Community feedback requested fleet inventory and policy-based targeting. Agents will report OS, platform, IP, hostname via heartbeat; dynamic grouping enables policy scoping by agent criteria instead of manual assignment. Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.6 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
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Architecture Guide
Overview
Certctl is a certificate management platform with a decoupled control-plane and agent architecture. The control plane orchestrates certificate issuance and renewal, while agents deployed across your infrastructure handle key generation, certificate deployment, and local validation — private keys never leave the infrastructure they were generated on.
New to certificates? Read the Concepts Guide first.
Design Principles
- Private Key Isolation — Agents generate ECDSA P-256 keys locally and submit CSRs only. Private keys never touch the control plane. Server-side keygen available via
CERTCTL_KEYGEN_MODE=serverfor demo only. - GUI as Primary Interface — The web dashboard is the operational control plane, not a secondary viewer. Every backend feature ships with its corresponding GUI surface.
- Decoupled Operations — Agents operate autonomously; the control plane coordinates but doesn't block agent function
- Audit-First — Complete traceability of all issuance, deployment, and rotation events
- Connector Architecture — Pluggable issuers, targets, and notifiers for extensibility
- Self-Hosted — No cloud lock-in; run with Docker Compose, Kubernetes, or bare metal
System Components
flowchart TB
subgraph "Control Plane"
API["REST API\n(Go net/http, :8443)"]
SVC["Service Layer"]
REPO["Repository Layer\n(database/sql + lib/pq)"]
SCHED["Background Scheduler\n4 loops"]
DASH["Web Dashboard\n(React SPA)"]
end
subgraph "Data Store"
PG[("PostgreSQL 16\n14 tables\nTEXT primary keys")]
end
subgraph "Agent Fleet"
A1["Agent: nginx-prod\n(heartbeat + work poll)"]
A2["Agent: f5-prod"]
A3["Agent: iis-prod"]
end
subgraph "Issuer Backends"
CA1["Local CA\n(crypto/x509)"]
CA2["ACME\n(Let's Encrypt)"]
CA3["step-ca\n(planned)"]
CA4["OpenSSL / Custom CA\n(planned)"]
CA5["ADCS\n(planned)"]
CA6["Vault PKI\n(planned)"]
end
subgraph "Target Systems"
T1["NGINX\n(file write + reload)"]
T2["F5 BIG-IP\n(iControl REST, planned)"]
T3["IIS\n(WinRM, planned)"]
end
DASH --> API
API --> SVC
SVC --> REPO
REPO --> PG
SCHED --> SVC
SVC -->|"Issue/Renew"| CA1 & CA2 & CA3
A1 & A2 & A3 -->|"CSR + Heartbeat"| API
API -->|"Cert + Chain\n(NO private key)"| A1 & A2 & A3
A1 -->|"Deploy"| T1
A2 -->|"Deploy"| T2
A3 -->|"Deploy"| T3
Control Plane (Server)
The control plane is a Go HTTP server backed by PostgreSQL. It manages state (certificates, agents, targets, issuers, policies), orchestrates issuance by coordinating with CAs through issuer connectors, tracks jobs for certificate issuance/renewal/deployment workflows, maintains an immutable audit trail, and dispatches work via a background scheduler.
The server exposes a REST API under /api/v1/ and optionally serves the web dashboard as static files from the web/ directory.
Key internals: The server uses Go 1.22's net/http stdlib routing (no external router framework), structured logging via slog, and a handler → service → repository layered architecture. Handlers define their own service interfaces for clean dependency inversion.
Agents
Lightweight Go processes that run on or near your infrastructure. Agents generate ECDSA P-256 private keys locally, create CSRs, and submit them to the control plane for signing — private keys never leave agent infrastructure. Agents also handle certificate deployment to target systems (NGINX, F5, IIS) and report job status. They communicate with the control plane via HTTP and authenticate with API keys.
The agent runs two background loops: a heartbeat (every 60 seconds) to signal it's alive, and a work poll (every 30 seconds) to check for actionable jobs via GET /api/v1/agents/{id}/work. Jobs may be AwaitingCSR (agent needs to generate key + submit CSR) or Deployment (agent needs to deploy a certificate). Private keys are stored in CERTCTL_KEY_DIR (default /var/lib/certctl/keys) with 0600 permissions.
Planned (V2): Agent metadata collection — agents will report OS, platform, architecture, IP address, and hostname via heartbeat using runtime.GOOS, runtime.GOARCH, and net stdlib. This metadata enables dynamic device grouping, allowing policies to be scoped by agent criteria (e.g., all Ubuntu agents, all agents in a specific subnet) rather than requiring manual per-certificate assignment.
