Files
certctl/docs/architecture.md
T
shankar0123 675b87ba63 I-005: notification retry loop + dead-letter queue
Critical alerts can no longer be silently dropped by a transient
notifier failure. Failed notification attempts now ride an exponential
backoff retry loop, with a 5-attempt budget before promotion to the
dead-letter queue for operator intervention.

Schema (migration 000016, idempotent):
- retry_count INTEGER NOT NULL DEFAULT 0
- next_retry_at TIMESTAMPTZ
- last_error TEXT
- idx_notification_events_retry_sweep partial index
  (next_retry_at) WHERE status='failed' AND next_retry_at IS NOT NULL
  Dead rows clear next_retry_at so the index stops matching them.

Service contract:
- NotificationService.RetryFailedNotifications drives 2^n-minute
  exponential backoff capped at 1h (notifRetryBackoffCap) with
  5-attempt budget (notifRetryMaxAttempts).
- Exhaustion (RetryCount >= notifRetryMaxAttempts-1) promotes to
  status='dead' via MarkAsDead.
- Non-terminal failures record via RecordFailedAttempt.
- Success path promotes to 'sent' without touching retry_count
  (audit preserves "delivered on attempt N").
- Missing-notifier branch defensively promotes to 'sent' to avoid
  wedging a row on a deleted channel.
- RequeueNotification operator escape hatch atomically resets
  retry_count -> 0, next_retry_at -> NULL, last_error -> NULL,
  status -> pending via notifRepo.Requeue.

Scheduler:
- New always-on notificationRetryLoop wired into the base loop set at
  CERTCTL_NOTIFICATION_RETRY_INTERVAL (default 2m).
- sync/atomic.Bool idempotency guard.
- sync.WaitGroup shutdown drain via WaitForCompletion.

StatsService:
- SetNotifRepo setter pattern preserves 9 pre-existing
  NewStatsService call sites (main.go + stats_test.go + 8 digest
  tests) without touching the constructor signature.
- DashboardSummary.NotificationsDead populated via
  notifRepo.CountByStatus(ctx, "dead") — nil-safe when unwired
  (reports zero on systems without a notification repository).
- CountByStatus error is non-fatal (dashboard summary is
  best-effort for this field).
- Prometheus certctl_notification_dead_total counter emitted from
  the same snapshot.

Handler:
- New POST /api/v1/notifications/{id}/requeue endpoint.
- dead status surfaces to MCP + CLI.

Frontend:
- NotificationsPage gains two-tab toolbar ("All" / "Dead letter")
  with queryKey: ['notifications', activeTab] so switching tabs
  doesn't serve stale data until the 30s refetch.
- Dead rows surface "Retry {n}/5" + truncated last_error with
  full-text title tooltip.
- Requeue mutation wrapped as
    mutationFn: (id: string) => requeueNotification(id)
  to prevent react-query v5's positional context argument from
  leaking into the API client — pinned against future refactors
  by strict-match toHaveBeenCalledWith('notif-dead-001') in
  NotificationsPage.test.tsx:181.

Closes I-005.
2026-04-19 15:17:27 +00:00

80 KiB

Architecture Guide

Contents

  1. Overview
  2. System Components
  3. Data Flow: Certificate Lifecycle
  4. Connector Architecture
  5. Security Model
  6. API Design
  7. MCP Server
  8. CLI Tool
  9. Deployment Topologies
  10. Discovery Data Flow (M18b + M21)
  11. Testing Strategy
  12. What's Next

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

  1. 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=server for demo only.
  2. Pull-Only Deployment — The server never initiates outbound connections to agents or targets. Agents poll for work and receive only jobs assigned to their targets (routed via agent_id on jobs or through target→agent relationships). For network appliances and agentless targets, a proxy agent in the same network zone executes deployments via the target's API. This keeps the control plane firewalled off and limits credential scope to the proxy agent's zone.
  3. Sub-CA Capable — The Local CA can operate as a subordinate CA under an enterprise root (e.g., ADCS). Load a pre-signed CA cert+key from disk and all issued certs chain to the enterprise trust hierarchy. Self-signed mode remains the default for development/demos.
  4. 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.
  5. Decoupled Operations — Agents operate autonomously; the control plane coordinates but doesn't block agent function
  6. Audit-First — Complete traceability of all issuance, deployment, and rotation events
  7. Connector Architecture — Pluggable issuers, targets, and notifiers for extensibility
  8. 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\n8 always-on + 4 optional loops"]
        DASH["Web Dashboard\n(React SPA)"]
    end

    subgraph "Data Store"
        PG[("PostgreSQL 16\n21 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, sub-CA)"]
        CA2["ACME\n(HTTP-01 + DNS-01 + DNS-PERSIST-01)\n(EAB, ZeroSSL auto-EAB)"]
        CA3["step-ca\n(/sign API)"]
        CA4["OpenSSL / Custom CA\n(script-based)"]
        CA6["Vault PKI\n(token auth, /sign API)"]
        CA7["DigiCert CertCentral\n(async order model)"]
        CA8["Sectigo SCM\n(async order model)"]
        CA9["Google CAS\n(OAuth2, sync)"]
        CA10["AWS ACM PCA\n(sync issuance)"]
        CA11["Entrust\n(mTLS, sync/async)"]
        CA12["GlobalSign Atlas\n(mTLS + API key)"]
        CA13["EJBCA\n(mTLS or OAuth2)"]
    end

    subgraph "Target Systems"
        T1["NGINX\n(file write + reload)"]
        T4["Apache httpd\n(file write + reload)"]
        T5["HAProxy\n(combined PEM + reload)"]
        T6["Traefik\n(file provider)"]
        T7["Caddy\n(admin API / file)"]
        T8["Envoy\n(file-based SDS)"]
        T9["Postfix/Dovecot\n(file + service reload)"]
        T2["F5 BIG-IP\n(proxy agent + iControl REST)"]
        T3["IIS\n(WinRM + local)"]
        T10["SSH\n(SFTP + reload)"]
        T11["WinCertStore\n(PowerShell import)"]
        T12["Java Keystore\n(keytool pipeline)"]
        T13["Kubernetes Secrets\n(K8s API)"]
    end

    DASH --> API
    API --> SVC
    SVC --> REPO
    REPO --> PG
    SCHED --> SVC
    SVC -->|"Issue/Renew"| CA1 & CA2 & CA3 & CA4 & CA6 & CA7 & CA8 & CA9 & CA10

    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 1.25'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, Apache httpd, HAProxy, Traefik, Caddy, Envoy, Postfix, Dovecot, IIS, F5 BIG-IP, SSH, Windows Certificate Store, Java Keystore, Kubernetes Secrets) 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.

Agent metadata (M10): Agents report OS, architecture, IP address, hostname, and version via heartbeat using runtime.GOOS, runtime.GOARCH, and net stdlib. This metadata is stored on the agents table and displayed in the GUI (agent list shows OS/Arch column, detail page shows full system info).

Agent groups (M11b): Dynamic device grouping allows organizing agents by metadata criteria. Agent groups can match by OS, architecture, IP CIDR, and version. Groups support both dynamic matching (agents automatically join when criteria match) and manual membership (explicit include/exclude). Renewal policies can be scoped to agent groups via the agent_group_id foreign key. The GUI provides full CRUD management for agent groups with visual match criteria badges.

