Closes the wire-layer authorization gap surfaced by the 2026-05-10 audit
(CRIT-1). Before this commit only ~24 of ~140 routes carried rbacGate
enforcement — all of them admin-only fine-grained perms (auth.session.*,
auth.oidc.*, auth.breakglass.admin, cert.bulk_revoke, crl.admin, scep.admin,
est.admin, ca.hierarchy.manage). Every catalogued legacy-CRUD perm
(cert.read/issue/revoke/delete, profile.edit/delete, issuer.edit/delete,
target.*, agent.*, plus role-mgmt verbs) was declared in
internal/domain/auth/validate.go but never wired at the router. A r-viewer
Bearer was essentially r-admin minus five verbs at the wire layer (CWE-862).
This commit:
- Adds rbacGateScoped(checker, perm, scopeType, scopeFn, h) helper to
internal/api/router/router.go for path-bound scope resolution. Per-profile
and per-issuer grants (Decision 2) now reach the wire layer.
- Wraps every state-changing route AND every read endpoint in router.go
with rbacGate (global) or rbacGateScoped (path-bound). The auth-management
routes (POST /api/v1/auth/roles, etc.) gain router-level enforcement
in addition to the existing service-layer Authorizer check — defense in
depth (HIGH-9 of the same audit collapses into this closure).
- Auth-exempt surfaces stay un-gated by design: login, callback, BCL,
logout, breakglass-login, bootstrap, health, auth-info, version. Allowlist
is documented in TestRouterRBACGateCoverage.
- Extends internal/domain/auth/validate.go CanonicalPermissions with 30 new
perms across 12 namespaces: cert.edit; job.read, job.cancel; approval.read,
approval.approve, approval.reject; policy.read/edit/delete;
team.read/edit/delete; owner.read/edit/delete; notification.read/edit;
discovery.read/run/claim; network_scan.read/edit/run;
healthcheck.read/edit/delete/acknowledge; digest.read, digest.send;
verification.read, verification.run; stats.read; metrics.read.
- Updates DefaultRoles for r-admin / r-operator / r-viewer / r-mcp / r-cli /
r-agent. r-auditor gets NOTHING new — the auditor pin
(TestAuditorRoleHoldsExactlyAuditReadAndExport) stays invariant.
- Migration 000039_audit_crit1_perms seeds the new perm rows + role grants
per the updated DefaultRoles map. Idempotent ON CONFLICT DO NOTHING.
Reverse migration removes role_permissions before permissions
(ON DELETE RESTRICT on the FK).
- AST-level CI guard TestRouterRBACGateCoverage in
internal/api/router/router_rbac_coverage_test.go walks router.go and
asserts every state-changing + read route is wrapped (or in the
documented allowlist). Adding a new ungated route fails CI.
- Updates docs/operator/rbac.md permission-catalogue table with the new
namespaces + footer link to the AST CI guard.
- Updates certctl/CHANGELOG.md v2.1.0 section with the closure narrative.
Audit doc cowork/auth-bundles-audit-2026-05-10.md CRIT-1 row annotated
CLOSED 2026-05-10. Bundle's exit-gate spec lives at
cowork/auth-bundles-fixes-2026-05-10/01-crit-1-rbac-gates.md.
CRIT-2 / CRIT-3 / CRIT-4 / CRIT-5 of the same audit remain open and
continue to block the v2.1.0 tag.
Verification gate green:
- gofmt -d (no diff after gofmt -w on the touched files)
- go vet ./...
- go test -short -count=1 ./... (all packages pass including auditor pin)
- go build ./...
HIGH-9 of the audit closes via this commit's router-layer rbacGate on
POST /api/v1/auth/keys/{id}/roles + DELETE /api/v1/auth/keys/{id}/roles/{role_id}
(defense-in-depth on top of the existing service-layer privilege check).
Refs: cowork/auth-bundles-audit-2026-05-10.md CRIT-1 HIGH-9
14 KiB
RBAC operator reference
Last reviewed: 2026-05-09
This is the operator-facing reference for the role-based access control primitive that ships with Bundle 1 (auth bundle 1) of certctl. Read this if you're running certctl in production and need to grant / revoke access to API keys, set up the auditor split, or onboard the first admin.
For the threat model behind these controls, see
auth-threat-model.md. For the migration
flow from a pre-Bundle-1 deployment, see
docs/migration/api-keys-to-rbac.md.
