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doc: add policy for “placeholder” executables #52107

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GeoffreyBooth
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Split off from #51994.

I don’t think we want our distribution to include or create upon installation “placeholder” executables: a command like yarn that downloads and installs Yarn when run. This is for the following reasons:

  • It’s already very easy for users to install CLI tools, whether via npm install or curl or the command of their choice.

  • Providing placeholders puts us arguably on the hook for any security issues contained within the placeholder. Even if we have some fine print somewhere saying that somehow we’re not responsible for any vulnerabilities within the Yarn software that our yarn command downloads and installs, I think many users would understandably argue that that doesn’t absolve us: that we should provide the same security guarantees for Yarn that we do for npm, even if Yarn isn’t actually bundled within our distribution.

  • Any placeholder we provide would arguably need to follow the same rules for breaking changes that we currently follow for npm. So if a yarn placeholder currently downloads Yarn 1, it can’t be changed to download Yarn 4 until the next major release of Node. That would mean that Yarn would need to coordinate their major releases with us the way npm does, to minimize lag time; and it would also mean that we can’t ship a placeholder that simply always downloads the latest version. Such “pinned” placeholders, whether pinned to an exact version or the latest version of a semver major line, are much less useful to users and provide worse UX than current methods for installing software.

  • Placeholder executables arguably serve a “political” purpose: they imply a recommendation of the referenced software. Just as bundling npm arguably implies a recommendation of npm, shipping placeholders implies equivalent recommendations for those other tools. Obviously this is desirable for competitors to npm, but I don’t think this is a road we as a project want to go down: it’s much easier to state that we’re agnostic and don’t have recommendations for any tools, rather than having debates about every tool that someone proposes to create a placeholder for.

Landing this PR would mean that we’re deciding not to land #51886 or #51931 in the near term, and that any future efforts at either of the proposals in those PRs would require updating the text added by this PR with a new policy to permit the placeholder executables envisioned by either of those PRs.

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Review requested:

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@nodejs-github-bot nodejs-github-bot added the doc Issues and PRs related to the documentations. label Mar 15, 2024
@GeoffreyBooth GeoffreyBooth added the tsc-agenda Issues and PRs to discuss during the meetings of the TSC. label Mar 16, 2024

## Placeholder executables

Installing Node.js will not create "placeholder" executables: commands that
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this wording is pretty vague. npx can be considered to be a placeholder executable according to this definition or at least some interpretations of it

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@GeoffreyBooth GeoffreyBooth Mar 17, 2024

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I really don't see that, especially with the examples. The npx executable runs npx, which is included in our distribution. Npx itself isn't getting downloaded, it's downloading other things. Likewise for npm and Corepack (when run via the corepack executable).

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So to be clear, that means this policy would not block use from shipping a corepack_yarn executable, correct?

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It would block that. The policy says “refers to,” not “shares the exact same name as.” corepack_yarn refers to Yarn, just as download_yarn or download_and_install_yarn refer to Yarn.

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How does npx fits into this policy then? npx yarn downloads and executes Yarn, same as corepack_yarn would.

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@GeoffreyBooth GeoffreyBooth Mar 27, 2024

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For npx yarn the executable is npx, which doesn’t refer to Yarn. The text says “Installing Node.js will not create ‘placeholder’ executables;” Installing Node doesn’t create an npx yarn executable, it creates an npx executable. You may use that executable to run a command to download and install Yarn, and that’s fine, but the executable itself doesn’t refer to Yarn. Installing Node creates a node executable too and there’s some node --eval command that can download and install Yarn, but I’m not intending to ban the node executable either.

I understand you’re looking for loopholes, and perhaps the language can be improved, but the intent of the PR is very clearly laid out in the description. If you want to suggest alternative language that is clearer or stronger, that’s fine, but as I said in the TSC meeting that introduced this PR, the point is less about the specific language then the fact that we reach an agreement about placeholder executables. If we can reach such a consensus, then we can move on to nail down the best possible language to express that.

