Files
shankar0123 21aeed4f4e legal: addlicense headers + normalize legacy variants (Phase 0 RED-4)
Phase 0 closure (Path B2, post-rewrite):

addlicense sweep — adds the canonical certctl LLC copyright + BUSL-1.1
SPDX header to every production Go file. Template:

  // Copyright 2026 certctl LLC. All rights reserved.
  // SPDX-License-Identifier: BUSL-1.1

Coverage: 338 / 338 production Go files (cmd/ + internal/, excluding
*_test.go and **/testdata/**). Pre-sweep coverage was 22 / 338 (6.5%);
post-sweep is 338 / 338 (100%).

Normalized 22 pre-existing legacy headers (`// Copyright (c) certctl`
+ `// SPDX-License-Identifier: BSL-1.1`) and 1 file using a
`Certctl Contributors` attribution. The legacy SPDX ID `BSL-1.1`
is non-standard; the official SPDX identifier for Business Source
License 1.1 is `BUSL-1.1` (capital U). All 338 files now share the
canonical form.

Generated via:
  addlicense -c "certctl LLC" -y 2026 \
    -f cowork/legal/copyright-header.tpl \
    -ignore '**/testdata/**' -ignore '**/*_test.go' \
    cmd/ internal/

Verification:
  find cmd internal -name '*.go' -not -name '*_test.go' \
    -not -path '*/testdata/*' \
    -exec grep -L '^// Copyright 2026 certctl LLC' {} \; | wc -l

  Returns: 0

gofmt clean. Header additions are comments only, no compile impact.

Closes: cowork/certctl-architecture-diligence-audit.html#fix-RED-4
2026-05-13 21:23:35 +00:00