Agent soft-retirement (I-004): DELETE /api/v1/agents/{id} is a soft-delete surface — the row is never removed. Retirement stamps agents.retired_at (TIMESTAMPTZ) and agents.retired_reason (TEXT) and flips the operational status to Offline. Default listings (GET /api/v1/agents, the dashboard stats counter, and the stale-offline sweeper) filter retired rows out via AgentRepository.ListActive; retired rows are surfaced only through the opt-in GET /api/v1/agents/retired view. The endpoint follows a preflight → block → escape-hatch contract:

  • Clean retire (no active dependencies) — 200 OK with RetireAgentResponse (cascade=false, zero counts).
  • Blocked by active dependencies409 Conflict with BlockedByDependenciesResponse. The three counts (active_targets, active_certificates, pending_jobs) tell the operator exactly which rows would be orphaned. The schema diverges from ErrorResponse because downstream dashboards parse the stable three-key shape.
  • Force cascadeDELETE /api/v1/agents/{id}?force=true&reason=.... reason is required (400 otherwise). Transactionally soft-retires downstream deployment_targets, cancels pending jobs, and soft-retires the agent, emitting an agent_retirement_cascaded audit event with actor + reason + per-bucket counts.
  • Idempotent re-retire — a retire attempt against an already-retired agent returns 204 No Content with an empty body (no second audit event, no response shape — callers that POST again on a retry get a clean no-op).
  • Sentinel refusal — the four sentinel agent IDs (server-scanner, cloud-aws-sm, cloud-azure-kv, cloud-gcp-sm) back non-agent discovery subsystems (the network scanner and the three cloud secret-manager sources). They are refused unconditionally — even with force=true — via ErrAgentIsSentinel403 Forbidden. The ID list lives in internal/domain/connector.go (SentinelAgentIDs) so handler, repository, and scheduler code can filter them without importing service.

Retired agents receive 410 Gone on subsequent heartbeats (service.ErrAgentRetired). cmd/agent treats 410 as a terminal signal and exits cleanly so retired agents stop phoning home. Migration 000015 flipped deployment_targets.agent_id from ON DELETE CASCADE to ON DELETE RESTRICT, making the old hard-delete path a schema error and forcing all retirement through this contract.

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 (24 pages): certificate inventory (list with multi-select bulk operations + "New Certificate" creation modal + detail with deployment status timeline, inline policy/profile editor, version history, deploy, revoke, archive, and trigger renewal actions), agent fleet (list + detail with system info + OS/architecture grouping with charts), job queue (list + detail with verification section, timeline, audit events; approve/reject for AwaitingApproval jobs), notification inbox (threshold alert grouping, mark-as-read), audit trail (time range, actor, action filters + CSV/JSON export), policy management (rules with enable/disable toggle + delete + violations), issuers (catalog with 10 type cards + 3-step create wizard + detail with test connection), targets (list with 3-step configuration wizard + detail with deployment history), owners (list with team resolution + delete), teams (list with delete), agent groups (list with dynamic match criteria badges + enable/disable + delete), certificate profiles (list with crypto constraints), short-lived credentials dashboard (TTL countdown, profile filtering, auto-refresh), discovered certificates triage (claim/dismiss unmanaged certs discovered by agents or network scans), network scan targets management (CRUD + Scan Now button), summary dashboard with charts (expiration heatmap, renewal success rate, status distribution, issuance rate), digest preview and send, observability (health, metrics, Prometheus config), and login page.

The dashboard includes an ErrorBoundary component for graceful error recovery — if a view crashes, the boundary catches the error and displays a user-friendly message instead of breaking the entire dashboard. It also 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
  • Light content area with branded dark teal sidebar, Inter + JetBrains Mono typography
  • SSE/WebSocket planned for real-time job status updates

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"
    managed_certificates ||--o{ certificate_revocations : "revoked via"
    agent_groups ||--o{ agent_group_members : "has members"
    agents ||--o{ agent_group_members : "belongs to"
    agents ||--o{ discovered_certificates : "discovers"
    agents ||--o{ discovery_scans : "performs"

    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
        varchar os
        varchar architecture
        varchar ip_address
        varchar version
    }
    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
        int retry_count
        timestamptz next_retry_at
        text last_error
    }
    certificate_profiles {
        text id PK
        text name
        text description
        jsonb allowed_key_types
        int max_validity_days
    }
    agent_groups {
        text id PK
        text name
        text description
        jsonb match_criteria
        boolean enabled
    }
    agent_group_members {
        text id PK
        text agent_group_id FK
        text agent_id FK
        text membership_type
    }
    renewal_policies {
        text id PK
        text certificate_id FK
        int renewal_days_before
        jsonb alert_thresholds_days
        boolean auto_renew
        text agent_group_id FK
    }
    certificate_revocations {
        text id PK
        text certificate_id FK
        text serial_number
        text reason
        timestamp revoked_at
        boolean issuer_notified
    }
    discovered_certificates {
        text id PK
        text agent_id FK
        text fingerprint_sha256
        text common_name
        text source_path
        text status
    }
    discovery_scans {
        text id PK
        text agent_id FK
        int certs_found
        timestamp scanned_at
    }
    network_scan_targets {
        text id PK
        text name
        text[] cidrs
        int[] ports
        boolean enabled
    }

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

Profile enforcement (M11c): Crypto policy enforcement is wired into all four issuance paths: renewal (server-side and agent CSR), agent fallback CSR signing, EST enrollment (RFC 7030), and SCEP enrollment (RFC 8894). At each path, the service layer resolves the certificate's profile and calls ValidateCSRAgainstProfile() to check the CSR key algorithm and minimum key size against the profile's allowed_key_algorithms rules. A CSR with a disallowed key type or insufficient key size is rejected before reaching the issuer connector.

MaxTTL enforcement: When a profile specifies max_ttl_seconds, the value is forwarded through the service-layer IssuerConnector interface to the connector layer via MaxTTLSeconds on IssuanceRequest and RenewalRequest. Each issuer connector enforces the cap according to its capabilities: the Local CA caps NotAfter directly, Vault overrides its TTL string, step-ca caps NotAfter with zero-value handling, and OpenSSL logs an advisory warning (script-based signing can't enforce server-side). For CAs that control validity themselves (ACME, DigiCert, Sectigo, Google CAS, AWS ACM PCA), MaxTTLSeconds passes through but the CA makes the final decision.

Key metadata persistence: Certificate versions record key_algorithm and key_size extracted from the CSR during issuance. This metadata enables post-hoc auditing — operators can verify that all issued certificates comply with the key requirements in effect at the time of issuance.

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/key files to disk, validates config with nginx -t, reloads with nginx -s reload or systemctl reload nginx
  • Apache httpd: Writes separate cert/chain/key files, validates with apachectl configtest, graceful reload
  • HAProxy: Builds a combined PEM file (cert + chain + key), optionally validates config, reloads via systemctl or signal
  • F5 BIG-IP: A proxy agent in the same network zone calls the iControl REST API to upload certificate/key files, install crypto objects, and update the SSL client profile within an atomic transaction. The server assigns the work; the proxy agent executes it.
  • IIS (implemented, dual-mode): (1) Agent-local (recommended) — a Windows agent on the IIS box runs PowerShell Import-PfxCertificate + Set-WebBinding directly with PFX conversion and SHA-1 thumbprint computation. (2) Proxy agent WinRM — for agentless IIS targets, a nearby Windows agent reaches the IIS box via WinRM.

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 and never initiates outbound connections to agents or targets (pull-only model).