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I prefer we explicitly explain the issues we have with alternative npm clients (as they are described in #52107 (comment): Security issues, breaking changes) instead of a vague policy that doesn't address the real issues and might prevent us from doing things in the future

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aduh95 commented Mar 17, 2024

That would mean that Yarn would need to coordinate their major releases with us the way npm does, to minimize lag time

Not at all, one of the reason Corepack came to be is precisely so each projects can follow their own release cycle without affecting the other one.

it would also mean that we can’t ship a placeholder that simply always downloads the latest version.

Corepack already downloads the latest version by default (unless a specific version is requested) – the caveat for Yarn is that it would download the latest Yarn 1.x version. If that were to change, and corepack yarn would start pointing to Yarn Berry, it wouldn't be a breaking change for most Node.js users (the short explanation is that Corepack default values only affect newer installs, and once a user starts using a specific version globally, Corepack will stick to it until the user requests a change), but in any case, we already have a process for landing breaking changes.

I don’t think this is a road we as a project want to go down: it’s much easier to state that we’re agnostic and don’t have recommendations for any tools, rather than having debates about every tool that someone proposes to create a placeholder for

I think everyone agrees with that, but unfortunately that ship has long sailed since Node.js default includes npm, and that's unlikely to change anytime soon.

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My read of this PR is that it goes against the TSC vote that decided that Yarn will be included via Corepack (nodejs/TSC#1012 (comment)).

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GeoffreyBooth commented Mar 17, 2024

might prevent us from doing things in the future

As I wrote above, all it would take for us to change our minds is another PR to update this document. Nothing is ever set in stone, including that 2021 vote.

that ship has long sailed since Node.js default includes npm

This was addressed in

purpose. This is for historical reasons — when `npm` was added in 2011, it was
the only JavaScript package manager — and because it is the reference
implementation for the npm registry, which is the de facto primary source for
most JavaScript software. In accordance with our [policy][distribution-policy]

And your comment proves my point: if you’re going to point to npm as precedent to justify adding Yarn and pnpm, then others will surely point to the inclusion of Yarn and pnpm to justify future additions, whether of package managers or other tools. This isn’t a debate we want to keep having.

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I'm a definite -1 on this pull request. If you want to proceed with this pull request, we should have a TSC vote.

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I’m a definite -1 on this pull request. If you want to proceed with this pull request, we should have a TSC vote.

That’s fine. Can you please explain your objection?

What policy do you think we should have for placeholder executables? Or if you think we should have none, why?

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ronag commented Mar 20, 2024

but unfortunately that ship has long sailed since Node.js default includes npm, and that's unlikely to change anytime soon.

I think this is a strawman argument. I don't think the ship has sailed in any fashion. There is history regarding npm that cannot be compared to the current situation. Also one "wrong" does not make additional wrongs right.

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mhdawson commented Mar 20, 2024

My general concerns/current thoughts include:

  • The project cannot/should not take on maintenance (having to handle related CVEs, doing security releases, etc.) for additional package managers. The cost/benefit just does not support doing it.
  • The only reason we should allow "placeholder" executables in general (and also specifically for package managers) is if we can do it in a way that:
    • ensures the project does not ever need to do an update if a placeholder executable has a CVE or other problem
    • avoids giving the impression that anything installed by the placeholder is part of Node.js
    • requires the end user to actively confirm that they want to install something which is external
    • ensures what gets installed is what the end user asked for and only what the end user asked for
    • there is well documented governance on how/what can be added as a placeholder so that we only point users to things that we reach sufficient consensus that they are a good choice for users.
  • If we can't meet those requirements then my take is that we either need to pull an executable/project into the Node.js project like we do for other dependencies or not add the executable at all. In the case of additional package managers that would be not at all.
  • I'm ok if there are build flags so that distros can build in a different way but those should not be enabled for the builds we ship
  • I'm not sure if my points above should/need to apply for placeholder binaries that are not enabled by default and the user must take some action to opt-in first.