Mental model
Every action against the certctl HTTP / CLI / MCP / GUI surface is
performed by an actor (an API key, an agent's machine identity,
the synthetic demo-anon actor when the server runs in
CERTCTL_AUTH_TYPE=none mode). Each actor holds zero or more
roles. Each role grants a set of permissions at a scope.
A request to a gated endpoint succeeds when the actor's effective
permission set (the union across all held roles) contains the
permission the endpoint requires.
The schema lives in migrations/000029_rbac.up.sql and ships with
seven seeded default roles + a 33-permission canonical catalogue.
The middleware that gates requests lives at
internal/auth/require_permission.go. The service-layer authorizer
that resolves "actor → permissions" lives at
internal/service/auth/authorizer.go.
Default roles (seeded by migration 000029)
| Role | ID | Use case | Permission shape |
|---|---|---|---|
| Admin | r-admin |
Operator with full control | Every permission in the canonical catalogue |
| Operator | r-operator |
Day-to-day cert lifecycle | cert.*, profile.read, issuer.read, target.*, agent.read, audit.read |
| Viewer | r-viewer |
Read-only console access | *.read for every resource type |
| Agent | r-agent |
Machine identity for certctl-agent |
cert.read + agent.heartbeat + agent.job.poll + agent.job.complete + agent.job.report |
| MCP | r-mcp |
Operator-equivalent for the MCP server, minus destructive ops | Like Operator without *.delete |
| CLI | r-cli |
Day-to-day operator CLI | Like Operator + auth.key.list / auth.key.create / auth.key.rotate |
| Auditor | r-auditor |
Compliance reviewer | audit.read + audit.export ONLY |
The auditor split is the load-bearing one: an auditor cannot read
certificates, profiles, or issuers - only audit events. That makes the
role legitimate to hand to a SOC 2 / FedRAMP / PCI auditor without
giving them the keys to the kingdom. The
internal/domain/auth/auditor_test.go invariants pin this set going
forward.
The five admin-only fine-grained perms seeded by migration 000030 (Phase 3.5 conversion) gate the high-blast-radius endpoints:
cert.bulk_revoke-POST /api/v1/certificates/bulk-revokeand the EST siblingcrl.admin-/api/v1/admin/crl/cachescep.admin-/api/v1/admin/scep/intune/*est.admin-/api/v1/admin/est/*ca.hierarchy.manage-/api/v1/issuers/{id}/intermediates,/api/v1/intermediates/{id}
Only r-admin holds these by default. To delegate one, create a
custom role with the specific perm and grant it to the right actor.
Permission catalogue
The catalogue is namespaced. Permission strings are stable across
releases; new permissions add to the namespace, never reshape an
existing one. Run
certctl-cli auth permissions list (or GET /api/v1/auth/permissions)
for the live catalogue.
| Namespace | Examples | What the namespace gates |
|---|---|---|
cert.* |
cert.read, cert.issue, cert.revoke, cert.delete, cert.bulk_revoke |
The certificate lifecycle surface (/api/v1/certificates) |
profile.* |
profile.read, profile.edit, profile.delete |
CertificateProfile CRUD |
issuer.* |
issuer.read, issuer.edit, issuer.delete |
Issuer connector config |
target.* |
target.read, target.edit, target.delete |
Deployment target config |
agent.* |
agent.read, agent.edit, agent.retire, agent.heartbeat, agent.job.* |
Agent fleet + agent self-service endpoints |
audit.* |
audit.read, audit.export |
The audit-events surface |
auth.role.* |
auth.role.list, auth.role.create, auth.role.edit, auth.role.delete, auth.role.assign |
RBAC management |
auth.key.* |
auth.key.list, auth.key.create, auth.key.rotate, auth.key.delete |
API key management |
auth.bootstrap.* |
auth.bootstrap.use |
Day-0 first-admin path |
crl.admin, scep.admin, est.admin, ca.hierarchy.manage |
(single perms) | The five admin-only fine-grained perms (see above) |
job.* |
job.read, job.cancel |
Deployment job lifecycle |
approval.* |
approval.read, approval.approve, approval.reject |
Two-person approval workflow (cert-issuance + profile-edit) |
policy.* |
policy.read, policy.edit, policy.delete |
Compliance policies + renewal policies |
team.*, owner.* |
team.read, team.edit, team.delete, owner.* |
Organizational metadata |
notification.* |
notification.read, notification.edit |
Notification queue + requeue |
discovery.* |
discovery.read, discovery.run, discovery.claim |
Agent + cloud-secret-store discovery |
network_scan.* |
network_scan.read, network_scan.edit, network_scan.run |
TLS network scanning + SCEP probing |
healthcheck.* |
healthcheck.read, healthcheck.edit, healthcheck.delete, healthcheck.acknowledge |
Uptime monitors |
digest.* |
digest.read, digest.send |
Operator-summary digest emails |
verification.* |
verification.read, verification.run |
Post-deploy verification |
stats.read, metrics.read |
(single perms) | Dashboard summary + Prometheus exposition |
The full catalogue lives in
internal/domain/auth/validate.go.
