feat(ci): DEPL-005 + DATA-012 — weekly backup/restore smoke + audit-chain round-trip assertion

Acquisition-audit DEPL-005 (backup runbook exists but no CI restore
test) + DATA-012 closure (Sprint 4 ACQ, 2026-05-16).

A backup procedure that has never been restore-tested is not a backup
procedure. The Helm CronJob at deploy/helm/certctl/templates/backup-
cronjob.yaml and the operator runbook at
docs/operator/runbooks/postgres-backup.md both document a
`pg_dump -Fc --no-owner --no-acl`-based backup strategy, but the
dump shape has never been restored end-to-end under CI. This sprint
adds the missing assertion.

Each Monday at 07:00 UTC (1h offset from loadtest.yml's 06:00 slot so
the two jobs don't fight for runners), boot a real postgres:16-alpine
service container pinned to the SAME sha256 digest as
deploy/docker-compose.yml, exercise the audit_events hash chain
with 24 synthetic rows representing an issue/renew/revoke/auth-login
cycle, take a custom-format dump, DROP SCHEMA public CASCADE
(simulating an operator-side data-loss event), pg_restore, and
assert:

  pre.row_count        == post.row_count
  pre.chain_head_hash  == post.chain_head_hash    (BYTE-EXACT)
  post.first_break_id  == ""                      (verify_chain clean)
  post.verifier_walked == pre.row_count           (every row walked)

The chain-head byte-exact assertion is the load-bearing one.
Migration 000047 hashes each row's canonical payload with
`to_char(timestamp AT TIME ZONE 'UTC',
'YYYY-MM-DD"T"HH24:MI:SS.US"Z"')` — any TIMESTAMPTZ-precision loss
in the dump/restore path (a real concern across major Postgres
upgrades or with --format=plain) would corrupt the hash. The point
of testing is to PROVE the property, not to defend against a known
quirk.

Files
=====
- .github/workflows/backup-restore.yml — Mondays 07:00 UTC +
  workflow_dispatch. Postgres service container; Go 1.25.10;
  contents:read; 15-min timeout. Action SHAs pinned to match
  ci.yml's pinning convention.
- deploy/test/backup-restore-smoke.sh — bash orchestrator: preflight
  (postgresql-client + Go + python3 on PATH); wait-for-ready loop;
  DROP SCHEMA + workload + dump + DROP SCHEMA + restore + verify
  + python3 JSON diff. ::error:: prefix on any assertion failure.
  Same script runs unchanged locally against any reachable Postgres.
- deploy/test/backupsmoke/main.go — Go program with --mode=workload
  and --mode=verify. Imports the repo's
  internal/repository/postgres.RunMigrations and emits a small JSON
  snapshot to stdout. INSERT shape mirrors
  internal/repository/postgres/audit_chain_test.go.
- docs/operator/runbooks/postgres-backup.md — adds a 'CI restore
  verification' subsection after the existing quarterly-dry-run
  section, points at the new workflow + harness + smoke program,
  bumps the last-reviewed marker.

Verified locally: gofmt clean, go vet clean, staticcheck clean,
`go build ./deploy/test/backupsmoke` succeeds, bash -n on the shell
harness, python3 -c yaml.safe_load on the workflow, dry-run of the
JSON-diff python block on synthetic pre.json/post.json covers both
PASS and ::error:: paths.
This commit is contained in:
shankar0123
2026-05-16 17:27:57 +00:00
parent 4f2d865b51
commit 374ec574c5
4 changed files with 602 additions and 1 deletions
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# Acquisition-audit DEPL-005 + DATA-012 closure (Sprint 4 ACQ,
