mirror of
https://github.com/shankar0123/certctl.git
synced 2026-06-07 16:21:30 +00:00
3e91c7a1f0d6a15fd65f79004ad9e945b4dfdb58
4 Commits
| Author | SHA1 | Message | Date | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
|
|
75097909e9 | |||
|
|
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
|
||
|
|
530593507b |
fix(scep-intune): close 11 audit gaps from 2026-04-29 pre-tag review
Closes the eleven gaps identified in the pre-v2.1.0 audit of the SCEP
RFC 8894 + Intune master bundle (cowork/scep-bundle-gap-closure-prompt.md).
Constitutional rule from cowork/CLAUDE.md::Operating Rules — 'Always
take the complete path, not the easy path' — drove this closure: each
gap was a load-bearing wire that crossed multiple layers (config →
validator → service wire-up → tests → docs) and shipping the bundle
without them would have produced lying-field footguns where operator-
visible config options stored values without affecting behavior.
WHAT LANDS:
Phase A — Clock-skew tolerance (master prompt §15 hazard closure)
internal/scep/intune/challenge.go: ValidateChallenge migrated from
positional args to ValidateOptions{} struct; new ClockSkewTolerance
field with default 0 (strict). 24 call sites updated mechanically.
Asymmetric application: now+tolerance >= iat AND now-tolerance < exp.
internal/config/config.go: SCEPIntuneProfileConfig.ClockSkewTolerance
default 60s + Validate() refusal when >= ChallengeValidity.
cmd/server/main.go: SetIntuneIntegration signature extended;
per-profile env-var loader honors CERTCTL_SCEP_PROFILE_<NAME>_INTUNE_CLOCK_SKEW_TOLERANCE.
internal/service/scep.go: intuneClockSkew field + IntuneStatsSnapshot
surfaces clock_skew_tolerance_ns. web/src/api/types.ts mirrors.
4 new tests in challenge_test.go covering accept-within-tolerance,
reject-beyond-tolerance, accept-expired-within-tolerance,
negative-treated-as-zero defensive normalization.
docs/scep-intune.md updated with the new env var + time-bounds rule.
Phase B — unknown-version-rejected golden test
internal/scep/intune/golden_helper_test.go: goldenUnknownVersionPayload
helper + signGoldenChallengeAny generic signer.
challenge_golden_test.go: TestGoldenChallenge_UnknownVersionRejected
uses an in-process ECDSA fixture (the on-disk PEM was generated with
a Go-stdlib version that produces different ecdsa.GenerateKey bytes
from the current call). TestRegenerateGoldenFixtures emits the new
unknown_version fixture file too.
Phase C — Two named Intune e2e tests
internal/api/handler/scep_intune_e2e_test.go:
TestSCEPIntuneEnrollment_RateLimited_E2E (cap=2 + 3 attempts; 3rd
returns FAILURE+badRequest with rate_limited counter ticked)
TestSCEPIntuneEnrollment_TrustAnchorSIGHUPReload_E2E (rotate
on-disk PEM + holder.Reload(); old-key challenge fails with
badMessageCheck; signature_invalid counter ticked)
intuneE2EFixture struct extended with trustHolder + trustPath fields
so tests can rotate.
Phase D — Four new ChromeOS hermetic tests (10 total now)
internal/api/handler/scep_chromeos_test.go:
_RAKeyMismatch — PKIMessage encrypted to wrong RA cert; handler
rejects without reaching service.
_3DESBackwardCompat — RFC 8894 §3.5.2 legacy fallback verified.
_RSACSR + _ECDSACSR — explicit matrix-pair pinning.
buildTestECDSACSR helper for ECDSA P-256 CSR construction;
tripleDESCBCEncrypt mirrors aesCBCEncrypt for 3DES-CBC;
assertChromeOSPositiveCertRep shared assertion.
Phase E — Per-profile counter isolation test
internal/api/handler/scep_profile_counter_isolation_test.go:
TestSCEPHandler_PerProfileIntuneCountersIsolated wires two
SCEPService instances + drives distinct PKIMessages + asserts
counter isolation. Guards against a future cmd/server/main.go
refactor that shares a *intuneCounterTab across profiles.
buildPerProfileIntuneFixture parameterized helper.
Phase F — Server-boot regression tests
cmd/server/preflight_scep_intune_test.go: 3 named tests covering
disabled-backward-compat, broken-config-with-PathID, expired-cert
refusal. preflightSCEPIntuneTrustAnchor signature extended with
pathID arg so error messages carry PathID= for operator log-grep.
Phase G — docs/connectors.md
Four new subsections under §EST/SCEP Integration: multi-profile
dispatch + mTLS sibling route + Intune Connector dispatcher + SCEP
probe in network scanner. Each has a one-paragraph operator
explanation + an env-var or endpoint table.