Web Dashboard
The web dashboard is the primary operational interface for certctl. It is built with Vite + React + TypeScript and uses TanStack Query for server state management (caching, background refetching, optimistic updates).
Current views: certificate inventory (list with "New Certificate" creation modal + detail with version history, deploy, archive, and trigger renewal actions), agent fleet (health indicators from heartbeat), job queue (status, retry, cancel), notification inbox (threshold alert grouping, mark-as-read), audit trail (time range and actor/action filters), policy management (rules with enable/disable toggle + delete + violations), issuers (list with test connection + delete), targets (list with delete), and a summary dashboard.
The dashboard includes a demo mode that activates when the API is unreachable — it renders realistic mock data for screenshots and offline presentations.
Tech decisions:
- Vite for fast builds and HMR during development
- TanStack Query over manual fetch/useEffect for automatic cache invalidation and refetching
- Dark theme default (ops teams live in dark mode)
- SSE/WebSocket planned for real-time job status updates (V2.0)
PostgreSQL Database
All state is stored in PostgreSQL 16. The schema uses TEXT primary keys (not UUIDs) with human-readable prefixed IDs like mc-api-prod, t-platform, o-alice.
erDiagram
teams ||--o{ owners : "has members"
teams ||--o{ managed_certificates : "owns"
owners ||--o{ managed_certificates : "responsible for"
issuers ||--o{ managed_certificates : "signs"
renewal_policies ||--o{ managed_certificates : "governs"
managed_certificates ||--o{ certificate_versions : "has versions"
managed_certificates ||--o{ certificate_target_mappings : "deployed to"
deployment_targets ||--o{ certificate_target_mappings : "receives"
agents ||--o{ deployment_targets : "manages"
managed_certificates ||--o{ jobs : "triggers"
policy_rules ||--o{ policy_violations : "produces"
managed_certificates ||--o{ policy_violations : "violates"
managed_certificates ||--o{ audit_events : "logged in"
managed_certificates ||--o{ notification_events : "generates"
teams {
text id PK
text name
text description
}
owners {
text id PK
text name
text email
text team_id FK
}
managed_certificates {
text id PK
text name
text common_name
text[] sans
text environment
text owner_id FK
text team_id FK
text issuer_id FK
text renewal_policy_id FK
text status
timestamp expires_at
jsonb tags
}
certificate_versions {
text id PK
text certificate_id FK
text serial_number
text fingerprint_sha256
text pem_chain
text csr_pem
}
agents {
text id PK
text name
text hostname
text status
text api_key_hash
}
deployment_targets {
text id PK
text name
text type
text agent_id FK
jsonb config
}
issuers {
text id PK
text name
text type
jsonb config
boolean enabled
}
jobs {
text id PK
text type
text certificate_id FK
text target_id FK
text status
int attempts
}
policy_rules {
text id PK
text name
text type
jsonb config
boolean enabled
}
policy_violations {
text id PK
text certificate_id FK
text rule_id FK
text message
text severity
}
audit_events {
text id PK
text actor
text actor_type
text action
text resource_type
text resource_id
jsonb details
}
notification_events {
text id PK
text type
text certificate_id FK
text channel
text recipient
text status
}
Migrations are idempotent (IF NOT EXISTS on all CREATE statements, ON CONFLICT (id) DO NOTHING on all seed data) so they're safe to run multiple times — important for Docker Compose where both initdb and the server may run the same SQL.
Data Flow: Certificate Lifecycle
1. Create Managed Certificate
sequenceDiagram
participant U as User / API Client
participant API as REST API
participant SVC as CertificateService
participant DB as PostgreSQL
participant AUD as AuditService
U->>API: POST /api/v1/certificates<br/>{name, common_name, sans, ...}
API->>SVC: Create(ctx, certificate)
SVC->>SVC: Validate required fields
SVC->>DB: INSERT INTO managed_certificates
SVC->>AUD: Create(audit_event: certificate_created)
AUD->>DB: INSERT INTO audit_events
SVC-->>API: ManagedCertificate
API-->>U: 201 Created + JSON body
2. Certificate Issuance
Agent-Side Key Generation (Default)
In the default agent keygen mode (CERTCTL_KEYGEN_MODE=agent), the control plane never touches private keys. When a renewal or issuance job is created, it enters AwaitingCSR state. The agent picks it up, generates an ECDSA P-256 key pair locally, and submits only the CSR (public key).