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ronag commented Mar 21, 2024

Not at all, one of the reason Corepack came to be is precisely so each projects can follow their own release cycle without affecting the other one.

@aduh95 I would appreciate clarification on how this can be practically adopted. If one of those projects has a security issue, how can we not coordinate with them?

Please elaborate also within the context of (#52107 (comment)):

Even if we have some fine print somewhere saying that somehow we’re not responsible for any vulnerabilities within the Yarn software that our yarn command downloads and installs, I think many users would understandably argue that that doesn’t absolve us: that we should provide the same security guarantees for Yarn that we do for npm, even if Yarn isn’t actually bundled within our distribution.

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aduh95 commented Mar 21, 2024

If one of those projects has a security issue, how can we not coordinate with them?

How would coordinate with them achieve exactly? The project does not define what version users use, whatever is the latest on first use will be used (or the one defined in package.json).
When using Corepack, the package manager is like a dependency to your project, the user is in control of what version gets used. It's the responsibility of the user to update the version they're using, and setup some automation to keep up with latest security releases, like any other dependency they would have in their node_modules folder.

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ronag commented Mar 21, 2024

How would coordinate with them achieve exactly? The project does not define what version users use, whatever is the latest on first use will be used (or the one defined in package.json).

Exactly. How would that work?

If one of those projects has a security issue, how can we not coordinate with them?

How would coordinate with them achieve exactly? The project does not define what version users use, whatever is the latest on first use will be used (or the one defined in package.json). When using Corepack, the package manager is like a dependency to your project, the user is in control of what version gets used. It's the responsibility of the user to update the version they're using, and setup some automation to keep up with latest security releases, like any other dependency they would have in their node_modules folder.

I think here we have a fundamental disagreement. Which is why I asked you to elaborate in the context of #52107 (comment). While I agree with you in theory. In practice, I don't think that is how it will be perceived/expected by the users. We will be expected to be responsible for security issues in these projects, no matter whether or not we say that it's the users responsibility.

When a user installs node, and starts using yarn which is automagically installed, they would in my opinion expect there to be no known security issues. I don't really see a difference with npm from the user's perspective. What you suggest would in my view require us to leave things as is, i.e. the user has to opt-in to corepack and actively make an explicit choice.

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aduh95 commented Mar 21, 2024

When the user first use the yarn binary, they are asked if they're OK downloading that specific version, which hopefully address your concern for the "automagic" part of it. Also, I trust the Yarn project to send users notifications if they are using a vulnerable version, and give them instructions on how to update.

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I won't comment the proposed doc changes.

About the topic itself, I outlined my opinion here:

nodejs/TSC#1518 (comment)

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I can think of only two ways that we could create a placeholder executable to download versions of Yarn:

  1. The executable always downloads the latest version, in which case there’s no verification against a checksum that that latest version isn’t corrupted or replaced by malware.
  2. The executable always downloads a known version that the placeholder can verify against a checksum included within the Node distribution, in which case we would need to do security releases to update that known version and checksum.

Is there a third option, where somehow it can download the latest version’s checksum from somewhere in a secure way?

If not, I think the only way that we can ship a placeholder executable with the same security guarantees as we provide for npm is via option 2, which means we’d be on the hook for security releases whenever vulnerabilities are discovered in Yarn. This also presupposes that we have some security around generating the hashes that we embed in our distribution, so that we aren’t inadvertently distributing the hash of a compromised download.

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aduh95 commented Mar 21, 2024

Is there a third option, where somehow it can download the latest version’s checksum from somewhere in a secure way?

We can use a Digital Signature Algorithm.

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We can use a Digital Signature Algorithm.

Okay, but Corepack isn’t doing this currently?

How would we ensure that whatever’s signing the release on the server side isn’t corrupted?

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ronag commented Mar 21, 2024

Stupid question. But since we have decided to not remove npm. Can't corepack or whatever solution we decide on simply use npm for the security sensitive stuff, i.e. all that needs to be done is to make npm install the right package manager in the project npm i --dev yarn@{version} and delegate e.g. yarn {command} to npm run yarn {command}?