# 2026-05-16). Weekly backup-restore smoke test.
#
# Why
# ===
# The Helm CronJob at deploy/helm/certctl/templates/backup-cronjob.yaml
# and the operator runbook at docs/operator/runbooks/postgres-backup.md
# both document a pg_dump -Fc -based backup strategy, but the dump has
# never been restored end-to-end under CI. A backup procedure that has
# never been restore-tested is not a backup procedure. This workflow
# adds the missing assertion.
#
# What
# ====
# Each Monday at 07:00 UTC (1h offset from loadtest.yml's 06:00 UTC
# slot so they don't fight for runners), boot a real Postgres
# 16-alpine container against the same digest pin as the production
# deploy/docker-compose.yml, exercise the audit_events hash chain
# with a small synthetic workload, pg_dump the database, drop the
# schema, pg_restore, and assert the chain head + row count
# round-trip byte-for-byte.
#
# The chain head round-trip property is the load-bearing assertion.
# Migration 000047 hashes each audit_events row's canonical payload
# with `to_char(timestamp AT TIME ZONE 'UTC',
# 'YYYY-MM-DD"T"HH24:MI:SS.US"Z"')`. Any TIMESTAMPTZ-precision loss
# in the dump→restore path (a real concern across major Postgres
# upgrades or with --format=plain) would corrupt the hash. The whole
# point of testing instead of trusting docs is to PROVE the property
# under a real workload.
#
# Workflow boundaries
# ===================
# - Does not exercise PITR / WAL archiving (DR runbook owns that).
# - Does not exercise the Helm CronJob's S3 sink or scheduling
# (operator-side concern, not a property of the dump shape).
# - Does not deploy or boot the certctl-server itself — the smoke
# harness talks to Postgres directly; we're testing the dump,
# not the server.
name: backup-restore-smoke
on:
# Manual trigger from the Actions tab — useful before tagging a
# release that touches the audit_events schema, or after a dep
# bump that could affect canonical-payload formatting.
workflow_dispatch:
schedule:
# Mondays at 07:00 UTC. Off-peak, off-set 1h from loadtest.yml
# (06:00 UTC) so the two jobs don't fight for runners on the
# GitHub-hosted ubuntu-latest pool.
- cron: '0 7 * * 1'
# Defense-in-depth: this job reads source and exercises a database;
# it never needs write access to PRs, branches, releases, or
# packages. Pin permissions to the minimum.
permissions:
contents: read
jobs:
backup-restore:
name: pg_dump / pg_restore smoke
runs-on: ubuntu-latest
# 15-minute hard cap. The actual workload + dump + restore + verify
# cycle runs in well under a minute on a warm runner; 15 minutes
# absorbs cold image pulls, slow runner provisioning, and the
# Postgres service-container readiness wait without letting a stuck
# job consume the runner indefinitely.
timeout-minutes: 15
# Postgres service container. Pin to the same digest as
# deploy/docker-compose.yml so the smoke runs against the exact
# image the production deploy uses — a regression that surfaces
# only on a specific Postgres minor bump shows up here on the
# next image refresh in compose, not silently on a customer site.
services:
postgres:
image: postgres:16-alpine@sha256:890480b08124ce7f79960a9bb16fe39729aa302bd384bfd7c408fee6c8f7adb7
env:
POSTGRES_DB: certctl
POSTGRES_USER: certctl
POSTGRES_PASSWORD: certctl
ports:
- 5432:5432
# GitHub's services-container health check. The smoke shell
# also waits for pg_isready as a belt-and-suspenders guard.
options: >-
--health-cmd "pg_isready -U certctl -d certctl"
--health-interval 5s
--health-timeout 3s
--health-retries 10
steps:
- name: Checkout
uses: actions/checkout@34e114876b0b11c390a56381ad16ebd13914f8d5 # v4
- name: Set up Go
uses: actions/setup-go@40f1582b2485089dde7abd97c1529aa768e1baff # v5
with:
go-version: '1.25.10'
# Cache go-build + go-mod for the weekly run. Keep the
# cache key bound to go.sum so a dep bump invalidates it.
cache: true
- name: Run backup-restore smoke
env:
PGHOST: 127.0.0.1
PGPORT: '5432'
PGUSER: certctl
PGPASSWORD: certctl
PGDATABASE: certctl
# Insert enough rows to exercise the chain over a non-trivial
# length. 24 ≫ 1 — large enough to surface ordering bugs,
# small enough that the dump finishes in seconds.
SMOKE_ROWS: '24'