sequenceDiagram
participant S as Scheduler
participant SVC as RenewalService
participant DB as PostgreSQL
participant A as Agent
participant API as Control Plane API
participant ISS as Issuer Connector
S->>SVC: ProcessRenewalJob(job)
SVC->>DB: UPDATE job SET status='AwaitingCSR'
SVC->>DB: UPDATE cert SET status='RenewalInProgress'
A->>API: GET /agents/{id}/work
API-->>A: [{id, type:"Renewal", status:"AwaitingCSR", common_name, sans}]
A->>A: Generate ECDSA P-256 key pair
A->>A: Store key to CERTCTL_KEY_DIR/certId.key (0600)
A->>A: Create CSR with CN + SANs
A->>API: POST /agents/{id}/csr<br/>{csr_pem, certificate_id}
API->>SVC: CompleteAgentCSRRenewal(job, cert, csrPEM)
SVC->>ISS: RenewCertificate(CN, SANs, csrPEM)
ISS-->>SVC: IssuanceResult{cert_pem, chain_pem, serial}
SVC->>DB: INSERT INTO certificate_versions (PEM chain + CSR only)
SVC->>DB: UPDATE cert SET status='Active', expires_at
SVC->>DB: CREATE deployment jobs for targets
Note over A: Agent deploys using locally-held private key
Server-Side Key Generation (Demo Only)
Set CERTCTL_KEYGEN_MODE=server for development/demo with Local CA. The control plane generates RSA-2048 keys server-side. A log warning is emitted at startup.
sequenceDiagram
participant U as User / Scheduler
participant SVC as RenewalService
participant ISS as IssuerConnector
participant DB as PostgreSQL
U->>SVC: ProcessRenewalJob(job)
SVC->>SVC: Generate RSA-2048 key pair (server-side)
SVC->>SVC: Create CSR with CN + SANs
SVC->>ISS: RenewCertificate(CN, SANs, csrPEM)
ISS-->>SVC: IssuanceResult{cert_pem, chain_pem, serial}
SVC->>DB: INSERT INTO certificate_versions (PEM + private key)
SVC->>DB: UPDATE cert SET status='Active'
SVC->>DB: CREATE deployment jobs
Note over SVC: WARNING: Private keys touch control plane
3. Deploy Certificate to Target
The agent deploys certificates using target connectors. Each connector knows how to push certificates to a specific system:
- NGINX: Writes cert/chain files to disk, validates config with
nginx -t, reloads withnginx -s reloadorsystemctl reload nginx - F5 BIG-IP: Calls the F5 REST API to upload certificate and update virtual server bindings
- IIS: Uses WinRM to import the certificate into the Windows certificate store and bind it to an IIS site
The agent handles both the certificate (public) and the private key (read from local key store at CERTCTL_KEY_DIR). The control plane never sees the private key.
4. Automatic Renewal
The control plane runs a scheduler with four background loops:
flowchart LR
subgraph "Scheduler (Background Goroutines)"
R["Renewal Checker\n⏱ every 1h"]
J["Job Processor\n⏱ every 30s"]
H["Agent Health\n⏱ every 2m"]
N["Notification Processor\n⏱ every 1m"]
end
R -->|"Find expiring certs\nCreate renewal jobs"| DB[("PostgreSQL")]
J -->|"Process pending jobs\nCoordinate issuance"| DB
H -->|"Check heartbeat staleness\nMark agents offline"| DB
N -->|"Send pending notifications\nEmail / Webhook"| DB
| Loop | Interval | Purpose |
|---|---|---|
| Renewal checker | 1 hour | Finds certificates approaching expiry, creates renewal jobs |
| Job processor | 30 seconds | Processes pending jobs (issuance, renewal, deployment) |
| Agent health check | 2 minutes | Marks agents as offline if heartbeat is stale |
| Notification processor | 1 minute | Sends pending notifications via configured channels |
When the renewal checker finds a certificate within its renewal window, it performs two tasks: threshold-based alerting and renewal job creation.
Threshold-Based Expiration Alerting: Each renewal policy defines configurable alert thresholds (default: 30, 14, 7, 0 days before expiry). For each certificate approaching expiry, the scheduler checks which thresholds have been crossed and sends deduplicated notifications. A certificate that crosses the 14-day threshold only gets one 14-day alert, even though the renewal checker runs every hour. Deduplication is tracked via threshold tags embedded in the notification message and queried with the MessageLike filter. Certificates are also transitioned to Expiring status when they enter the alert window and Expired when they hit 0 days.