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aduh95 commented Mar 21, 2024

Can we move that conversation to the Corepack repo? It doesn't seem to be related a "placeholder" executable policy.

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GeoffreyBooth commented Mar 24, 2024

It would be good for us to reach a decision on this question both for Corepack and so that any potential alternative that the @nodejs/package-maintenance team designs knows what the potential constraints are. To those TSC members who haven't weighed in yet, is there anything else you need to reach a decision? Any more information, or another discussion? We aren't reaching a consensus on this one, so we'll need to vote; but ideally everyone will be as informed as possible before voting, and we don't vote until everyone is ready.

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openjs-foundation/summit#400

We are putting together a session for the collab summit next week. Hopefully it is not too late 🤞, but there are a few things which need to be decided on:

  1. What even is the goal for the project in this area?
  2. Is the PMWG the best place for this conversation?
  3. Is chartering necessary?
  4. If we can get good answers to all this, can we make concrete next steps to tie all these discussions together into a technical strategy to act on?

I opened the issue quickly just now, but was thinking I would open a PMWG issue to discuss the agenda in more detail and then update it from there.

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@aduh95 and @anonrig, are there any steps that can be taken to resolve your objections to this PR?

My read of this PR is that it goes against the TSC vote that decided that Yarn will be included via Corepack (nodejs/TSC#1012 (comment)).

I don’t really see how this PR is in conflict with the vote from 2021. That vote added Corepack but didn’t add any placeholder executables (what enabling Corepack would create) and in the discussion before the vote I see mentions of how the initial Corepack PR did create the placeholder executables but those were removed (changed to created on enable) before landing and before the vote due to feedback: #35398 (comment). So arguably the vote was to land Corepack without placeholder executables, with nothing that I can find implying that the executables were somehow blessed by the vote to be prospectively approved. Adding something as experimental doesn't guarantee that it will graduate to stability.

Regardless, votes aren’t binding forever and three years is a long time. We’re entirely within our rights to reevaluate old votes and old decisions, and we should, as circumstances change. So even if that vote directly addressed this topic, I don’t think “because we voted on this” is a valid objection, unless the vote just happened recently. Do you have a different objection, that we could try to resolve by consensus?

I’m a definite -1 on this pull request. If you want to proceed with this pull request, we should have a TSC vote.

I don’t find this comment very collaborative or in the spirit of consensus seeking and I asked above for clarification and it’s been over a week with no reply. What is your objection that makes you a -1 on this pull request?

Per our collaborator guide:

Collaborators can object to a pull request by using the “Request Changes” GitHub feature. Dissent comments alone don’t constitute an objection. Any pull request objection must include a clear reason for that objection, and the objector must remain responsive for further discussion towards consensus about the direction of the pull request. Where possible, provide a set of actionable steps alongside the objection.

If the objection is not clear to others, another collaborator can ask an objecting collaborator to explain their objection or to provide actionable steps to resolve the objection. If the objector is unresponsive for seven days after a collaborator asks for clarification, a collaborator may dismiss the objection.

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I don't think it's a good idea to generally prohibit placeholders. There could be ways to include them under very specific circumstances. Since we likely need a vote to include such placeholder anyway, I am against prohibiting it in general. I would be fine to say any placeholder addition requires a TSC vote and maybe even further requirements similar to the ones @mhdawson mentioned.

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I don’t think it’s a good idea to generally prohibit placeholders. There could be ways to include them under very specific circumstances. Since we likely need a vote to include such placeholder anyway, I am against prohibiting it in general. I would be fine to say any placeholder addition requires a TSC vote and maybe even further requirements similar to the ones @mhdawson mentioned.

@BridgeAR I’d like to try to resolve this objection. As stated in the top post, my goal with this PR is to try to resolve all the outstanding Corepack decisions, so this could be written to prohibit placeholder executables specifically for package managers and stop there. That would leave for another day the possibility of placeholders for other use cases; personally I think they should always be prohibited, but for today we don’t need to go that far until someone actually proposes some other use case in the future. If I added text to that effect, and also that any placeholders (for any purpose?) need a TSC vote to be added, would that satisfy your concern? Something like this?