The router-level enforcement sits in
internal/api/router/router.go;
the AST-level CI guard
TestRouterRBACGateCoverage
pins the contract — adding a new state-changing or read endpoint
without an rbacGate / rbacGateScoped wrap fails CI.
Scope semantics
Permissions are granted at one of three scopes:
global- applies to every resource in the tenant. The default for the seeded role grants. Acert.readgrant at global scope lets the actor read any certificate.profile- applies only to the namedCertificateProfile(matched by ID).cert.issueat scopeprofile/p-corp-cdnlets the actor issue againstp-corp-cdnonly.issuer- applies only to the named issuer. Lets you grantissuer.editon the production issuer to a senior operator without giving them edit on every issuer.
Global beats specific: an actor with cert.read at global scope
passes a cert.read check against any specific profile or issuer
even if no scoped grant exists. The reverse is also true - a
scoped grant doesn't satisfy a request against a different scope.
The Authorizer's CheckPermission is the single point of truth.
Note (Bundle 1 deferral): the
scope_idcolumn is not currently FK-constrained against the resource tables. An operator can grant a permission at scopeprofile/p-boguswithoutp-bogusexisting; the gate still works (no rows match at request time), but the API does not 404 the grant. Bundle 2 tracks the strict-FK closure. Seeinternal/repository/postgres/auth.go::AddPermission'sTODO(bundle-2)comment.
Granting + revoking access
From the GUI
/auth/roles lists every role; click into one to see its
permissions and (if you hold auth.role.edit) add or remove a
permission. /auth/keys lists every actor with role grants;
click "Assign role" to grant, click the × on a role tag to revoke.
The synthetic actor-demo-anon row is shown but flagged
"system-managed" with the mutation buttons hidden - the server-side
reserved-actor guard rejects mutations against it regardless.
From the CLI
# Identity probe - what can the current API key actually do?
certctl-cli auth me
# Roles
certctl-cli auth roles list
certctl-cli auth roles get r-admin
# Permissions catalogue
certctl-cli auth permissions list
# Key → role assignment
certctl-cli auth keys list
certctl-cli auth keys assign alice --role r-operator
certctl-cli auth keys revoke alice --role r-admin
# Walk-every-key prompt for downgrade
certctl-cli auth keys scope-down
# Audit-driven role suggestion (last 30 days of audit events)
certctl-cli auth keys scope-down --suggest
certctl-cli auth keys scope-down --suggest --apply
# JSON-driven scope-down for automation (Helm post-upgrade hook etc.)
certctl-cli auth keys scope-down --non-interactive ./scope-down.json
The mutating role-lifecycle commands (certctl-cli auth roles create / update / delete + roles add-permission / remove-permission)
are tracked as Bundle 1 Phase 5.5 follow-up; today, manage custom
roles via the HTTP API or GUI.