Renewal Job Creation: If the certificate's issuer has a registered connector, the scheduler creates a renewal job. The job processor picks it up, coordinates with the issuer, and triggers deployment. All steps are logged in the audit trail and generate notifications.
Connector Architecture
Certctl uses connector interfaces for extensibility. Each connector type has a standard interface that implementations must satisfy.
flowchart TB
subgraph "Issuer Connectors"
direction TB
II["IssuerConnector Interface\nIssueCertificate() | RenewCertificate()\nRevokeCertificate() | GetOrderStatus()"]
II --> LC["Local CA"]
II --> ACME["ACME v2"]
II --> SC["step-ca (planned)"]
II --> OC["OpenSSL / Custom CA (planned)"]
II --> AD["ADCS (planned)"]
II --> VP["Vault PKI (planned)"]
end
subgraph "Target Connectors"
direction TB
TI["TargetConnector Interface\nDeployCertificate()\nValidateDeployment()"]
TI --> NG["NGINX"]
TI --> F5["F5 BIG-IP (interface only)"]
TI --> IIS["IIS (interface only)"]
end
subgraph "Notifier Connectors"
direction TB
NI["NotifierConnector Interface\nSendAlert() | SendEvent()"]
NI --> EM["Email (SMTP)"]
NI --> WH["Webhook (HTTP)"]
NI --> SL["Slack (future)"]
end
IssuerConnectorAdapter (Dependency Inversion)
The service layer defines its own IssuerConnector interface (internal/service/renewal.go) while the connector layer has its own issuer.Connector interface (internal/connector/issuer/interface.go). The IssuerConnectorAdapter (internal/service/issuer_adapter.go) bridges the two, translating between their request/response types. This maintains clean dependency inversion — the service package never imports the connector package directly.
flowchart LR
SVC["Service Layer<br/>service.IssuerConnector"] --> ADAPT["IssuerConnectorAdapter<br/>(bridges interfaces)"]
ADAPT --> CONN["Connector Layer<br/>issuer.Connector"]
CONN --> LC["Local CA"]
CONN --> ACME["ACME v2"]
Registration happens in cmd/server/main.go:
localCA := local.New(nil, logger)
issuerRegistry := map[string]service.IssuerConnector{
"iss-local": service.NewIssuerConnectorAdapter(localCA),
}
Issuer Connector
Handles certificate issuance from CAs.
type Connector interface {
ValidateConfig(ctx context.Context, config json.RawMessage) error
IssueCertificate(ctx context.Context, request IssuanceRequest) (*IssuanceResult, error)
RenewCertificate(ctx context.Context, request RenewalRequest) (*IssuanceResult, error)
RevokeCertificate(ctx context.Context, request RevocationRequest) error
GetOrderStatus(ctx context.Context, orderID string) (*OrderStatus, error)
}
Built-in issuers: Local CA (self-signed, in-memory CA for development/demos using crypto/x509) and ACME v2 (fully implemented with HTTP-01 challenge solving, compatible with Let's Encrypt, Sectigo, and any ACME-compliant CA). The ACME connector uses golang.org/x/crypto/acme, generates an ECDSA P-256 account key, handles account registration with ToS acceptance, order creation, HTTP-01 challenge solving via a built-in temporary HTTP server, order finalization, and DER-to-PEM chain conversion. Configure via CERTCTL_ACME_DIRECTORY_URL and CERTCTL_ACME_EMAIL.
Target Connector
Deploys certificates to infrastructure. The DeploymentRequest includes KeyPEM because agents generate and hold private keys locally — the key is passed from the agent's local key store into the target connector, never from the control plane.
type Connector interface {
ValidateConfig(ctx context.Context, config json.RawMessage) error
DeployCertificate(ctx context.Context, request DeploymentRequest) (*DeploymentResult, error)
ValidateDeployment(ctx context.Context, request ValidationRequest) (*ValidationResult, error)
}
The DeploymentRequest struct carries the full material needed by the target system: the signed certificate, the CA chain, the agent-generated private key, target-specific configuration, and arbitrary metadata. The key field is populated by the agent from its local key store (CERTCTL_KEY_DIR) — it never originates from the control plane.
Built-in targets: NGINX (writes cert/chain/key files, validates with nginx -t, reloads), F5 BIG-IP (REST API upload + virtual server binding), IIS (WinRM PFX import + site binding).
