checks every new receipt links forward. If the server ever rewinds a sequence number or presents a divergent lineage, LogEvent / LogEvents return a *ForkDetectedError and the stored head is not advanced. The default store is in-memory; use a file store for fork detection across process invocations, or disable it.

// Persist across CLI invocations (atomic, 0600 at ~/.attesto/heads.json):
client, _ := attesto.NewClient(apiKey, attesto.WithHeadStore(attesto.NewFileHeadStore("")))

// Disable fork detection:
client, _ = attesto.NewClient(apiKey, attesto.WithHeadStore(nil))

Verify anchors on-chain

VerifyAnchorOnchain checks an anchor epoch against the chain itself — one raw JSON-RPC eth_call to the anchoring contract's getCommitment(batchId) (comparing the on-chain merkle root) plus a transaction-receipt check (status, block). No web3 dependency; the RPC endpoint is yours, so this never asks Attesto to confirm Attesto.

anchor, _ := client.GetAnchorEpoch(ctx, "aep_...")
report := attesto.VerifyAnchorOnchain(ctx, anchor, "https://polygon-rpc.example", 15*time.Second)
if !report.OK {
	log.Fatalf("anchor failed on-chain verification: %v", report.Problems)
}

CLI equivalent (fetch + on-chain check in one step):

attesto anchors verify aep_... --rpc-url https://polygon-rpc.example

Receiving Attesto webhooks

func handler(w http.ResponseWriter, r *http.Request) {
	body, _ := io.ReadAll(r.Body)
	headers := map[string]string{
		"X-Attesto-Timestamp": r.Header.Get("X-Attesto-Timestamp"),
		"X-Attesto-Signature": r.Header.Get("X-Attesto-Signature"),
	}
	if !attesto.VerifyWebhook(body, headers, webhookSecret, 300) {
		w.WriteHeader(http.StatusUnauthorized)
		return
	}
	process(body)
}

Verification recomputes hmac_sha256(secret, "<timestamp>." + body) from the X-Attesto-Timestamp / X-Attesto-Signature headers, rejects timestamps more than the allowed skew from now (replay protection), and compares with hmac.Equal (constant time).

Operator and Admin Endpoints

System-key clients are created with attesto.NewClient. Tenant/operator endpoints, including connector installation and Local Vault installation management, use attesto.NewBearerClient with a tenant bearer token obtained from the dashboard session flow.

Secrets returned once by connector creation are present only in the returned struct and are never logged by the SDK.