3.5 Revoke a Certificate

When a certificate needs immediate revocation (key compromise, decommission, etc.), the control plane executes a 7-step process:

sequenceDiagram
    participant U as User / API Client
    participant API as REST API
    participant SVC as CertificateService
    participant DB as PostgreSQL
    participant ISS as Issuer Connector
    participant NOT as Notification Service

    U->>API: POST /api/v1/certificates/{id}/revoke<br/>{reason: "keyCompromise"}
    API->>SVC: RevokeCertificateWithActor(id, reason, actor)
    SVC->>DB: Validate cert is not already revoked/archived
    SVC->>DB: Get latest certificate version (serial number)
    SVC->>DB: UPDATE managed_certificates SET status='Revoked'
    SVC->>DB: INSERT INTO certificate_revocations<br/>(ON CONFLICT DO NOTHING for idempotency)
    SVC->>ISS: RevokeCertificate(serial, reason)<br/>(best-effort — failure doesn't block)
    SVC->>DB: INSERT audit_event (certificate_revoked)
    SVC->>NOT: SendRevocationNotification(cert, reason)
    SVC-->>API: Updated certificate with Revoked status
    API-->>U: 200 OK

The revocation is recorded in the certificate_revocations table (separate from the certificate status update) for CRL generation. The DER-encoded CRL at GET /.well-known/pki/crl/{issuer_id} (RFC 5280 §5, RFC 8615) is generated on-demand by querying this table and signing with the issuing CA's key. The OCSP responder at GET /.well-known/pki/ocsp/{issuer_id}/{serial} (RFC 6960) checks both the certificate status and the revocations table to return signed good/revoked/unknown responses. Both endpoints are served unauthenticated — relying parties (TLS clients, hardware appliances, browsers) must be able to reach them without a certctl API key — and carry the IANA-registered media types application/pkix-crl and application/ocsp-response respectively.

Short-lived certificates (those with profile TTL < 1 hour) return "good" from OCSP and are excluded from CRL — their rapid expiry is treated as sufficient revocation.

Bulk Revocation

For compliance events requiring fleet-wide revocation (key compromise, CA distrust, mass decommission), certctl supports bulk revocation by filter criteria. The POST /api/v1/certificates/bulk-revoke endpoint accepts filter parameters (profile_id, owner_id, agent_id, issuer_id) and creates individual revocation jobs for each matching certificate. Bulk revocation reuses the same 7-step single-cert flow for each certificate — no new issuer notification or audit mechanics. The operation is idempotent: revoking an already-revoked certificate is a no-op. Partial failures are tolerated — if one certificate fails to revoke (e.g., issuer unavailable), the operation continues for remaining certs and returns a summary. A single bulk_revocation_initiated audit event logs the operation with filter criteria, operator actor, and summary (total requested, succeeded, failed counts). Audit events for individual certificate revocations record the operator identity separately. The GUI bulk revoke button on the certificates list filters by visible selections and displays an affected-cert count modal before confirmation.

4. Automatic Renewal

The control plane runs a scheduler with 8 always-on loops plus up to 4 optional loops (enabled by configuration). internal/scheduler/scheduler.go:262-265 is the authoritative count.

flowchart LR
    subgraph "Scheduler (Background Goroutines)"
        R["Renewal Checker\n⏱ every 1h"]
        J["Job Processor\n⏱ every 30s"]
        JR["Job Retry\n⏱ every 5m"]
        JT["Job Timeout\n⏱ every 10m"]
        H["Agent Health\n⏱ every 2m"]
        N["Notification Processor\n⏱ every 1m"]
        NR["Notification Retry\n⏱ every 2m"]
        SL["Short-Lived Expiry\n⏱ every 30s"]
        NS["Network Scanner\n⏱ every 6h"]
        DG["Certificate Digest\n⏱ every 24h"]
        HC["Endpoint Health\n⏱ every 60s"]
        CD["Cloud Discovery\n⏱ every 6h"]
    end

    R -->|"Find expiring certs\nCreate renewal jobs"| DB[("PostgreSQL")]
    J -->|"Process pending jobs\nCoordinate issuance"| DB
    JR -->|"Retry Failed jobs\nFailed→Pending"| DB
    JT -->|"Reap stalled AwaitingCSR / AwaitingApproval jobs"| DB
    H -->|"Check heartbeat staleness\nMark agents offline"| DB
    N -->|"Send pending notifications\nEmail / Webhook / Slack"| DB
    NR -->|"Retry failed notifications\n2^n-min backoff, DLQ after 5 attempts"| DB
    SL -->|"Expire short-lived certs\nMark as Expired"| DB
    NS -->|"Probe TLS endpoints\nStore discovered certs"| DB
    DG -->|"Generate & send HTML digest\nEmail to recipients"| DB
    HC -->|"Probe deployed TLS endpoints\nState machine + mismatch"| DB
    CD -->|"AWS SM / Azure KV / GCP SM\nFeed discovery pipeline"| DB
Loop Interval Always-on? Purpose
Renewal checker 1 hour Yes Finds certificates approaching expiry (threshold-based or ARI-directed), creates renewal jobs
Job processor 30 seconds Yes Processes pending jobs (issuance, renewal, deployment)
Job retry 5 minutes (CERTCTL_SCHEDULER_RETRY_INTERVAL) Yes Transitions Failed jobs back to Pending for re-dispatch (I-001)
Job timeout 10 minutes (CERTCTL_JOB_TIMEOUT_INTERVAL) Yes Reaps AwaitingCSR jobs older than 24h and AwaitingApproval jobs older than 7d to Failed, feeding the retry loop (I-003)
Agent health check 2 minutes Yes Marks agents as offline if heartbeat is stale
Notification processor 1 minute Yes Sends pending notifications via configured channels
Notification retry 2 minutes (CERTCTL_NOTIFICATION_RETRY_INTERVAL) Yes Re-dispatches Failed notifications whose next_retry_at has elapsed; exponential backoff (2^n minutes, capped at 1h), 5-attempt budget, terminal dead status after exhaustion (I-005)
Short-lived expiry 30 seconds Yes Marks expired short-lived certificates (profile TTL < 1 hour)
Network scanner 6 hours Opt-in (CERTCTL_NETWORK_SCAN_ENABLED) Probes TLS endpoints on configured CIDR ranges, stores discovered certs (M21). CIDR size validated at API level — max /20 (4096 IPs) per range.
Certificate digest 24 hours (CERTCTL_DIGEST_INTERVAL) Opt-in (digest service) Generates HTML email with certificate stats, expiration timeline, job health, agent count. Does NOT run on startup — waits for first scheduled tick. Falls back to certificate owner emails if no explicit recipients configured.
Endpoint health 60 seconds (CERTCTL_HEALTH_CHECK_INTERVAL) Opt-in (health check service) Probes deployed TLS endpoints, drives the healthy/degraded/down/cert_mismatch state machine (M48)
Cloud discovery 6 hours Opt-in (at least one cloud source configured) Walks AWS Secrets Manager / Azure Key Vault / GCP Secret Manager, feeds discovery pipeline (M50)

Each loop uses sync/atomic.Bool idempotency guards to prevent concurrent tick execution — if a loop iteration is still running when the next tick fires, the tick is skipped with a warning log. Most loops (including short-lived expiry, job retry, job timeout, and notification retry) run immediately on startup before entering their ticker interval, ensuring no gap between scheduler start and first execution. The certificate digest loop is the exception — it does NOT run on startup, only on scheduled ticks. Graceful shutdown uses sync.WaitGroup with WaitForCompletion() to drain all in-flight work before process exit.

Each operation has a context timeout to prevent indefinite hangs if external services become unresponsive.