Notifier Connector
Sends alerts about certificate lifecycle events.
type Connector interface {
ValidateConfig(ctx context.Context, config json.RawMessage) error
SendAlert(ctx context.Context, alert Alert) error
SendEvent(ctx context.Context, event Event) error
}
Built-in notifiers: Email (SMTP) and Webhook (HTTP POST).
See the Connector Development Guide for details on building custom connectors.
Security Model
Private Key Management
flowchart LR
subgraph "Agent (Your Infrastructure)"
GEN["1. GENERATE\ncrypto/ecdsa P-256"]
STORE["2. STORE\nFile perms 0600"]
USE["3. USE\nCSR gen + deployment"]
ROT["4. ROTATE\nDelete old after renewal"]
end
subgraph "Control Plane (certctl-server)"
CP["Only sees:\n• Certificates (public)\n• Chains (public)\n• CSRs (public key only)"]
end
GEN --> STORE --> USE --> ROT
USE -.->|"CSR (public key only)"| CP
CP -.->|"Signed cert + chain"| USE
style CP fill:#fee,stroke:#c33
style GEN fill:#efe,stroke:#3c3
style STORE fill:#efe,stroke:#3c3
style USE fill:#efe,stroke:#3c3
style ROT fill:#efe,stroke:#3c3
Agent keygen mode (default, CERTCTL_KEYGEN_MODE=agent): Private keys follow a strict lifecycle on agents:
- Generated on the agent — ECDSA P-256, never sent to the control plane
- Stored on the agent —
CERTCTL_KEY_DIRwith file permissions 0600 - Used by the agent — for deployment to targets (via
DeploymentRequest.KeyPEM) - Rotated by the agent — old keys overwritten after successful renewal
The control plane only handles public material: certificates, chains, and CSRs.
Server keygen mode (CERTCTL_KEYGEN_MODE=server, demo only): The control plane generates RSA-2048 keys server-side within processRenewalServerKeygen. Private keys are stored in certificate_versions.csr_pem. A log warning is emitted at startup. Use only for Local CA development/demo.
Authentication
- API clients → Server: API key in
Authorization: Bearerheader, ornonefor demo mode - Agent → Server: API key registered at agent creation, included in all requests
- Server → Issuers: ACME account key, or connector-specific credentials
- Agent → Targets: SSH keys, API tokens, WinRM credentials (stored locally on agent)
Audit Trail
Every action is recorded as an immutable audit event:
{
"id": "audit-001",
"actor": "o-alice",
"actor_type": "User",
"action": "certificate_created",
"resource_type": "certificate",
"resource_id": "mc-api-prod",
"details": {"environment": "production"},
"timestamp": "2026-03-14T10:30:00Z"
}
Audit events cannot be modified or deleted. They support filtering by actor, action, resource type, resource ID, and time range.
API Design
All endpoints are under /api/v1/ and follow consistent patterns:
- List:
GET /api/v1/{resources}— returns{data: [...], total, page, per_page} - Get:
GET /api/v1/{resources}/{id}— returns the resource - Create:
POST /api/v1/{resources}— returns the created resource with201 - Update:
PUT /api/v1/{resources}/{id}— returns the updated resource - Delete:
DELETE /api/v1/{resources}/{id}— returns204(soft delete/archive) - Actions:
POST /api/v1/{resources}/{id}/{action}— returns202for async operations
Resources: certificates, issuers, targets, agents, jobs, policies, teams, owners, audit, notifications.
Health checks live outside the API prefix: GET /health and GET /ready.
Deployment Topologies
Docker Compose (Development / Small Deployments)
flowchart TB
subgraph "Docker Network (certctl-network)"
SERVER["certctl-server\n:8443\nAPI + Dashboard"]
PG[("PostgreSQL\n:5432\nSchema + Seed Data")]
AGENT["certctl-agent\nHeartbeat + Work Poll"]
end
USER["Browser / curl"] -->|"HTTP :8443"| SERVER
SERVER -->|"SQL"| PG
AGENT -->|"HTTP (internal)"| SERVER
Production (Kubernetes)
flowchart TB
subgraph "Kubernetes Cluster"
subgraph "Control Plane"
DEP["Deployment\ncertctl-server\nreplicas: 2+"]
CM["ConfigMap\nIssuer/target configs"]
SEC["Secret\nAPI keys, ACME creds"]
end
subgraph "Data"
SS[("StatefulSet\nPostgreSQL\nprimary + replica")]
end
subgraph "Agent Fleet"
DS["DaemonSet\ncertctl-agent\n(infra nodes)"]
end
end
ING["Ingress\n+ TLS termination"] --> DEP
DEP --> SS
DEP --> CM & SEC
DS --> DEP
For production, you would also add an ingress controller, TLS termination for the certctl API itself, and external PostgreSQL (RDS, Cloud SQL, etc.).