172 lines
6.0 KiB
Go

// Copyright 2026 certctl LLC. All rights reserved.
// SPDX-License-Identifier: BUSL-1.1
// Package secret provides Ref, an opaque handle to a credential.
//
// Closes the #6 acquisition-readiness blocker from the 2026-05-01
// issuer coverage audit. Pre-fix, GlobalSign / EJBCA / Sectigo stored
// API keys / OAuth tokens / 3-header credentials as plain Go strings
// on the Connector struct. Encrypted at rest via
// internal/crypto/encryption.go (AES-256-GCM v3 + PBKDF2-600k), they
// sat in process memory in the clear after load and were written to
// HTTP headers on every API call. DEBUG-level HTTP request logging
// leaked them into logs.
//
// Ref defeats casual heap-dump extraction and accidental log leaks:
//
// - The bytes are never marshalled into a string. Use(fn) is the
// only access path; Ref.String() returns "[redacted]".
// - The buffer passed to fn is zeroed (overwritten with 0 bytes)
// after fn returns. The credential is present in the heap only
// for the duration of fn.
// - MarshalJSON returns "[redacted]" so JSON-encoding a config
// struct (e.g., GET /issuers response) doesn't leak.
//
// Ref is paired with the request-logging middleware filter in
// internal/api/middleware/redact.go which strips known credential
// headers (Authorization, X-API-Key, X-DC-DEVKEY, X-Vault-Token,
// customerUri, login, password) from outbound DEBUG logs as a
// belt-and-braces defense against third-party HTTP clients (AWS SDK
// at DEBUG, etc.) that format headers themselves.
package secret
import (
"encoding/json"
"fmt"
"io"
)
// Ref is an opaque handle to a credential. Use Use(fn) or WriteTo(w)
// to obtain the underlying bytes; do not store the slice beyond the
// callback's return — the buffer is zeroed and may be reused.
type Ref struct {
// src returns a fresh copy of the credential bytes on every
// invocation. Production: a closure that decrypts an at-rest
// blob. Test: a closure that returns a copy of a static []byte.
src func() ([]byte, error)
}
// NewRef constructs a Ref backed by the supplied source. The source
// closure is called every time Use / WriteTo is invoked; it must
// return a fresh slice (the caller will zero it).
func NewRef(src func() ([]byte, error)) *Ref {
return &Ref{src: src}
}
// NewRefFromString is a convenience for tests / config-loading paths
// that have a plaintext string already. The source returns a copy of
// the string's bytes on every invocation; the original string still
// lives in the caller's memory (immutable Go string semantics) — the
// caller should drop the reference once it has been wrapped in a Ref.
//
// Production code paths should prefer NewRef with a decrypt-on-demand
// closure so the plaintext is never present in process memory at rest.
func NewRefFromString(s string) *Ref {
return &Ref{
src: func() ([]byte, error) {
// Copy so the returned slice is independent — Use will
// zero the copy without disturbing s.
b := make([]byte, len(s))
copy(b, s)
return b, nil
},
}
}
// Use invokes fn with a freshly-allocated buffer holding the secret
// bytes. After fn returns (or panics), the buffer is overwritten with
// zeros and dropped.
//
// fn MUST NOT retain the slice beyond its return. Storing the slice
// in a struct field, sending it on a channel, or passing it to a
// goroutine that runs after Use returns are all bugs — the buffer
// will be zeroed before the consumer reads it.
func (r *Ref) Use(fn func(buf []byte) error) error {
if r == nil {
return fmt.Errorf("secret.Ref.Use: nil Ref")
}
buf, err := r.src()
if err != nil {
return fmt.Errorf("secret.Ref: source: %w", err)
}
defer zero(buf)
return fn(buf)
}
// WriteTo writes the secret bytes to w (typically an HTTP header
// writer or a CSR signing routine) and zeros the staging buffer
// afterwards. Convenience over Use for the common "set a header"
// case.
//
// Returns the byte count and any write error.
func (r *Ref) WriteTo(w io.Writer) (int64, error) {
if r == nil {
return 0, fmt.Errorf("secret.Ref.WriteTo: nil Ref")
}
buf, err := r.src()
if err != nil {
return 0, fmt.Errorf("secret.Ref: source: %w", err)
}
defer zero(buf)
n, werr := w.Write(buf)
return int64(n), werr
}
// String returns "[redacted]" — the type intentionally never
// stringifies the underlying bytes. Catches accidental leak via
// fmt.Sprintf("%v", cfg), slog attribute formatting, etc.
func (r *Ref) String() string { return "[redacted]" }
// MarshalJSON returns "[redacted]" so a config struct holding *Ref
// fields can be JSON-encoded without leaking credentials. Used by
// the API surface (GET /issuers etc.) and any operator-facing
// serialization path.
func (r *Ref) MarshalJSON() ([]byte, error) {
return []byte(`"[redacted]"`), nil
}
// UnmarshalJSON parses a JSON string into a Ref via NewRefFromString.
// Required for the production wiring path where issuer Config structs
// are JSON-deserialized from the DB-stored config blob (the factory's
// NewFromConfig in internal/connector/issuerfactory).
//
// Accepts either a JSON string ("abc") or null (treated as nil Ref).
// Other JSON shapes (numbers, objects, arrays) are rejected — a
// credential is always either a string or absent.
func (r *Ref) UnmarshalJSON(data []byte) error {
if string(data) == "null" {
// nil-Ref unmarshal is a no-op; the field on the parent
// struct stays nil and IsEmpty() reports true.
return nil
}
var s string
if err := json.Unmarshal(data, &s); err != nil {
return fmt.Errorf("secret.Ref: expected JSON string, got: %w", err)
}
*r = *NewRefFromString(s)
return nil
}
// IsEmpty reports whether the source returns an empty byte slice
// (zero-length credential). Useful for ValidateConfig paths that need
// to check "did the operator set the credential" without obtaining
// the bytes.
func (r *Ref) IsEmpty() bool {
if r == nil {
return true
}
buf, err := r.src()
if err != nil {
return true
}
defer zero(buf)
return len(buf) == 0
}
// zero overwrites b with zero bytes. Visible for testing.
func zero(b []byte) {
for i := range b {
b[i] = 0
}
}