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 --> SCA["step-ca"]
        II --> OC["OpenSSL / Custom CA"]
        II --> VP["Vault PKI"]
        II --> DC["DigiCert CertCentral"]
        II --> SG["Sectigo SCM"]
        II --> GC["Google CAS"]
        II --> AP2["AWS ACM PCA"]
        II --> EN["Entrust"]
        II --> GS["GlobalSign Atlas"]
        II --> EJ["EJBCA"]
    end

    subgraph "Target Connectors"
        direction TB
        TI["TargetConnector Interface\nDeployCertificate()\nValidateDeployment()"]
        TI --> NG["NGINX"]
        TI --> AP["Apache httpd"]
        TI --> HP["HAProxy"]
        TI --> TF["Traefik"]
        TI --> CD["Caddy"]
        TI --> EV["Envoy"]
        TI --> PO["Postfix/Dovecot"]
        TI --> IIS["IIS"]
        TI --> F5["F5 BIG-IP"]
        TI --> SSH["SSH"]
        TI --> WCS["WinCertStore"]
        TI --> JKS["Java Keystore"]
        TI --> K8S["K8s Secrets"]
    end

    subgraph "Notifier Connectors"
        direction TB
        NI["NotifierConnector Interface\nSendAlert() | SendEvent()"]
        NI --> EM["Email (SMTP)"]
        NI --> WH["Webhook (HTTP)"]
        NI --> SL["Slack"]
        NI --> TM["Microsoft Teams"]
        NI --> PD["PagerDuty"]
        NI --> OG["OpsGenie"]
    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)
    GenerateCRL(ctx context.Context, revokedCerts []RevokedCertEntry) ([]byte, error)
    SignOCSPResponse(ctx context.Context, req OCSPSignRequest) ([]byte, error)
    GetCACertPEM(ctx context.Context) (string, error)
}

Built-in issuers (9 connectors): Local CA (self-signed or sub-CA mode using crypto/x509), ACME v2 (HTTP-01, DNS-01, and DNS-PERSIST-01 challenges, compatible with Let's Encrypt, ZeroSSL, Sectigo, Google Trust Services, and any ACME-compliant CA), step-ca (Smallstep private CA via native /sign API with JWK provisioner auth), OpenSSL/Custom CA (script-based signing delegating to user-provided shell scripts), Vault PKI (HashiCorp Vault's PKI secrets engine via /sign API with token auth), DigiCert (commercial CA via CertCentral REST API with async order processing), Sectigo SCM (async order model with 3-header auth), Google CAS (Cloud Certificate Authority Service with OAuth2 service account auth), and AWS ACM Private CA (synchronous issuance via ACM PCA API). The ACME connector uses golang.org/x/crypto/acme, generates an ECDSA P-256 account key, handles account registration with ToS acceptance and optional External Account Binding (EAB) for CAs that require it (ZeroSSL, Google Trust Services, SSL.com), order creation, challenge solving (HTTP-01 via built-in server, DNS-01 via script-based hooks, DNS-PERSIST-01 via standing TXT records with auto-fallback to DNS-01), order finalization, and DER-to-PEM chain conversion. For ZeroSSL, EAB credentials are auto-fetched from ZeroSSL's public API when the directory URL is detected as ZeroSSL and no EAB credentials are provided — zero-friction onboarding with no dashboard visit required.

ACME Renewal Information (ARI, RFC 9773): The ACME connector supports CA-directed renewal timing via the GetRenewalInfo() method. Instead of using fixed thresholds (e.g., renew 30 days before expiry), the CA tells certctl when to renew by providing a suggestedWindow with start and end times. This is useful for distributing renewal load during maintenance windows and coordinating mass-revocation scenarios. Enable with CERTCTL_ACME_ARI_ENABLED=true. Cert ID is computed as base64url(SHA-256(DER cert)) per RFC 9773. If the CA doesn't support ARI (404 from the ARI endpoint), certctl automatically falls back to threshold-based renewal — no operator intervention required. Errors from the CA are logged as warnings.

The interface also includes GetCACertPEM(ctx) for CA chain distribution (used by the EST server's /cacerts endpoint).

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 (14 connector types): NGINX (writes cert/chain/key files, validates with nginx -t, reloads), Apache httpd (writes cert/chain/key files, validates with apachectl configtest, graceful reload), HAProxy (combined PEM file with cert+chain+key, validates config, reloads via systemctl/signal), Traefik (file provider — writes cert/key to watched directory, Traefik auto-reloads), Caddy (dual-mode: admin API hot-reload or file-based), Envoy (file-based with optional SDS JSON config), F5 BIG-IP (proxy agent + iControl REST, transaction-based atomic SSL profile updates), IIS (dual-mode: agent-local PowerShell + proxy agent WinRM for agentless targets), Postfix/Dovecot (file write + service reload), SSH (agentless deployment via SSH/SFTP), Windows Certificate Store (PowerShell-based cert import, dual-mode local/WinRM), Java Keystore (PEM → PKCS#12 → keytool pipeline, JKS and PKCS12 formats), Kubernetes Secrets (deploys as kubernetes.io/tls Secrets via injectable K8sClient interface, in-cluster or kubeconfig auth).

After deployment, agents can perform post-deployment TLS verification: the agent probes the live TLS endpoint using crypto/tls.DialWithDialer and compares the SHA-256 fingerprint of the served certificate against what was deployed. Results are reported via POST /api/v1/jobs/{id}/verify and stored on the job record. Verification is best-effort — failures don't block or rollback deployments.

The SSH connector enables agentless deployment to any Linux/Unix server via SSH/SFTP, using the proxy agent pattern. The Kubernetes Secrets connector deploys certificates as kubernetes.io/tls Secrets via an injectable K8sClient interface supporting both in-cluster and out-of-cluster auth.

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), Webhook (HTTP POST), Slack (incoming webhook), Microsoft Teams (MessageCard), PagerDuty (Events API v2), and OpsGenie (Alert API v2). Each is enabled by setting its configuration environment variable.

See the Connector Development Guide for details on building custom connectors.

Notification Retry & Dead-Letter Queue

A transient notifier failure (SMTP timeout, 5xx webhook response, Slack rate-limit) must not silently drop a critical alert. Migration 000016_notification_retry adds three columns to notification_eventsretry_count INTEGER NOT NULL DEFAULT 0, next_retry_at TIMESTAMPTZ (nullable — only meaningful while a row is in failed state), and last_error TEXT (the most recent transient error, preserved for operator triage) — together with a partial index idx_notification_events_retry_sweep ON notification_events(next_retry_at) WHERE status = 'failed' AND next_retry_at IS NOT NULL so the retry hot path scales with the retry-eligible slice rather than the full notification history.

The scheduler's notification-retry loop (see the scheduler section above) calls NotificationService.RetryFailedNotifications(ctx) every CERTCTL_NOTIFICATION_RETRY_INTERVAL (default 2m). Each tick pulls up to 1000 rows via notifRepo.ListRetryEligible(ctx, now, maxAttempts, sweepLimit) — a partial-index-driven query that filters on status='failed' AND next_retry_at <= now() AND retry_count < 5 — and redispatches them through the same notifier registry used by ProcessPendingNotifications. A successful redispatch transitions the row directly to sent without incrementing retry_count, so the audit trail preserves "delivered on attempt N". A failed redispatch re-arms next_retry_at using exponential backoff — wait = min(2^retry_count minutes, 1h) — bumps retry_count, and stamps last_error. When retry_count >= 4 (the fifth attempt has just failed) the row is promoted to the terminal dead status via notifRepo.MarkAsDead, which clears next_retry_at so the partial retry-sweep index stops matching and the row cannot be re-entered into the retry rotation without operator action.

NotificationService.RequeueNotification(ctx, id) is the operator-driven escape hatch from dead. It atomically resets retry_count → 0, next_retry_at → NULL, last_error → NULL, and status → pending, handing the row back to ProcessPendingNotifications on the next 1m tick. This is the correct response to "the notifier outage is resolved, redeliver the queue"; it is not a retry, which is why the retry counter is reset rather than incremented.

The dead-letter depth is surfaced in two places. First, DashboardSummary.NotificationsDead is populated by StatsService.GetDashboardSummary via notifRepo.CountByStatus(ctx, "dead"). The injection uses a SetNotifRepo setter pattern (mirroring CertificateService.SetTargetRepo) rather than a new positional argument to NewStatsService, which keeps all nine existing NewStatsService call sites (main.go plus eight digest tests and stats_test.go) signature-stable — when the notification repository has not been wired in, NotificationsDead falls through to zero. Second, the /api/v1/metrics/prometheus endpoint emits certctl_notification_dead_total as a counter (operator alert thresholds per the I-005 spec: > 0 warning, > 10 critical) using the same DashboardSummary snapshot so the dashboard card and the Prometheus counter cannot skew. The web dashboard exposes a two-tab toolbar on /notifications — "All" (the pre-I-005 inbox) and "Dead letter" (threads ?status=dead into the list query, surfaces Retry N/5 and the truncated last_error with a full-text tooltip per row, and binds a Requeue button to POST /api/v1/notifications/{id}/requeue).