Testing Strategy
certctl uses a layered testing approach aligned with the handler → service → repository architecture, with 220+ tests across five layers (service, handler, integration, connector, and frontend). The goal is high-confidence regression prevention at the service and handler layers, where the most complex business logic lives, combined with integration tests that exercise the full request path from HTTP to database.
Service layer unit tests (internal/service/*_test.go) — 74 test functions across 7 files with mock repositories. These test all business logic in isolation: certificate CRUD with validation, agent lifecycle (registration, heartbeat, CSR submission with both keygen modes), job state machine (creation, processing, cancellation, retry logic), policy evaluation (all 4 rule types, violation creation), renewal and issuance flow (server-side and agent-side keygen paths), and notification deduplication (threshold tag matching, channel routing). Mock repositories are simple structs with function fields, avoiding heavy mocking frameworks — this keeps tests readable and avoids coupling to mock library APIs.
Handler layer tests (internal/api/handler/*_test.go) — 119 test functions across 7 files using Go's httptest package. Every handler file has a corresponding test file: certificates (20 tests), agents (20 tests), jobs (14 tests), notifications (11 tests), policies (15 tests), issuers (15 tests), and targets (14 tests). Each test file follows the same pattern: a mock service struct with function fields, httptest.NewRecorder for capturing responses, and a shared contextWithRequestID() helper. Tests cover the happy path, input validation (missing fields, invalid JSON, empty IDs), error propagation from the service layer, method-not-allowed responses, and pagination parameters.
Integration tests (internal/integration/) — Two test files exercising the full stack from HTTP request through router, handler, service, and postgres repository layers. lifecycle_test.go has 11 subtests covering the complete certificate lifecycle: team/owner creation, certificate creation, issuer verification, renewal trigger, job verification, agent registration, CSR submission, deployment, and status reporting. negative_test.go has 12 subtests covering error paths: nonexistent resource lookups (404s), invalid request bodies (malformed JSON, missing required fields), invalid CSR submission, heartbeat for nonexistent agents, wrong HTTP methods on list endpoints, empty list responses, renewal on nonexistent certificates, and expired certificate lifecycle. Both use a shared setupTestServer() that builds a fully-wired server with real postgres repositories and the Local CA issuer connector.
Frontend tests (web/src/api/client.test.ts, web/src/api/utils.test.ts) — 53 Vitest tests covering the API client and utility functions. The API client tests mock globalThis.fetch and verify all endpoint functions (certificates, agents, jobs, policies, issuers, targets, notifications, audit, health) send correct HTTP methods, URLs, headers, and request bodies. They also test API key management (store/retrieve/clear), auth header propagation, 401 event dispatching, and error handling (server messages, error fields, status text fallback). The utility tests use vi.useFakeTimers() for deterministic date testing and cover formatDate, formatDateTime, timeAgo, daysUntil, and expiryColor. The test environment uses jsdom with @testing-library/jest-dom matchers.
CI pipeline (.github/workflows/ci.yml) — Two parallel jobs: Go (build, vet, test with coverage, coverage threshold enforcement) and Frontend (TypeScript type check, Vitest test suite, Vite production build). The Go job runs all tests with -coverprofile, then enforces coverage thresholds: service layer must be at least 30% (current: ~34%) and handler layer must be at least 50% (current: ~61%). These thresholds act as regression floors — they can only go up. The service layer threshold is deliberately lower because much of the service code depends on postgres repositories and external connectors that require real infrastructure to test meaningfully. Connector tests are included via ./internal/connector/issuer/local/... (the Local CA package, which has unit tests for certificate signing logic). The Frontend job runs npx vitest run between the TypeScript check and production build steps.
What's not tested and why: Postgres repository implementations (internal/repository/postgres/) require a real database and are tested only through integration tests, not unit tests. Target connectors (NGINX, F5, IIS) depend on real infrastructure or complex mocks. Scheduler loops are time-dependent and tested manually during development. The ACME connector requires a real ACME server (tested manually against Let's Encrypt staging). These are all candidates for future expansion as the test infrastructure matures.
What's Next
- Quick Start — Get certctl running locally
- Advanced Demo — Issue a certificate end-to-end
- Connector Guide — Build custom connectors