From the HTTP API
Every endpoint is documented in api/openapi.yaml under the [Auth]
tag. Quick reference:
| Endpoint | Permission |
|---|---|
GET /v1/auth/me |
(none - own data) |
GET /v1/auth/roles |
auth.role.list |
GET /v1/auth/roles/{id} |
auth.role.list |
POST /v1/auth/roles |
auth.role.create |
PUT /v1/auth/roles/{id} |
auth.role.edit |
DELETE /v1/auth/roles/{id} |
auth.role.delete |
GET /v1/auth/permissions |
auth.role.list |
POST /v1/auth/roles/{id}/permissions |
auth.role.edit |
DELETE /v1/auth/roles/{id}/permissions/{perm} |
auth.role.edit |
GET /v1/auth/keys |
auth.role.list |
POST /v1/auth/keys/{id}/roles |
auth.role.assign |
DELETE /v1/auth/keys/{id}/roles/{role_id} |
auth.role.assign |
GET /v1/auth/check |
(authenticated; surfaces effective perms) |
GET /v1/auth/bootstrap + POST /v1/auth/bootstrap |
(auth-exempt; gated by env-var token) |
From the MCP server
Bundle 1 Phase 11 ships 12 RBAC tools:
certctl_auth_me, certctl_auth_list_roles, certctl_auth_get_role,
certctl_auth_create_role, certctl_auth_update_role,
certctl_auth_delete_role, certctl_auth_list_permissions,
certctl_auth_add_permission_to_role,
certctl_auth_remove_permission_from_role,
certctl_auth_list_keys, certctl_auth_assign_role_to_key,
certctl_auth_revoke_role_from_key. Each routes through the same
HTTP surface above; permission gates fire server-side.
The auditor pattern
Hand the auditor key to compliance reviewers. They get:
GET /api/v1/audit?category=auth- every auth/authz mutation in the system (role creates, role grants on actors, bootstrap consumption, etc.).GET /api/v1/audit?category=cert_lifecycle- every cert event.GET /api/v1/audit?category=config- every issuer / target / settings edit.GET /api/v1/audit/export- bulk export.
They do NOT get cert read, profile read, issuer read, or any mutating permission. The categorization is enforced by the database CHECK constraint (migration 000032); the WORM trigger from migration 000018 keeps the audit table append-only at the DB layer.
To create an auditor key:
certctl-cli auth keys assign <key-id> --role r-auditor- (Optional) Revoke any other roles the key holds with
certctl-cli auth keys revoke <key-id> --role r-... - Confirm via
certctl-cli auth mewhile authenticated as the auditor key - the response should show onlyaudit.readandaudit.exportineffective_permissions.
Day-0 bootstrap (first-admin path)
Bundle 1 Phase 6 ships a one-shot bootstrap endpoint for fresh deployments where no admin actor exists yet.
-
Set
CERTCTL_BOOTSTRAP_TOKEN=$(openssl rand -hex 32)in the server environment. -
Boot the server. Logs include "bootstrap endpoint enabled - POST /api/v1/auth/bootstrap to mint the first admin key (one-shot)" when the path is callable.
-
Run a single curl:
curl -X POST $URL/api/v1/auth/bootstrap \ -H 'Content-Type: application/json' \ -d '{"token":"<the-token>","actor_name":"first-admin"}' -
Capture the
key_valuefrom the response. It is shown ONCE. The server never logs it. -
Use the new key to authenticate against the rest of the API. The bootstrap path is now closed: subsequent calls return HTTP 410 Gone, even with the same valid token, because an admin actor exists.
The token is constant-time-compared. The server logs a startup
warning if CERTCTL_BOOTSTRAP_TOKEN is set AND admin actors
already exist (config-drift signal). For OIDC-first-admin (the
"first user who signs in via SSO becomes admin" pattern), wait for
Bundle 2.
Demo mode (CERTCTL_AUTH_TYPE=none)
When auth is disabled, the server injects a synthetic actor
actor-demo-anon into every request context. That actor holds
r-admin at global scope (seeded by migration 000029), so every
gated route resolves with a populated actor and admin grants. The
synthetic actor is reserved: the API rejects any mutation that
targets it (HTTP 409 with ErrAuthReservedActor).
Production deployments MUST NOT use demo mode - there is no
per-request actor identity for the audit trail, and every request
flows as admin. Use it for the docker compose up demo + the five
example folders only.
Where to look next
- Threat model - what attacks this primitive defends against and which it does not
- Migration guide - moving pre-Bundle-1 deployments onto RBAC
- Profiles - the
RequiresApproval=trueflow that Bundle 1 Phase 9 closure protects from flip-flop - Approval workflow - the Rank 7 Infisical deep-research deliverable that the Phase 9 closure piggybacks on
internal/auth/- the middleware + keystore + RequirePermissioninternal/service/auth/- the service-layer Authorizercowork/auth-bundle-1-prompt.md- the design + phase plancowork/auth-bundles-index.md- the per-phase status tracker