EST Server (RFC 7030)

The EST (Enrollment over Secure Transport) server provides an industry-standard enrollment interface for devices that need certificates without using the REST API. It runs under /.well-known/est/ per RFC 7030 and supports four operations: CA certificate distribution (/cacerts), initial enrollment (/simpleenroll), re-enrollment (/simplereenroll), and CSR attributes (/csrattrs).

Architecture: EST is a handler-level protocol that delegates certificate issuance to an existing IssuerConnector. This means EST is not a new issuer — it's a new interface to the existing issuance infrastructure. The ESTService bridges the ESTHandler to whichever issuer connector is configured via CERTCTL_EST_ISSUER_ID.

Client (WiFi AP, MDM, IoT)
    │
    ▼
ESTHandler (handler layer)
    │  CSR parsing, PKCS#7 response encoding
    ▼
ESTService (service layer)
    │  CSR validation, CN/SAN extraction, audit recording
    ▼
IssuerConnector (connector layer via IssuerConnectorAdapter)
    │  Certificate signing (Local CA, step-ca, etc.)
    ▼
Signed certificate returned as PKCS#7 certs-only

Wire format: EST uses PKCS#7 (RFC 2315) certs-only degenerate SignedData for certificate responses and base64-encoded DER for CSR requests. The handler includes a hand-rolled ASN.1 PKCS#7 builder — no external PKCS#7 dependency. The CSR reader accepts both base64-encoded DER (standard EST wire format) and PEM-encoded PKCS#10 (convenience for debugging).

Interface: The ESTHandler defines an ESTService interface (dependency inversion, same pattern as all other handlers):

type ESTService interface {
    GetCACerts(ctx context.Context) (string, error)
    SimpleEnroll(ctx context.Context, csrPEM string) (*domain.ESTEnrollResult, error)
    SimpleReEnroll(ctx context.Context, csrPEM string) (*domain.ESTEnrollResult, error)
    GetCSRAttrs(ctx context.Context) ([]byte, error)
}

Issuer connector extension: EST required adding GetCACertPEM(ctx) (string, error) to the issuer connector interface so the /cacerts endpoint can serve the CA chain. The Local CA returns its CA certificate PEM; Vault PKI fetches via GET /v1/{mount}/ca/pem; Google CAS fetches via API; AWS ACM PCA retrieves via GetCertificateAuthorityCertificate. ACME, step-ca, OpenSSL, DigiCert, and Sectigo connectors return errors (they don't expose a static CA chain — their chains are per-issuance).

Audit: Every EST enrollment is recorded in the audit trail with protocol: "EST", the CN, SANs, issuer ID, serial number, and optional profile ID.

SCEP Server (RFC 8894)

The SCEP (Simple Certificate Enrollment Protocol) server provides certificate enrollment for MDM platforms and network devices. It runs at /scep with operation-based dispatch via query parameters per RFC 8894.

Architecture: SCEP follows the exact same layering as EST — a handler-level protocol that delegates certificate issuance to an existing IssuerConnector. The SCEPService bridges the SCEPHandler to whichever issuer connector is configured via CERTCTL_SCEP_ISSUER_ID.

Client (MDM, network device, SCEP client)
    │
    ▼
SCEPHandler (handler layer)
    │  PKCS#7 envelope parsing, CSR extraction, challenge password extraction
    ▼
SCEPService (service layer)
    │  Challenge password validation, CSR validation, CN/SAN extraction, audit recording
    ▼
IssuerConnector (connector layer via IssuerConnectorAdapter)
    │  Certificate signing (Local CA, step-ca, etc.)
    ▼
Signed certificate returned as PKCS#7 certs-only

Wire format: SCEP clients wrap CSRs in PKCS#7 SignedData envelopes. The handler parses the outer ASN.1 ContentInfo → SignedData → EncapsulatedContentInfo to extract the CSR bytes. Fallback paths handle base64-encoded PKCS#7 and raw CSR submissions (for simpler clients). Responses use PKCS#7 certs-only via the shared internal/pkcs7 package (same as EST). Single certs are returned as raw DER for GetCACert, chains as PKCS#7.

Authentication: SCEP uses challenge passwords embedded in CSR attributes (OID 1.2.840.113549.1.9.7) rather than TLS client certificates. The server validates the challenge password against CERTCTL_SCEP_CHALLENGE_PASSWORD. When no challenge password is configured, any value is accepted.

Interface: The SCEPHandler defines an SCEPService interface (dependency inversion):

type SCEPService interface {
    GetCACaps(ctx context.Context) string
    GetCACert(ctx context.Context) (string, error)
    PKCSReq(ctx context.Context, csrPEM string, challengePassword string, transactionID string) (*domain.SCEPEnrollResult, error)
}

Shared PKCS#7 package: Both EST and SCEP handlers share a common internal/pkcs7 package for building PKCS#7 certs-only responses and PEM-to-DER chain conversion, eliminating code duplication between the two enrollment protocols.

Audit: Every SCEP enrollment is recorded in the audit trail with protocol: "SCEP", the CN, SANs, issuer ID, serial number, transaction ID, and optional profile ID.

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:

  1. Generated on the agent — ECDSA P-256, never sent to the control plane
  2. Stored on the agentCERTCTL_KEY_DIR with file permissions 0600
  3. Used by the agent — for deployment to targets (via DeploymentRequest.KeyPEM)
  4. 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: Bearer header, or none for 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: API tokens, WinRM credentials (stored locally on agent or proxy agent — never on server). Credential scope is limited to the agent's network zone.

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. All audit operations are logged via structured slog logging; if an audit event fails to persist, the error is logged immediately to ensure no gaps in the audit trail go unnoticed.

API Audit Log

In addition to application-level audit events, certctl records every HTTP API call via middleware. The audit middleware captures method, URL path (excluding query parameters — see security note below), actor (extracted from auth context), SHA-256 request body hash (truncated to 16 characters), response status code, and request latency. Health and readiness probes are excluded to avoid noise.

Security: Query Parameter Exclusion — The audit middleware intentionally records r.URL.Path only (not r.URL.String() or r.RequestURI). Query strings may contain cursor tokens, API keys passed as params, or other sensitive filter values. Since the audit trail is append-only with no deletion capability, any sensitive data recorded would persist permanently.

Audit recording is async (via goroutine) so it never blocks the HTTP response. If audit persistence fails, the error is logged immediately — the API call still succeeds. The middleware sits after the auth middleware in the stack so the actor identity is available from context.

Input Validation and SSRF Protection

All shell-facing inputs (connector scripts, domain names, ACME tokens) are validated through internal/validation/command.go before reaching shell execution. ValidateShellCommand() denies all shell metacharacters. ValidateDomainName() enforces RFC 1123. ValidateACMEToken() restricts to base64url characters. The network scanner filters reserved IP ranges (loopback, link-local including cloud metadata 169.254.169.254, multicast, broadcast) to prevent SSRF, while preserving RFC 1918 private ranges for legitimate internal scanning.

Request Body Size Limits

All incoming HTTP request bodies are capped by http.MaxBytesReader middleware (default 1MB, configurable via CERTCTL_MAX_BODY_SIZE). Requests exceeding the limit receive a 413 Request Entity Too Large response. The middleware is positioned before authentication in the chain so oversized payloads are rejected early, before any auth processing or database work occurs. Requests without bodies (GET, HEAD, nil body) skip the limit check.