run: bash deploy/test/backup-restore-smoke.sh
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#!/usr/bin/env bash
# Copyright 2026 certctl LLC. All rights reserved.
# SPDX-License-Identifier: BUSL-1.1
#
# Acquisition-audit DEPL-005 + DATA-012 closure (Sprint 4 ACQ,
# 2026-05-16). Backup/restore smoke harness — orchestrates a real
# pg_dump -Fc → DROP DATABASE → CREATE DATABASE → pg_restore loop
# around the audit_events hash chain and asserts the chain head
# round-trips byte-for-byte.
#
# This script is the body of the `.github/workflows/backup-restore.yml`
# weekly job AND the same thing an operator can run locally against a
# running Postgres to gain confidence before a real restore.
#
# Prereqs
# =======
# - psql / pg_dump / pg_restore installed and on PATH (ubuntu-latest
# ships postgresql-client by default; on macOS use Homebrew's
# libpq).
# - A reachable Postgres at $PGHOST:$PGPORT, plus the certctl user +
# database created. In CI we point this at the GHA service container
# (postgres:16-alpine, pinned to the same digest as
# deploy/docker-compose.yml). Locally, point it wherever — the
# script DROPs the database it connects to, so DO NOT POINT THIS
# AT A DATABASE YOU CARE ABOUT.
# - Go 1.25+ on PATH so the smoke program can be built. (CI's
# setup-go step handles this.)
# - jq is NOT required — JSON snapshots are compared via python3.
#
# Behavior contract
# =================
# - On success: exit 0, prints "PASS" + a summary line.
# - On any assertion failure: prints `::error::<reason>`, exits 1.
# (The ::error:: prefix is the GitHub Actions log-annotation shape;
# it surfaces as a red banner in the Actions run UI.)
#
# Non-goals
# =========
# - Does not exercise PITR / WAL archiving. The Sprint 4 scope is the
# pg_dump/pg_restore path only; managed-DB PITR is the operator's
# responsibility per docs/operator/runbooks/postgres-backup.md.
# - Does not regenerate the audit chain after restore. A "restore
# that rewrote history" would mask exactly the bug under test.
set -euo pipefail
REPO_ROOT="$(cd "$(dirname "$0")/../.." && pwd)"
WORKDIR="$(mktemp -d)"
trap 'rm -rf "$WORKDIR"' EXIT
# ----------------------------------------------------------------------
# Configuration — every knob is env-overridable so the same script
# runs unchanged in CI (where the GHA service container exposes
# 127.0.0.1:5432) and on an operator's laptop (where they may have
# Postgres on a UNIX socket or a different port).
# ----------------------------------------------------------------------
: "${PGHOST:=127.0.0.1}"
: "${PGPORT:=5432}"
: "${PGUSER:=certctl}"
: "${PGPASSWORD:=certctl}"
: "${PGDATABASE:=certctl}"
: "${SMOKE_ROWS:=24}"
: "${MIGRATIONS_PATH:=${REPO_ROOT}/migrations}"
# psql/pg_dump/pg_restore all read PG* env vars. Export so we don't
# have to spell them out on every command line.
export PGHOST PGPORT PGUSER PGPASSWORD PGDATABASE
DB_URL="postgres://${PGUSER}:${PGPASSWORD}@${PGHOST}:${PGPORT}/${PGDATABASE}?sslmode=disable"
fail() {
# GitHub Actions log annotation. The `::error::` prefix is what
# the Actions UI uses to highlight a line in the run log.
echo "::error::backup-restore-smoke: $*" >&2
exit 1
}
step() { printf '\n=== %s ===\n' "$*"; }
# ----------------------------------------------------------------------
# Sanity preflight
# ----------------------------------------------------------------------
step "preflight"
command -v psql >/dev/null || fail "psql not on PATH (install postgresql-client)"
command -v pg_dump >/dev/null || fail "pg_dump not on PATH"
command -v pg_restore >/dev/null || fail "pg_restore not on PATH"
command -v go >/dev/null || fail "go not on PATH (need Go to build the smoke program)"
command -v python3 >/dev/null || fail "python3 not on PATH (used for JSON diff)"
test -d "${MIGRATIONS_PATH}" || fail "migrations dir not found: ${MIGRATIONS_PATH}"
