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https://github.com/shankar0123/certctl.git
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17455d2ea25356290ed9b928cef95f616629e66a
2 Commits
| Author | SHA1 | Message | Date | |
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8b75e0311b |
chore: rename Go module path to github.com/certctl-io/certctl
Mechanical sed across the main go.mod's module declaration, the f5-mock-icontrol
sub-module's go.mod, every Go file's import path (361 files), and a rebuild of
the checked-in f5-mock-icontrol binary so its embedded build-info reflects the
new module path. No behavior change.
Choice B from cowork/transfer-certctl-to-org.md, executed 2026-05-04. Choice A
(keep module path declared as github.com/shankar0123/certctl regardless of
repo URL) shipped on the day of the org transfer (2026-05-03) since we had no
external Go consumers; this commit closes that deferral.
Backward-compat: GitHub HTTP redirects continue to forward
github.com/shankar0123/certctl → github.com/certctl-io/certctl at the URL
level, but Go's module proxy uses the path declared in go.mod as the
canonical name. Pre-fix, anyone trying `go get github.com/certctl-io/certctl/...`
hit a "module path mismatch" error because go.mod said
github.com/shankar0123/certctl and the URL they fetched it from said
certctl-io/certctl. Post-fix, the canonical name and the URL agree, so
go get / go install / external Go consumers / Go-tooling integrations
work cleanly via either the new path (preferred) or the old path (which
redirects and Go follows the redirect for source fetch).
Anyone still importing the old path inside their own code keeps working
provided they update their go.mod's `require` line to match — the module
path declared in their consumer's go.sum / go.mod is the authoritative
import name, so a mass sed across their import statements is the migration
on the consumer side. No external consumers exist today.
Diff shape:
361 *.go files — import path replacement only
2 go.mod — module declaration replacement only
1 binary — deploy/test/f5-mock-icontrol/f5-mock-icontrol rebuilt
so embedded build-info reflects the new path (8618965 vs
8618933 bytes; 32-byte diff is the build-info change)
Total: 364 files, 730 insertions / 730 deletions, net-zero size, pure
mechanical substitution.
Verification:
gofmt: 17 files needed re-alignment after sed (the new path is one char
shorter than the old, so column-aligned import groups drifted). Applied
`gofmt -w` to fix.
go mod tidy: clean exit on both modules.
go vet ./...: clean exit.
go build ./...: clean exit.
go test -short -count=1 on representative packages: all green
(internal/domain, internal/validation, internal/crypto, internal/crypto/signer,
cmd/agent). Test output now reads `ok github.com/certctl-io/certctl/...`
confirming the module path resolves correctly.
binary: f5-mock-icontrol rebuilt; `strings | grep shankar0123` returns
nothing; `strings | grep certctl-io/certctl` shows the new module path
embedded in build-info.
Files intentionally NOT touched in this commit:
README.md / CHANGELOG.md / docs/ / etc. — already swept to certctl-io
URLs in commit
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b0c4ed1ae2 |
openssl: add failure_test.go covering 6 shell-out error modes
Closes Top-10 fix #3 of the 2026-05-03 issuer-coverage audit (see cowork/issuer-coverage-audit-2026-05-03/RESULTS.md). Pre-fix, the OpenSSL adapter (497 LOC, certctl's highest-risk issuer surface) had openssl_test.go (8 happy-path funcs + 20 subtests) but no dedicated _failure_test.go. Compare to ACME, Vault, DigiCert, Sectigo, Entrust, GlobalSign, EJBCA — all peers have one. An acquirer's diligence team flags this as an immediate blocker on the highest-risk issuer surface. This commit adds 6 failure-mode tests: 1. TestOpenSSL_Issue_ScriptNotFound_OperatorActionableError — SignScript path doesn't exist; error wraps os.ErrNotExist (errors.Is); message contains 'no such file' / 'not found' so the operator's grep finds it in journalctl. 2. TestOpenSSL_Issue_PermissionDenied_OperatorActionableError — SignScript exists with mode 0o600 (non-executable); error wraps os.ErrPermission; message contains 'permission'. Skipped under root (uid 0 bypasses chmod gating). 3. TestOpenSSL_Issue_MalformedStdout_DistinguishedFromCSRReject — script exits 0 + writes garbage (no PEM markers) to the cert output file; error mentions PEM/certificate/parse so operators distinguish output-parsing failure from a script- side fault. 4. TestOpenSSL_Issue_NonZeroExit_DistinguishesCAReject_From_ ScriptError — script writes 'policy violation: …' to stderr and exits 2 (CA-side rejection convention); the script's stderr surfaces in the error message; errors.Unwrap returns non-nil (proving the underlying *exec.ExitError chain survives). 5. TestOpenSSL_Issue_TimeoutEnforced_ContextCancellationPropagates — script does 'exec sleep 30' (not 'sleep 30 ' as a child; exec replaces bash so SIGKILL goes directly to the sleeper, avoiding the orphan-pipes corner case where a killed bash leaves sleep holding stdout/stderr open and CombinedOutput blocks); ctx with 100ms deadline; call returns within ~5s wall-clock; either errors.Is(err, context.DeadlineExceeded) or the error message names 'killed' / 'signal'. 6. TestOpenSSL_Issue_SignalKilled_PartialOutputDiscarded — script writes a half-PEM ('-----BEGIN CERTIFICATE-----\nMII…') then 'kill -KILL $$'; assertion: result is nil OR CertPEM is empty (no half-cert leaks to caller); error names 'signal' / 'killed' OR 'PEM' / 'parse' (both are operator-actionable). Each test pins the operator-actionable error message contract: the message names the failure mode (so journalctl + grep find it) and proves no half-state was created (no partial cert returned). errors.Is / errors.Unwrap checks confirm the wrapping chain survives. The OpenSSL adapter has no commandRunner abstraction (production code uses exec.CommandContext directly); these tests use real operator-supplied scripts written to t.TempDir (matches the adapter's actual production code path; no os/exec mocking). The 'exec sleep 30' technique in Test 5 is the load-bearing fix for the bash-orphans-sleep-and-pipes-stay-open corner case that otherwise makes the test take 30s instead of 100ms. Coverage delta: - Before this commit: openssl_test.go + openssl_stubs_test.go covered 8 happy-path funcs. - After: 79.8% statement coverage of openssl.go (up from operator-pre-existing baseline; the 6 new tests exercise every error path through callSignScript + parseCertificate). Tests pass clean under '-race -count=10' (Test 5's deadline tolerance is the only timing-sensitive case; the 5s wall-clock budget vs the 100ms ctx deadline gives ample slack on slow CI without masking deadline-not-enforced bugs). Test-only commit; no production code changes. Hardening fixes (per-call concurrency semaphore, threat-model docs) are separate Top-10 entries. Verified locally: - gofmt clean across the repo. - go vet ./... clean across the repo. - go test -race -count=10 -short ./internal/connector/issuer/openssl/... green. Audit reference: cowork/issuer-coverage-audit-2026-05-03/ RESULTS.md Top-10 fix #3. |