Installing Node.js will not create “placeholder” executables for package managers. A placeholder executable is a binary, symlink or script that has a name that refers to software that is not distributed with Node.js, but instead would be downloaded when the executable is run. For example, Node.js will not create yarn or download_yarn placeholder executables that will download Yarn when run. Node.js includes npm and npx executables, but these are not placeholders because the name of the executable refers to software that is contained within the Node.js distribution.

Adding placeholder executables that refer to other types of software besides package managers will first require an affirmative vote of the Node.js Technical Steering Committee.

@MoLow @aduh95 I tried to address your comments as well, please let me know what you think of this.

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anonrig commented Mar 29, 2024

Instead of going directly for core pack, we tried to reduce the problem into multiple small problems, but the decision of this pull-request defines the future of core pack which I don't think we should do. This change is hiding the fact that we are actually determining the future of corepack within node.js.

I believe that this decision is too big of a change that it is as equal as important as making a decision towards removing core pack. I'd like to have an official voting for this decision rather than approving a pull request and landing it with the current state.

We saw how the previous pull request was interpreted by people.

The decision to vote core pack is long overdue and further delaying it is causing exhaustion and burning out all stake holders of these discussions.

Regarding core pack discussions: If we go ahead and remove corepack, I'd like to propose shipping non-npm included version of node.js on top of the existing ones. If we can't remove npm, we should at least provide a version for people who don't want npm.

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I’d like to have an official voting for this decision

I think it’s inevitable that there will be votes, either for this PR or the “remove Corepack” one or both, but before this one gets voted on I’d like to try to make it as good as it can be, and to come as close to consensus as I can get.

I’d like to propose shipping non-npm included version of node.js on top of the existing ones. If we can’t remove npm, we should at least provide a version for people who don’t want npm.

I proposed this in nodejs/package-maintenance#591 (comment) and openjs-foundation/summit#400 (comment). It will be part of next week’s collab summit version management working session.

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I'm -1 as a generic statement on this.

@GeoffreyBooth GeoffreyBooth dismissed stale reviews from mcollina and BridgeAR March 30, 2024 14:24

addressed note

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@mcollina @BridgeAR @MoLow @aduh95 I’ve revised per your feedback, please take a look.

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MoLow commented Mar 31, 2024

I am still -1 on this change. although it's less vague I don't agree it reflects the current or the desired situation

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I don't agree it reflects the current or the desired situation

What do you feel is the desired situation?

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I am still against this. I don't think we should generally prohibit any specific kind of placeholders. I left a suggestion that I believe could be used instead.

doc/contributing/distribution.md Outdated Show resolved Hide resolved
Co-authored-by: Ruben Bridgewater <ruben@bridgewater.de>
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LGTM % formatting

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@aduh95 and @anonrig Do you have any objections to the current text proposed by @BridgeAR?

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I'd prefer to not include a new process, especially this document does not feel the right place to document that. Instead, I propose we take advantage of the existing process: semver-major PRs require at least 2 approval from TSC voting members.

Comment on lines +39 to +41
without a very strong reason to do so. It therefore requires an affirmative vote
of the Node.js Technical Steering Committee to include any such placeholder
executables.
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Suggested change
without a very strong reason to do so. It therefore requires an affirmative vote
of the Node.js Technical Steering Committee to include any such placeholder
executables.
without a very strong reason to do so. Including such placeholder executable is therefore considered a semver-major change.

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It doesn’t seem like this will reach consensus. Rather than force a vote on it, I think a more productive use of time will be to engage with the package maintenance team and see if that approach produces a favorable outcome. We can come back to this if needed.

@GeoffreyBooth GeoffreyBooth removed the tsc-agenda Issues and PRs to discuss during the meetings of the TSC. label Apr 16, 2024
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