# Wait for Postgres readiness up to 60s. pg_isready returns 0 when
# the server is accepting connections, so the loop is the canonical
# CI-friendly "wait for the service container" pattern.
step "waiting for postgres at ${PGHOST}:${PGPORT}"
for _ in $(seq 1 60); do
if pg_isready -h "${PGHOST}" -p "${PGPORT}" -U "${PGUSER}" -d "${PGDATABASE}" -q; then
break
fi
sleep 1
done
pg_isready -h "${PGHOST}" -p "${PGPORT}" -U "${PGUSER}" -d "${PGDATABASE}" -q \
|| fail "postgres not ready after 60s at ${PGHOST}:${PGPORT}"
# Wipe any prior state in the target DB. A previous failed run could
# have left rows behind; the smoke contract is "starts from clean."
step "wiping ${PGDATABASE} schema (DROP SCHEMA public CASCADE; CREATE SCHEMA public)"
psql -v ON_ERROR_STOP=1 -c 'DROP SCHEMA IF EXISTS public CASCADE; CREATE SCHEMA public; GRANT ALL ON SCHEMA public TO PUBLIC;'
# ----------------------------------------------------------------------
# Build the smoke program. We use `go run` to avoid leaving a binary
# behind; the migrations + workload are quick so the per-invocation
# compile cost is negligible.
# ----------------------------------------------------------------------
step "building smoke program"
cd "${REPO_ROOT}"
go build -o "${WORKDIR}/smoke" ./deploy/test/backupsmoke
# ----------------------------------------------------------------------
# Phase 1 — workload: migrate, insert rows, snapshot chain head.
# ----------------------------------------------------------------------
step "phase 1 — workload (${SMOKE_ROWS} audit_events rows)"
"${WORKDIR}/smoke" \
--mode=workload \
--db-url="${DB_URL}" \
--migrations-path="${MIGRATIONS_PATH}" \
--rows="${SMOKE_ROWS}" \
| tee "${WORKDIR}/pre.json"
# ----------------------------------------------------------------------
# Phase 2 — backup. Canonical pg_dump shape per
# deploy/helm/certctl/templates/backup-cronjob.yaml: --format=custom,
# --no-owner, --no-acl. --no-owner / --no-acl keep the dump portable
# across Postgres installations with different role layouts (the
# audit-trail hash chain is data, not ACL state).
# ----------------------------------------------------------------------
step "phase 2 — pg_dump -Fc"
pg_dump --format=custom --no-owner --no-acl --dbname="${PGDATABASE}" --file="${WORKDIR}/backup.dump"
test -s "${WORKDIR}/backup.dump" || fail "pg_dump produced an empty file"
# ----------------------------------------------------------------------
# Phase 3 — wipe. The fresh-schema approach is the closest analogue
# to "operator nuked the wrong volume." DROP DATABASE would require
# connecting to a different DB and reconnect dance; DROP SCHEMA
# achieves the same "no rows, no schema, no functions" end state
# inside the existing connection and is restore-compatible (pg_dump
# -Fc bundles the schema in the dump, so pg_restore recreates it).
# ----------------------------------------------------------------------
step "phase 3 — drop schema (simulating data-loss event)"
psql -v ON_ERROR_STOP=1 -c 'DROP SCHEMA IF EXISTS public CASCADE; CREATE SCHEMA public; GRANT ALL ON SCHEMA public TO PUBLIC;'
# Sanity: confirm audit_events is actually gone before restore. A
# regression here (e.g. DROP SCHEMA silently no-op) would let the
# verifier "succeed" by reading the original rows, making the test
# false-pass.
PRE_RESTORE_TABLES=$(psql -tAc "SELECT COUNT(*) FROM information_schema.tables WHERE table_schema='public'")
if [ "${PRE_RESTORE_TABLES}" -ne 0 ]; then
fail "post-DROP SCHEMA, expected 0 public tables; saw ${PRE_RESTORE_TABLES}"
fi
# ----------------------------------------------------------------------
# Phase 4 — restore.
# ----------------------------------------------------------------------
step "phase 4 — pg_restore"
pg_restore --dbname="${PGDATABASE}" --no-owner --no-acl --exit-on-error "${WORKDIR}/backup.dump"
# ----------------------------------------------------------------------
# Phase 5 — verify: re-snapshot, run audit_events_verify_chain().
# ----------------------------------------------------------------------
step "phase 5 — verify (audit_events_verify_chain() + snapshot)"
"${WORKDIR}/smoke" \
--mode=verify \
--db-url="${DB_URL}" \
| tee "${WORKDIR}/post.json"