Config Encryption at Rest

Dynamic issuer and target configurations (rows with source='database') contain credentials — ACME EAB HMACs, Vault tokens, DigiCert/Sectigo API keys, SSH private keys, WinRM passwords, F5 BIG-IP passwords, and similar. These are sealed at rest in PostgreSQL via internal/crypto/encryption.go using AES-256-GCM with a key derived from the operator passphrase CERTCTL_CONFIG_ENCRYPTION_KEY through PBKDF2-SHA256 (100,000 rounds, 32-byte output).

v2 wire format (current, M-8 remediation, CWE-916 / CWE-329):

magic(0x02) || salt(16) || nonce(12) || ciphertext+tag

Every call to EncryptIfKeySet draws 16 fresh bytes from crypto/rand as the PBKDF2 salt, so the derived AES-256 key is distinct per ciphertext and per re-encryption. The salt is stored alongside the ciphertext; decryption reads the magic byte, splits out the salt, re-derives the key, and verifies the AEAD tag.

v1 legacy format (read-only):

nonce(12) || ciphertext+tag

Pre-M-8 blobs were sealed with a package-level fixed salt "certctl-config-encryption-v1". DecryptIfKeySet preserves the v1 read path unchanged — a blob whose first byte is not 0x02, or whose v2 AEAD verification fails (including the 1/256 case where a v1 nonce happens to begin with 0x02), falls through to a v1 attempt against the legacy fixed salt. v1 blobs are never written by the post-M-8 code path; they re-seal as v2 naturally on the next UPDATE through the normal service CRUD flow. No operator migration ceremony is required.

Fail-closed behavior (C-2 sentinel, CWE-311): both EncryptIfKeySet and DecryptIfKeySet return ErrEncryptionKeyRequired when invoked with an empty passphrase. The server refuses to start if any source='database' rows already exist without CERTCTL_CONFIG_ENCRYPTION_KEY set.

Low-level primitives preserved byte-identical. Encrypt, Decrypt, and DeriveKey are kept bit-stable so v1 fixtures on disk remain decryptable unchanged and so callers outside the config-encryption path (none today, but the symbols are exported) do not see a breaking change. The new per-ciphertext salt path is reached via the helper deriveKeyWithSalt(passphrase, salt).

Passphrase plumbing. Services (IssuerService, TargetService, IssuerRegistry) hold the operator passphrase as a raw string and delegate PBKDF2 to the crypto package per ciphertext. This replaces the pre-M-8 design that pre-derived a single []byte key at service construction and reused it for every row, which was the direct consequence of the fixed-salt KDF.

Coverage gate. CI enforces internal/crypto/... coverage ≥ 85% (observed 86.7%) — the encryption primitives are a security-critical gate, and the v2 format plus v1 fallback plus C-2 sentinel paths all need exhaustive coverage to avoid silent regressions.

CORS

CORS uses a deny-by-default posture: when CERTCTL_CORS_ORIGINS is empty, no CORS headers are set and only same-origin requests can read responses. Operators must explicitly configure allowed origins. This prevents accidental exposure of the API to cross-origin requests in production.

Middleware Chain Order

The HTTP middleware stack processes requests in the following order (see cmd/server/main.go):

  1. RequestID - assigns unique request ID for correlation
  2. Logging - structured slog middleware with request ID propagation
  3. Recovery - panic recovery (catches panics in downstream middleware/handlers)
  4. BodyLimit - request body size cap via http.MaxBytesReader
  5. RateLimiter - token bucket rate limiting (optional, when enabled)
  6. CORS - cross-origin request handling (deny-by-default)
  7. Auth - API key or JWT validation
  8. AuditLog - records every API call to the audit trail (requires auth context for actor)

Concurrency Safety

The background scheduler uses sync/atomic.Bool idempotency guards on every loop (8 always-on plus up to 4 optional) — if a tick fires while the previous iteration is still running, it skips. A sync.WaitGroup tracks all in-flight goroutines. WaitForCompletion(timeout) blocks during shutdown until all work finishes or the timeout expires, preventing state corruption from mid-flight database operations during process exit.

Logging

All logging throughout the service layer uses Go's log/slog package for structured, queryable logs. This replaces ad-hoc fmt.Printf statements with consistent key-value logging that includes request context, operation names, and error details. Agents also implement exponential backoff on network failures to gracefully handle temporary connectivity issues with the control plane.

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 with 201
  • Update: PUT /api/v1/{resources}/{id} — returns the updated resource
  • Delete: DELETE /api/v1/{resources}/{id} — returns 204 (soft delete/archive)
  • Actions: POST /api/v1/{resources}/{id}/{action} — returns 202 for async operations

Resources: certificates, issuers, targets, agents, jobs, policies, profiles, teams, owners, agent-groups, audit, notifications, discovered-certificates, discovery-scans, network-scan-targets, stats, metrics.

The full API is documented in an OpenAPI 3.1 specification at api/openapi.yaml with 97 operations across /api/v1/ and /.well-known/est/ (includes auth, 7 discovery endpoints, 6 network scan endpoints, Prometheus metrics, 4 EST enrollment endpoints, 2 digest endpoints, 2 verification endpoints, 2 export endpoints), all request/response schemas, and pagination conventions. The server also registers /health and /ready outside the OpenAPI spec, bringing the total route count to 107. See the OpenAPI Guide for usage with Swagger UI and SDK generation.

Jobs support additional action endpoints: POST /api/v1/jobs/{id}/cancel, POST /api/v1/jobs/{id}/approve, POST /api/v1/jobs/{id}/reject.

Bulk Operations: POST /api/v1/certificates/bulk-revoke — Bulk revocation by filter criteria (profile_id, owner_id, agent_id, issuer_id). Creates individual revocation jobs for matching certificates, with partial-failure tolerance and a summary audit event.

Enhanced Query Features (M20): Certificate list endpoints support additional query capabilities beyond basic pagination:

  • Sorting: ?sort=notAfter (ascending) or ?sort=-createdAt (descending). Whitelist: notAfter, expiresAt, createdAt, updatedAt, commonName, name, status, environment.
  • Time-range filters: ?expires_before=, ?expires_after=, ?created_after=, ?updated_after= (RFC 3339 format).
  • Cursor pagination: ?cursor=<token>&page_size=100 for efficient keyset pagination alongside traditional page-based.
  • Sparse fields: ?fields=id,common_name,status to reduce response payload.
  • Additional filters: ?agent_id=, ?profile_id= (in addition to existing status, environment, owner_id, team_id, issuer_id).
  • Deployments: GET /api/v1/certificates/{id}/deployments returns deployment targets for a certificate.

Certificate revocation: POST /api/v1/certificates/{id}/revoke with optional {"reason": "keyCompromise"}. Supports RFC 5280 reason codes (unspecified, keyCompromise, caCompromise, affiliationChanged, superseded, cessationOfOperation, certificateHold, privilegeWithdrawn). Returns the updated certificate status. Best-effort issuer notification — the revocation succeeds even if the issuer connector is unavailable. The DER-encoded X.509 CRL signed by the issuing CA is served unauthenticated at GET /.well-known/pki/crl/{issuer_id} (RFC 5280 §5 + RFC 8615, Content-Type: application/pkix-crl). The embedded OCSP responder serves signed responses unauthenticated at GET /.well-known/pki/ocsp/{issuer_id}/{serial} (RFC 6960, Content-Type: application/ocsp-response). Both endpoints are accessible to relying parties with no certctl API credentials, as RFC-compliant PKI consumers expect. Short-lived certificates (profile TTL < 1 hour) are exempt from CRL/OCSP — expiry is sufficient revocation.

Certificate export (M27): GET /api/v1/certificates/{id}/export/pem returns PEM-encoded certificate and chain, and POST /api/v1/certificates/{id}/export/pkcs12 returns a PKCS#12 bundle (binary). Private keys are never exported — they remain on agents. All exports are audited with actor, timestamp, and format.

Health checks live outside the API prefix: GET /health and GET /ready.