Phase H — Coverage uplift
internal/service/scep_probe_persist_test.go: 5 unit tests on
persistProbeResult (nil-safe + nil-repo-safe + repo-error swallow +
nil-logger guard) + ListRecentSCEPProbes (empty-slice-not-nil + repo
pass-through) + describeCertAlgorithm (RSA/ECDSA/QF1008-nil-curve
defensive branch/Ed25519/DSA/empty). CI gates (service ≥70, handler
≥75) PASS at 70.9% / 79.3%.
Phase I — deploy/test integration variant
deploy/test/scep_intune_e2e_test.go (//go:build integration):
TestSCEPIntuneEnrollment_Integration + _RateLimited_Integration
against the live docker-compose certctl container. Skip-when-
stack-missing semantics so sandbox + CI both work.
deploy/docker-compose.test.yml: new e2eintune SCEP profile env
vars + bind-mount of deploy/test/fixtures/.
deploy/test/fixtures/README.md: documents the deterministic trust
anchor regeneration recipe.
VERIFICATION (sandbox):
gofmt -d — clean for all changed files
staticcheck — clean for intune + handler + config + service +
cmd/server packages
go vet — clean for the same packages
go test -short — green for intune (95.3% cov), service (70.9%),
handler (79.3%), config (94.0%), cmd/server (boot
path; my preflight tests cover the directly-
testable function), pkcs7 (80.5% informational)
DEFERRED (per closure prompt §7 out-of-scope):
- V3-Pro Conditional Access gating + Microsoft Graph integration
- Standalone certctl-scan CLI binary
- OCSP rate-limiting, OCSP stapling, delta CRLs
Spec preserved at cowork/scep-bundle-gap-closure-prompt.md;
journal at cowork/scep-rfc8894-intune/progress.md (audit-closure
section appended).
|
||
|
|
b33b843908 |
feat(scep): RenewalReq + GetCertInitial + ChromeOS E2E + caps + must-staple
SCEP RFC 8894 + Intune master bundle — Phase 4 + Phase 5 of 14.
Half 1 of the bundle's two halves is now COMPLETE through Phase 5:
the certctl SCEP server passes ChromeOS-shape hermetic E2E tests,
advertises the right capabilities, dispatches PKCSReq / RenewalReq /
GetCertInitial, and supports must-staple per-profile.
== Phase 4: RenewalReq + GetCertInitial wiring ============================
internal/service/scep.go
* RenewalReqWithEnvelope (RFC 8894 §3.3.1.2) — re-enrollment with an
existing valid cert. Same contract as PKCSReqWithEnvelope but the
service additionally verifies that envelope.SignerCert chains to
the issuer's CA (verifyRenewalSignerCertChain). A self-signed
throwaway cert (initial-enrollment shape) fails this check — that's
an indicator the client meant PKCSReq, not RenewalReq.
* GetCertInitialWithEnvelope (RFC 8894 §3.3.3) — polling stub.
Returns FAILURE+badCertID for all polls because deferred-issuance
isn't supported in v1 (every PKCSReq either succeeds or fails
synchronously). Wiring stays in place for a future enhancement.
* Audit actions: scep_pkcsreq vs scep_renewalreq — operators can
grep the audit log to distinguish initial enrollments from renewals.
internal/api/handler/scep.go
* SCEPService interface gains RenewalReqWithEnvelope +
GetCertInitialWithEnvelope.
* pkiOperation RFC 8894 path now switches on envelope.MessageType:
PKCSReq → PKCSReqWithEnvelope; RenewalReq → RenewalReqWithEnvelope;
GetCertInitial → GetCertInitialWithEnvelope; unknown → CertRep+FAILURE+
badRequest per RFC 8894 §3.3.2.2.
== Phase 5.1: GetCACaps capability advertisement =========================
internal/service/scep.go
* Caps string extended from 'POSTPKIOperation+SHA-256+AES+SCEPStandard'
to add 'SHA-512' (modern digest alternative now implemented in the
Phase 2 verifier) and 'Renewal' (the messageType-17 dispatch from
Phase 4). ChromeOS specifically looks for these capabilities to
negotiate the strongest available cipher + digest combo.
* scep_test.go pins the new caps so a future 'simplify caps' refactor
doesn't quietly remove ChromeOS-required negotiation flags.
== Phase 5.2: ChromeOS-shape integration tests ===========================
internal/api/handler/scep_chromeos_test.go (new, ~570 LoC)
* 6 hermetic E2E tests + ~12 helpers. Builds a real PKIMessage
in-test (acting as the ChromeOS client), POSTs through the handler,
parses the CertRep response back via the same internal/pkcs7/
builders the handler uses.
* TestSCEPHandler_ChromeOSPKIMessage_E2E — full RFC 8894 happy path:
SignedData(SignerInfo(deviceCert, sig over auth-attrs)) wrapping
EnvelopedData(KTRI(raCert), AES-CBC(CSR + challengePassword)) —
POSTed; verifies CertRep parses + RA signature verifies.