# ----------------------------------------------------------------------
# Phase 6 — assert.
#
# pre.row_count == post.row_count
# pre.chain_head_hash == post.chain_head_hash (BYTE-EXACT)
# post.first_break_id == "" (verifier clean)
# post.verifier_walked == pre.row_count (every row walked)
#
# Use python3 rather than jq so the script runs unchanged on macOS
# without an extra Homebrew install.
# ----------------------------------------------------------------------
step "phase 6 — assertions"
python3 - <<'PY' "${WORKDIR}/pre.json" "${WORKDIR}/post.json"
import json, sys
pre = json.load(open(sys.argv[1]))
post = json.load(open(sys.argv[2]))
def bail(msg):
print(f"::error::backup-restore-smoke: {msg}", file=sys.stderr)
sys.exit(1)
if pre["row_count"] != post["row_count"]:
bail(f"row_count mismatch: pre={pre['row_count']} post={post['row_count']}")
if pre["chain_head_hash"] != post["chain_head_hash"]:
bail(
"chain_head_hash mismatch — pg_dump/pg_restore did NOT round-trip the "
"audit_events hash chain byte-for-byte. "
f"pre={pre['chain_head_hash']} post={post['chain_head_hash']}"
)
if post.get("first_break_id", "") != "":
bail(
"audit_events_verify_chain() reports a break post-restore at id="
f"{post['first_break_id']} pos={post.get('first_break_pos', '?')} — "
"the chain is no longer self-consistent after the restore."
)
if post.get("verifier_walked", -1) != pre["row_count"]:
bail(
f"verifier_walked={post.get('verifier_walked')} != pre.row_count="
f"{pre['row_count']} — verifier short-circuited or read stale rows."
)
print(
f"PASS rows={pre['row_count']} "
f"chain_head={pre['chain_head_hash'][:16]}… "
f"verifier=clean"
)
PY
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// Copyright 2026 certctl LLC. All rights reserved.
// SPDX-License-Identifier: BUSL-1.1
// Command backupsmoke is the workload+verifier half of the
// backup/restore CI gate (acquisition-audit DEPL-005 + DATA-012
// closure, Sprint 4 ACQ, 2026-05-16).
//
// The companion shell harness `deploy/test/backup-restore-smoke.sh`
// orchestrates the dump/drop/restore lifecycle around two
// invocations of this program: one before the backup
// (--mode=workload) and one after the restore (--mode=verify). Both
// emit a small JSON snapshot to stdout; the shell harness diffs them
// and asserts the chain head + row count round-trip byte-for-byte.
//
// Modes
// =====
//
// --mode=workload
// Run all up-migrations against `--migrations-path`, then
// generate `--rows` (default 24) audit_events rows representing
// an issue / renew / revoke / auth-login cycle. Emit a snapshot
// with the post-workload row_count + chain head row_hash.
//
// --mode=verify
// Run `audit_events_verify_chain()` (the per-row hash-chain
// verifier installed by migration 000047) and capture
// first_break_id / first_break_pos / verifier_walked. Emit a
// snapshot with row_count + chain head row_hash + verifier
// output. No mutations.
//
// The CI assertion contract
// =========================
//
// After (workload → pg_dump -Fc → DROP + CREATE → pg_restore →
// verify), the shell asserts:
//
// pre.row_count == post.row_count
// pre.chain_head_hash == post.chain_head_hash (byte-exact)
// post.first_break_id == "" (verifier clean)
//
// A pg_dump format-quirk that didn't preserve TIMESTAMPTZ
// microseconds would surface as a chain-head mismatch (the
// canonical payload re-formats `timestamp AT TIME ZONE 'UTC'` to
// microsecond ISO-8601 — any precision loss breaks the hash). A
// trigger-or-function regression would surface as a verifier non-
// empty first_break_id. The test exists to PROVE these properties
// under a real workload, not to defend against a known quirk.
package main
import (
"context"
"database/sql"
"encoding/json"
"flag"
"fmt"
"log"
"os"
"time"
_ "github.com/lib/pq"
"github.com/certctl-io/certctl/internal/repository/postgres"
)
// Snapshot is the on-the-wire shape emitted to stdout. The shell
// orchestrator parses it via python3 -c 'json.load(...)' and diffs
// the relevant fields. Keep it stable — any rename here must land
// alongside a shell-harness change.