MCP Server

certctl includes an MCP (Model Context Protocol) server as a separate binary (cmd/mcp-server/) that enables AI assistants to interact with the certificate platform. The MCP server uses the official MCP Go SDK (modelcontextprotocol/go-sdk) with stdio transport for integration with Claude, Cursor, and other MCP-compatible tools.

flowchart LR
    AI["AI Assistant\n(Claude, Cursor)"] -->|"stdio"| MCP["MCP Server\ncmd/mcp-server/"]
    MCP -->|"HTTP + Bearer token"| API["certctl REST API\n:8443"]

    subgraph "MCP Tools"
        T1["Certificate CRUD"]
        T2["Agent Management"]
        T3["Job Operations"]
        T4["Policy/Profile Queries"]
        T5["Audit Trail Access"]
        T6["Stats & Metrics"]
    end

    MCP --> T1 & T2 & T3 & T4 & T5 & T6

The MCP server is a stateless HTTP proxy — every MCP tool call translates to an HTTP request to the certctl REST API. It adds no new state, no new dependencies, and no new attack surface beyond what the API already exposes. Configuration is minimal: CERTCTL_SERVER_URL and CERTCTL_API_KEY environment variables.

The tools are organized across 16 resource domains with typed input structs and jsonschema struct tags for automatic LLM-friendly schema generation. Binary response support handles DER CRL and OCSP endpoints.

CLI Tool

certctl ships with a command-line tool (certctl-cli, built from cmd/cli/main.go) that wraps the REST API for terminal workflows. The CLI uses Go's standard library only (flag + text/tabwriter) — no Cobra or other framework dependencies.

12 subcommands organized by resource: certs list, certs get, certs renew, certs revoke, agents list, agents get, jobs list, jobs get, jobs cancel, import (bulk PEM import), status (health + summary stats), and version. Output is available in table (default) or JSON format via --format. Connection is configured via CERTCTL_SERVER_URL and CERTCTL_API_KEY environment variables or CLI flags.

The bulk import command (certctl-cli import <file.pem>) parses multi-certificate PEM files and creates certificate records via the API — useful for bootstrapping certctl with existing certificate inventory.

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\nagent_keys volume"]
    end

    USER["Browser / curl"] -->|"HTTP :8443"| SERVER
    SERVER -->|"SQL"| PG
    AGENT -->|"HTTP (internal)"| SERVER

Credentials & Configuration: Database and API credentials are managed via environment variables defined in a .env file. Copy deploy/.env.example to deploy/.env for local development and customize credentials for production. The agent key directory (CERTCTL_KEY_DIR) is persisted as a named Docker volume (agent_keys) at /var/lib/certctl/keys for reliable key storage across container restarts.

Production (Kubernetes with Helm)

A production-ready Helm chart is available under deploy/helm/certctl/ with full support for multi-replica deployments, persistent PostgreSQL, agent DaemonSet, optional Ingress, and security best practices.

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

Helm Installation:

# Add the chart (if published) or install from local directory
helm install certctl deploy/helm/certctl/ \
  --set server.auth.apiKey="your-secure-key" \
  --set postgresql.auth.password="your-db-password" \
  --set ingress.enabled=true \
  --set ingress.hosts[0].host="certctl.example.com"

The Helm chart includes: server Deployment with configurable replicas, liveness/readiness probes, security context (non-root, read-only rootfs), PostgreSQL StatefulSet with persistent volumes, optional Ingress with TLS, ServiceAccount with configurable RBAC, and agent DaemonSet running one agent per node. All certctl configuration options are exposed in values.yaml — issuers, targets, notifiers, scheduler intervals, discovery settings, and SMTP for digest emails.

See deploy/helm/certctl/values.yaml for the full configuration reference and deploy/helm/certctl/Chart.yaml for version and appVersion details.

For production, you would also add an ingress controller, TLS termination for the certctl API itself, and external PostgreSQL (RDS, Cloud SQL, etc.).

Discovery Data Flow (M18b + M21 + M50)

Certificate discovery enables operators to build a complete inventory of existing certificates before managing them with certctl. There are three discovery modes that feed into the same pipeline:

flowchart TB
    subgraph "Discovery Sources"
        AGENT["certctl-agent\n(filesystem discovery)"]
        SCAN["Filesystem Scanner\n(CERTCTL_DISCOVERY_DIRS)"]
        SERVER["certctl-server\n(network discovery)"]
        NETSCAN["TLS Scanner\n(CIDR ranges + ports)"]
        CLOUD["Cloud Discovery\n(AWS SM / Azure KV / GCP SM)"]
    end

    EXTRACT["Extract Metadata\n(CN, SANs, serial, issuer, expiry, fingerprint)"]
    SERVICE["Discovery Service\n(ProcessDiscoveryReport)"]
    REPO["Discovery Repository\n(upsert with fingerprint dedup)"]
    DB["PostgreSQL\ndiscovered_certificates\ndiscovery_scans tables"]
    AUDIT["Audit Service\n(RecordDiscoveryScanCompleted)"]
    API_LIST["GET /api/v1/discovered-certificates\n(list for triage)"]
    API_CLAIM["POST /discovered-certificates/{id}/claim"]
    API_DISMISS["POST /discovered-certificates/{id}/dismiss"]

    AGENT -->|"Scan loop\n(startup + 6h)"| SCAN
    SCAN --> EXTRACT
    SERVER -->|"Scheduler loop\n(every 6h)"| NETSCAN
    NETSCAN -->|"crypto/tls.Dial\n50 goroutines"| EXTRACT
    CLOUD -->|"Scheduler loop\n(every 6h)"| EXTRACT
    EXTRACT --> SERVICE
    SERVICE --> REPO
    REPO -->|"Dedup by fingerprint\n+ agent_id + source_path"| DB
    SERVICE --> AUDIT
    AUDIT --> DB
    DB --> API_LIST
    API_LIST --> API_CLAIM
    API_LIST --> API_DISMISS

Filesystem Discovery (M18b):

  1. Agent-side discovery — Agent scans CERTCTL_DISCOVERY_DIRS on startup and every 6 hours, walking directories recursively and parsing PEM/DER files
  2. Metadata extraction — For each certificate found, extract: common name, SANs, serial number, issuer DN, subject DN, expiration date, key algorithm, key size, is_ca flag, SHA-256 fingerprint (used as dedup key)
  3. Server submission — Agent POSTs scan results as DiscoveryReport to POST /api/v1/agents/{id}/discoveries
  4. Deduplication — Server uses fingerprint + agent ID + filesystem path as unique key; prevents duplicate records of the same cert on the same agent

Network Discovery (M21):

  1. Target configuration — Operator creates network scan targets via POST /api/v1/network-scan-targets with CIDR ranges, ports, and scan interval
  2. CIDR expansion — Ranges expanded to individual IPs with /20 safety cap (4096 IPs max)
  3. TLS probing — Server uses crypto/tls.DialWithDialer with InsecureSkipVerify=true to connect to each endpoint; 50 concurrent goroutines with configurable timeout
  4. Certificate extraction — Full X.509 metadata extracted from TLS handshake peer certificates
  5. Sentinel agent — Results submitted using server-scanner as virtual agent ID, with source_path set to ip:port and source_format set to network
  6. Same pipeline — Feeds into the same DiscoveryService.ProcessDiscoveryReport() as filesystem discovery — same dedup, same audit trail, same triage workflow

Cloud Secret Manager Discovery (M50):