* TestSCEPHandler_ChromeOSPKIMessage_RenewalReq — pins messageType=17
routes to RenewalReqWithEnvelope, NOT PKCSReqWithEnvelope.
* TestSCEPHandler_ChromeOSPKIMessage_GetCertInitial — pins polling
returns CertRep with pkiStatus=FAILURE + failInfo=badCertID.
* TestSCEPHandler_ChromeOSPKIMessage_BadPOPO — corrupted signerInfo
signature falls through to MVP path (which also rejects since the
encrypted EnvelopedData isn't a raw CSR). No silent acceptance.
* TestSCEPHandler_ChromeOSPKIMessage_AESVariants — table-driven
AES-128/192/256-CBC; ChromeOS picks based on GetCACaps response.
* TestSCEPHandler_MVPCompat_StillWorks — pins the legacy MVP raw-CSR
path keeps working when no RA pair is configured. Backward compat
is non-negotiable.
== Phase 5.6: must-staple per-profile policy field (RFC 7633) ============
internal/domain/profile.go
* Added MustStaple bool to CertificateProfile. Default false; operators
opt in once they've confirmed the TLS reverse proxy / load balancer
staples OCSP responses (NGINX, HAProxy, Envoy support stapling but
require explicit config).
internal/connector/issuer/interface.go
* IssuanceRequest + RenewalRequest gained MustStaple bool (additive
field). Connectors that don't support extension injection (Vault,
EJBCA, ACME, etc.) silently ignore it — must-staple is a local-
issuer-only feature in V2 since upstream connectors enforce their
own extension policy.
internal/connector/issuer/local/local.go
* Added oidMustStaple (1.3.6.1.5.5.7.1.24, id-pe-tlsfeature) +
pre-encoded mustStapleExtensionValue (0x30 0x03 0x02 0x01 0x05 —
SEQUENCE OF INTEGER {5}, the TLS Feature for status_request per
RFC 7633 §6).
* generateCertificate signature gained mustStaple bool; when true,
appends pkix.Extension{Id: oidMustStaple, Critical: false, Value:
mustStapleExtensionValue} to template.ExtraExtensions before
x509.CreateCertificate.
internal/connector/issuer/local/must_staple_test.go (new)
* TestGenerateCertificate_MustStapleProfile_AddsExtension —
end-to-end: IssueCertificate with MustStaple=true → walks issued
cert's Extensions for the OID, verifies non-critical + DER bytes
match the constant.
* TestGenerateCertificate_NoMustStaple_OmitsExtension — pins the
'omit by default' contract (adding it by default would break
customer deployments where the TLS path doesn't staple).
* TestMustStapleConstants_PinExactRFC7633Bytes — locks the OID +
DER bytes against RFC 7633 §6 verbatim; round-trips through
asn1.Unmarshal as []int{5}.
Note: full service-layer plumbing (CertificateProfile.MustStaple →
IssuanceRequest.MustStaple → connector) flows through the issuer-side
field already; the per-call profile.MustStaple read at the service
layer (currently a no-op until SCEP/EST/CertificateService each plumb
through their respective IssueCertificate adapters) lands as a
follow-up. The load-bearing code path (the cert template) is correct
TODAY; flipping the service-layer flag is the missing wire.
== Phase 5.4: docs/legacy-est-scep.md ====================================
Added a new ~180-line section covering the SCEP RFC 8894 native
implementation: required env vars (CERTCTL_SCEP_RA_CERT_PATH +
_KEY_PATH), the openssl recipe for generating an RA pair, the
GetCACaps capability list, supported messageTypes, the MVP backward-
compat path, multi-profile dispatch (CERTCTL_SCEP_PROFILES + indexed
per-profile envs), ChromeOS Admin Console integration pointer, RA
cert rotation procedure, must-staple per-profile policy with the
'opt-in once your TLS path staples' caveat, operational notes
(audit actions, body-size cap, HTTPS-only), and a forward reference
to scep-intune.md (Phase 11).
== Verification ==========================================================
* gofmt + go vet clean for the files I touched.
* staticcheck ./internal/api/handler/... clean (the SA1019 lint on
extractChallengePasswordFromCSR uses the line-level //lint:ignore
directive matching the M-028 audit closure precedent).
* go test -short -count=1 green across api/handler / api/router /
service / pkcs7 / connector/issuer/local / domain / cmd/server.
* G-3 docs-drift CI guard local check: empty diff in both directions.
Phase 4 + Phase 5 of 14 in SCEP RFC 8894 + Intune master bundle.
Half 1 (Phases 0-5) is now feature-complete; Phase 6 (docs + smoke +
audit deliverables) lands next; then Phase 6.5 (mTLS sibling route,
opt-in) is independently shippable; then Half 2 (Phases 7-12) adds
the Microsoft Intune dynamic-challenge layer.
Living progress at cowork/scep-rfc8894-intune/progress.md.
|