type Snapshot struct {
Phase string `json:"phase"`
RowCount int `json:"row_count"`
ChainHead string `json:"chain_head_hash"`
FirstBreakID string `json:"first_break_id,omitempty"`
FirstBreakPos int `json:"first_break_pos,omitempty"`
VerifierWalked int `json:"verifier_walked,omitempty"`
}
func main() {
var (
mode = flag.String("mode", "", "workload | verify")
dbURL = flag.String("db-url", os.Getenv("DATABASE_URL"), "Postgres URL (or set DATABASE_URL)")
migrationsPath = flag.String("migrations-path", "./migrations", "Path to the migrations/ directory (workload mode only)")
rows = flag.Int("rows", 24, "Number of audit_events rows to insert (workload mode only)")
)
flag.Parse()
if *dbURL == "" {
log.Fatal("--db-url or DATABASE_URL is required")
}
if *mode == "" {
log.Fatal("--mode is required (workload | verify)")
}
db, err := sql.Open("postgres", *dbURL)
if err != nil {
log.Fatalf("sql.Open: %v", err)
}
defer db.Close()
ctx, cancel := context.WithTimeout(context.Background(), 2*time.Minute)
defer cancel()
if err := db.PingContext(ctx); err != nil {
log.Fatalf("ping: %v", err)
}
switch *mode {
case "workload":
// Run all up-migrations end-to-end. The trigger + verifier
// function installed by migration 000047 must be in place
// before the inserts below; partial migration would mask a
// real bug.
if err := postgres.RunMigrations(db, *migrationsPath); err != nil {
log.Fatalf("RunMigrations(%s): %v", *migrationsPath, err)
}
if err := runWorkload(ctx, db, *rows); err != nil {
log.Fatalf("runWorkload: %v", err)
}
snap, err := snapshot(ctx, db, "workload", false)
if err != nil {
log.Fatalf("snapshot: %v", err)
}
emit(snap)
case "verify":
snap, err := snapshot(ctx, db, "verify", true)
if err != nil {
log.Fatalf("snapshot: %v", err)
}
emit(snap)
default:
log.Fatalf("unknown --mode=%q (workload | verify)", *mode)
}
}
// runWorkload inserts n audit_events rows representing an
// issue / renew / revoke / auth-login cycle. Patterns mirror the
// shape the application emits (see internal/service/audit_*.go),
// so the canonical payload exercised here is representative.
//
// event_category is omitted on each INSERT — migration 000032 gave
// the column DEFAULT 'cert_lifecycle', which is also the value the
// application uses for cert lifecycle events. Auth rows get the
// default too, which is harmless for the round-trip property under
// test (only the canonical-payload byte sequence matters).
//
// Timestamps are monotonic via the `NOW() + ($interval ||
// ' microsecond')::interval` pattern from
// internal/repository/postgres/audit_chain_test.go — ordering
// determinism is necessary for the chain head to be stable across
// runs.
func runWorkload(ctx context.Context, db *sql.DB, n int) error {
actions := []struct{ act, resType, resID string }{
{"certificate.issue", "certificate", "mc-smoke"},
{"certificate.renew", "certificate", "mc-smoke"},
{"certificate.revoke", "certificate", "mc-smoke"},
{"auth.login", "session", "sess-smoke"},
}
for i := 0; i < n; i++ {
a := actions[i%len(actions)]
id := fmt.Sprintf("audit-smoke-%04d", i)
_, err := db.ExecContext(ctx, `
INSERT INTO audit_events (
id, actor, actor_type, action,
resource_type, resource_id, details, timestamp
)
VALUES (
$1, 'smoke-actor', 'User', $2,
$3, $4, '{}'::jsonb,
NOW() + ($5 || ' microsecond')::interval
)
`, id, a.act, a.resType, a.resID, fmt.Sprintf("%d", i))
if err != nil {
return fmt.Errorf("insert row %d (%s): %w", i, id, err)
}
}
return nil
}
// snapshot reads the chain head + row count, optionally invoking
// the on-demand verifier. Verifier output goes in three additional
// fields so the workload-side snapshot can omit them via the
// `omitempty` tag.
