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 bc6039a (the post-transfer URL refresh). This commit is
purely the Go-tooling layer.
Scarf pixels (`shankar0123.docker.scarf.sh/...`) — Scarf-account
namespace, not a Go import or GitHub repo URL. Stays.
This is a non-blocking, non-customer-impacting change. Operators pulling
container images, running `make verify`, hitting the API, or installing the
agent see no functional difference. Only Go-tooling consumers (none today)
are affected, and they're enabled — not broken — by this commit.
Closes M-001 partially; M-002, M-003, and CI threshold raise #2 deferred.
Stubs coverage shipped across 8 issuer connectors via per-connector
<conn>_stubs_test.go (~50 LoC each) pinning the not-supported
issuer.Connector interface methods (GenerateCRL, SignOCSPResponse,
GetCACertPEM, GetRenewalInfo). Most CAs delegate CRL/OCSP/CA-cert
distribution to managed services, so these are documented stubs that
return errors. Pinning them ensures the stubs aren't silently replaced
with no-ops in a future refactor.
Coverage delta:
digicert: 79.3% -> 81.0% (+1.7pp)
ejbca: 75.8% -> 76.5% (+0.7pp)
entrust: 70.8% -> 70.8% (stubs already covered)
sectigo: 78.0% -> 79.4% (+1.4pp)
vault: 81.0% -> 84.1% (+3.1pp)
openssl: 76.9% -> 78.0% (+1.1pp)
googlecas: 81.0% -> 83.4% (+2.4pp)
globalsign: 75.9% -> 78.2% (+2.3pp)
(awsacmpca not included; its 0%-coverage hotspots are stubClient methods
structurally different from the others' interface stubs. Already at 83.5%.)
Why the gates aren't yet met: the stub functions are tiny (1-2 lines
each, mostly 'return nil, fmt.Errorf("not supported")'). Lifting each
connector to >=85% requires per-connector failure-mode test files
mirroring Bundle J's ACME pattern (httptest.Server + canned 401/403/
429+Retry-After/5xx/malformed responses against the actual API methods).
That's ~200-300 LoC x 9 connectors = ~2000-2700 LoC of bespoke per-CA
mock work; exceeds this session's budget. Tracked as follow-on
Bundle N.A-extended / N.B-extended.
Deferred sub-batches:
N.C (M-002 + M-003): internal/service (70.5%) + internal/api/handler
(79.4%) round-out NOT YET STARTED. Tracked as Bundle N.C-extended.
N.CI (CI threshold raise #2): prescribed raises require underlying
coverage at proposed floors first. Premature raise would fail CI
immediately. Tracked as Bundle N.CI-extended.
Verification:
go vet ./internal/connector/issuer/{8-pkgs}/... clean
gofmt -l clean
go test -short -count=1 PASS for all 8
Audit deliverables:
gap-backlog.md: M-001 partial-strikethrough with per-connector table
+ Bundle N closure-log entry covering all 4 sub-batch statuses
closure-plan.md: Bundle N [~] with per-sub-batch status breakdown
CHANGELOG.md: [unreleased] Bundle N entry