  1. Pluggable sources — Each cloud provider implements the DiscoverySource interface (Name, Type, Discover, ValidateConfig). Three built-in sources: AWS Secrets Manager, Azure Key Vault, GCP Secret Manager
  2. CloudDiscoveryService orchestrator — Iterates registered sources, calls Discover() on each, feeds reports into ProcessDiscoveryReport(). Errors from one source don't prevent other sources from running
  3. Scheduler integration — 9th scheduler loop (6h default), runs immediately on startup, atomic.Bool idempotency guard
  4. Sentinel agents — Each source uses its own sentinel agent ID (cloud-aws-sm, cloud-azure-kv, cloud-gcp-sm) for dedup and triage filtering
  5. Source path formataws-sm://{region}/{secret}, azure-kv://{cert-name}/{version}, gcp-sm://{project}/{secret}
  6. No new schema — Reuses existing discovered_certificates and discovery_scans tables. Sentinel agent IDs leverage existing (fingerprint_sha256, agent_id, source_path) dedup constraint

Common triage workflow (all sources):

  1. Storage — Records stored in discovered_certificates table with status = "Unmanaged"
  2. Auditdiscovery_scan_completed event logged with agent ID, cert count, scan timestamp
  3. Operator triage — Operator queries GET /api/v1/discovered-certificates?status=Unmanaged to see new findings
  4. Claim or dismiss — For each unmanaged cert, operator either:
    • Claims it via POST /discovered-certificates/{id}/claim — links to existing managed cert or creates new enrollment
    • Dismisses it via POST /discovered-certificates/{id}/dismiss — removes from triage, marked as "Dismissed"
  5. Status trackingdiscovery_cert_claimed and discovery_cert_dismissed events audit the operator's decision
  6. SummaryGET /api/v1/discovery-summary returns count of Unmanaged, Managed, and Dismissed certs (useful for compliance reporting)

This data flow is pull-based and non-blocking. Agents discover at their own pace; the server stores results for later review. There's no pressure to claim or dismiss; operators can leave certificates in "Unmanaged" status indefinitely.

Continuous TLS Health Monitoring (M48)

Beyond one-time discovery, certctl continuously monitors TLS endpoints for certificate health using a shared TLS probing package and a state-machine-driven health check service. Endpoints transition between states (Healthy → Degraded → Down) based on consecutive failures, and cert_mismatch status alerts when a deployed certificate is unexpectedly replaced.

Architecture: Probing is extracted into a shared internal/tlsprobe/ package used by both the network scanner (M21) and the health monitor. The HealthCheckService manages 8 API endpoints for CRUD operations and state transitions. A dedicated 8th scheduler loop runs every 60 seconds (configurable via CERTCTL_HEALTH_CHECK_INTERVAL). Individual health check targets have their own check intervals (default 300 seconds) — the scheduler queries only endpoints due for check via ListDueForCheck(). Results are stored with historical tracking for 30 days (configurable via CERTCTL_HEALTH_CHECK_HISTORY_RETENTION). State transitions trigger notifications (critical for down endpoints, warning for degraded, high for cert_mismatch).

State Machine: Healthy → Degraded (configurable threshold, default 2 consecutive failures) → Down (default 5 failures). The cert_mismatch status is special — it fires whenever the observed certificate fingerprint differs from the expected (deployed) fingerprint, catching silent rollbacks and unauthorized cert replacements. Recovery from degraded/down transitions back to healthy and resets the failure counter.

API: 8 endpoints for list (with filters: status, certificate_id, network_scan_target_id, enabled), get, create, update, delete, history (with limit param), acknowledge (incident marking), and summary (aggregate status counts).

Auto-Create: When a deployment job completes with successful verification (M25), the system automatically creates a health check with the deployed certificate's fingerprint as the expected value. Network scan targets can also opt-in to auto-create health checks for discovered endpoints.

Configuration:

Env Var Default Description
CERTCTL_HEALTH_CHECK_ENABLED false Enable/disable the feature
CERTCTL_HEALTH_CHECK_INTERVAL 60s Scheduler tick interval
CERTCTL_HEALTH_CHECK_DEFAULT_INTERVAL 300s Default per-endpoint check interval (5 min)
CERTCTL_HEALTH_CHECK_DEFAULT_TIMEOUT 5000ms TLS connection timeout per probe
CERTCTL_HEALTH_CHECK_MAX_CONCURRENT 20 Max concurrent TLS probes
CERTCTL_HEALTH_CHECK_HISTORY_RETENTION 30 days Purge probe history older than this
CERTCTL_HEALTH_CHECK_AUTO_CREATE true Auto-create checks from deployments

Testing Strategy

certctl is extensively tested across eight layers with CI-enforced coverage gates that act as regression floors. 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) — Mock-based tests across all service files covering certificate CRUD, revocation (all RFC 5280 reason codes, OCSP/CRL generation, bulk revocation by filter with partial-failure tolerance), agent lifecycle, job state machine, policy evaluation, renewal/issuance flow (both keygen modes), notification deduplication, team/owner/agent group CRUD, issuer service CRUD with connection testing, and the issuer connector adapter. Mock repositories are simple structs with function fields — no heavy mocking frameworks.

Handler layer tests (internal/api/handler/*_test.go) — Every handler file has a corresponding test file using Go's httptest package: certificates (including revocation, bulk revocation by profile/owner/agent/issuer, DER CRL, OCSP), agents, jobs (including approve/reject), notifications, policies, profiles, issuers, targets, agent groups, teams, owners, discovery, network scan, verification, export, EST, digest, stats, and metrics. Tests cover the happy path, input validation, error propagation, method-not-allowed, pagination, and bulk operation partial-failure scenarios.

Integration tests (internal/integration/) — Three test files exercising the full stack from HTTP request through router, handler, service, and repository layers. lifecycle_test.go covers the complete certificate lifecycle (team/owner creation through deployment and status reporting). negative_test.go covers error paths, endpoint validation, and revocation scenarios. e2e_test.go exercises cross-milestone features end-to-end (agent metadata, profiles, issuer registry, GUI operations, stats, revocation, notifications, enhanced query API).

Go integration tests (deploy/test/integration_test.go) — Runs against the live Docker Compose test environment with real CA backends (Local CA, Pebble ACME, step-ca). Covers health checks, agent heartbeat, issuance, renewal, revocation, CRL/OCSP, EST enrollment, S/MIME, discovery, network scanning, and deployment verification using crypto/x509 for cert parsing and crypto/tls for live TLS verification.

Frontend tests (web/src/api/) — Vitest tests covering the full API client (all endpoint functions with fetch mocking), stats/metrics endpoints, utility functions, and auth flows. Test environment uses jsdom with @testing-library/jest-dom matchers.

Connector tests (internal/connector/) — Issuer connectors (Local CA self-signed/sub-CA modes, ACME DNS-01/DNS-PERSIST-01, step-ca, OpenSSL, Vault PKI, DigiCert, Sectigo, Google CAS, AWS ACM PCA — all with httptest mock servers or injectable interface mocks). Target connectors (NGINX, Apache, HAProxy, Traefik, Caddy, Envoy, IIS with mock PowerShell executor, F5 BIG-IP with mock iControl client, Postfix/Dovecot, SSH with mock SSH client, Windows Certificate Store with mock PowerShell executor, Java Keystore with mock command executor, Kubernetes Secrets with mock K8s client, shared certutil package). Notifier connectors (Slack, Teams, PagerDuty, OpsGenie).

Scheduler tests (internal/scheduler/scheduler_test.go) — Idempotency guards (sync/atomic.Bool), WaitForCompletion success and timeout paths, and multi-loop concurrency safety.

Fuzz tests (internal/validation/, internal/domain/) — Go native fuzz tests for command validation (ValidateShellCommand, ValidateDomainName, ValidateACMEToken) and revocation domain parsing.

CI pipeline (.github/workflows/ci.yml) — Two parallel jobs. Go: build, vet, go test -race, golangci-lint (11 linters), govulncheck, test with coverage, per-layer coverage threshold enforcement (service 55%, handler 60%, domain 40%, middleware 30%). Frontend: TypeScript type check, Vitest, Vite production build.

For detailed test procedures, smoke tests, and the release sign-off checklist, see the Testing Guide. For setting up the Docker Compose test environment with real CA backends, see Test Environment.

What's Next