func snapshot(ctx context.Context, db *sql.DB, phase string, runVerifier bool) (*Snapshot, error) {
s := &Snapshot{Phase: phase}
if err := db.QueryRowContext(ctx, `SELECT COUNT(*) FROM audit_events`).Scan(&s.RowCount); err != nil {
return nil, fmt.Errorf("count(audit_events): %w", err)
}
if err := db.QueryRowContext(ctx, `SELECT row_hash FROM audit_chain_head WHERE id = 1`).Scan(&s.ChainHead); err != nil {
return nil, fmt.Errorf("read audit_chain_head: %w", err)
}
if runVerifier {
var brokenID sql.NullString
var brokenPos, walked int
err := db.QueryRowContext(ctx, `
SELECT first_break_id, first_break_pos, row_count
FROM audit_events_verify_chain()
`).Scan(&brokenID, &brokenPos, &walked)
if err != nil {
return nil, fmt.Errorf("audit_events_verify_chain(): %w", err)
}
if brokenID.Valid {
s.FirstBreakID = brokenID.String
}
s.FirstBreakPos = brokenPos
s.VerifierWalked = walked
}
return s, nil
}
// emit pretty-prints the snapshot to stdout. The trailing newline
// from json.Encoder is the right shape for both shell `tee` and
// python3 stdin handling.
func emit(s *Snapshot) {
enc := json.NewEncoder(os.Stdout)
enc.SetIndent("", " ")
if err := enc.Encode(s); err != nil {
log.Fatalf("encode snapshot: %v", err)
}
}
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# Runbook: PostgreSQL backup for certctl # Runbook: PostgreSQL backup for certctl
> Last reviewed: 2026-05-16 > Last reviewed: 2026-05-16 (Sprint 4 ACQ — CI restore verification subsection added)
Use this when: Use this when:
- You're setting up a new certctl deployment and need a backup policy - You're setting up a new certctl deployment and need a backup policy
@@ -198,6 +198,42 @@ to your quarterly on-call rotation:
The [disaster-recovery runbook](disaster-recovery.md) covers what to The [disaster-recovery runbook](disaster-recovery.md) covers what to
do when this dry-run reveals a gap. do when this dry-run reveals a gap.
## CI restore verification
> Acquisition-audit DEPL-005 + DATA-012 closure (Sprint 4 ACQ,
> 2026-05-16). The quarterly dry-run above is the operator-side
> proof; the workflow below is the upstream-side proof.
The certctl repo ships a weekly GitHub Actions workflow that
exercises the **exact** pg_dump shape this runbook recommends
(`--format=custom --no-owner --no-acl`) against a real Postgres
container, then asserts the audit_events hash chain round-trips
byte-for-byte across the dump → restore boundary. A regression in
the dump format, in a Postgres minor bump, or in migration 000047's
canonical-payload serialization would surface in the next Monday
run instead of on a customer's restore day.
- **Workflow:** [`.github/workflows/backup-restore.yml`](../../../.github/workflows/backup-restore.yml)
— Mondays 07:00 UTC + `workflow_dispatch`. Postgres service
container pinned to the same SHA256 digest as
`deploy/docker-compose.yml`.
- **Harness:** [`deploy/test/backup-restore-smoke.sh`](../../../deploy/test/backup-restore-smoke.sh)
— runs the workload → `pg_dump -Fc``DROP SCHEMA public CASCADE`
`pg_restore` → verify cycle. Locally runnable against any
reachable Postgres (it DROPs the schema, so do not point it at
data you care about).
- **Workload + verifier:** [`deploy/test/backupsmoke/main.go`](../../../deploy/test/backupsmoke/main.go)
— generates 24 synthetic `audit_events` rows representing an
issue/renew/revoke/auth-login cycle, snapshots the chain head
before the backup, and after restore runs
`audit_events_verify_chain()` to confirm `first_break_id IS NULL`.
The CI workflow is not a replacement for the quarterly operator
dry-run — it does not exercise the operator-managed file material
(CA keys, RA keys, trust anchors) listed in the "What to back up"
table above. Treat it as the dump-shape regression test; the
quarterly run remains the full-restore correctness test.
## Related reading ## Related reading
- [`docs/operator/runbooks/disaster-recovery.md`](disaster-recovery.md) — the restore companion - [`docs/operator/runbooks/disaster-recovery.md`](disaster-recovery.md) — the restore companion