shankar0123 aa183efdca docs: cross-validate all documentation against codebase, fix 21 inaccuracies
Fact-checked every doc file against actual source code. Key corrections:
- Table count 14→17 (added profiles, agent_groups, agent_group_members)
- Endpoint count 55→68 (counted from router.go)
- Test count 250+→330+ (99 service + 165 handler + 53 frontend + connectors)
- Dashboard views 14→16 pages (counted from web/src/pages/)
- step-ca marked implemented (was "Planned V2") across all docs
- ACME DNS-01 marked implemented (was "planned") in concepts.md
- Removed ADCS as separate planned connector (handled via sub-CA mode)
- Fixed pointer types in connectors.md interface docs (*string, *time.Time)
- Added 3 missing tables to architecture.md ER diagram
- Added 5 missing env vars to README config table
- Updated M11/M12 to  in README roadmap
- Issuer count in quickstart demo data 3→4 (added step-ca)

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.6 <noreply@anthropic.com>
2026-03-21 23:12:23 -04:00

certctl — Self-Hosted Certificate Lifecycle Platform

TLS certificate lifespans are shrinking. The CA/Browser Forum passed Ballot SC-081v3 unanimously in April 2025, setting a phased reduction: 200 days by March 2026, 100 days by March 2027, and 47 days by March 2029. Manual certificate management is no longer viable at any scale.

certctl is a self-hosted platform for end-to-end certificate lifecycle automation — from issuance through renewal to deployment — with zero human intervention. Track every certificate in your organization, automatically renew them before they expire, and deploy them to your servers without touching a terminal. Private keys never leave your infrastructure.

License Go Report Card Status: v1.0.0

What It Does

certctl gives you a single pane of glass for every TLS certificate in your organization. The web dashboard shows your full certificate inventory — what's healthy, what's expiring, what's already expired, and who owns each one. The REST API (68 endpoints) lets you automate everything. Agents deployed on your infrastructure generate private keys locally and submit CSRs — private keys never leave your servers. The background scheduler watches expiration dates and triggers renewals automatically — when certificate lifespans drop to 47 days, certctl handles the constant rotation without human involvement.

flowchart LR
    subgraph "Control Plane"
        API["REST API + Dashboard\n:8443"]
        PG[("PostgreSQL")]
    end

    subgraph "Your Infrastructure"
        A1["Agent"] --> T1["NGINX"]
        A2["Agent"] --> T2["Apache / HAProxy"]
        A3["Agent"] --> T3["F5 · IIS"]
    end

    API --> PG
    A1 & A2 & A3 -->|"CSR + status\n(no private keys)"| API
    API -->|"Signed certs"| A1 & A2 & A3
    API -->|"Issue/Renew"| CA["Certificate Authorities\nLocal CA · ACME"]

Screenshots

Dashboard Certificates
Dashboard — certificate stats, expiry timeline, recent jobs Certificates — full inventory with status, environment, owner filters
Agents Jobs
Agents — fleet health, hostname, heartbeat tracking Jobs — issuance, renewal, deployment job queue
Notifications Policies
Notifications — threshold alerts grouped by certificate Policies — enforcement rules with enable/disable and delete
Issuers Targets
Issuers — CA connectors with test connectivity Targets — deployment targets (NGINX, Apache, HAProxy, F5, IIS)
Audit Trail
Audit Trail — immutable log of every action

Quick Start

git clone https://github.com/shankar0123/certctl.git
cd certctl
docker compose -f deploy/docker-compose.yml up -d --build

Wait ~30 seconds, then open http://localhost:8443 in your browser.

The dashboard comes pre-loaded with 15 demo certificates, 5 agents, policy rules, audit events, and notifications — a realistic snapshot of a certificate inventory so you can explore immediately.

Verify the API:

curl http://localhost:8443/health
# {"status":"healthy"}

curl -s http://localhost:8443/api/v1/certificates | jq '.total'
# 15

Manual Build

# Prerequisites: Go 1.22+, PostgreSQL 16+
go mod download
make build

# Set up database
export CERTCTL_DATABASE_URL="postgres://certctl:certctl@localhost:5432/certctl?sslmode=disable"
export CERTCTL_AUTH_TYPE=none
make migrate-up

# Start server
./bin/server

# Start agent (separate terminal)
export CERTCTL_SERVER_URL=http://localhost:8443
export CERTCTL_API_KEY=change-me-in-production
export CERTCTL_AGENT_NAME=local-agent
export CERTCTL_AGENT_ID=agent-local-01
./bin/agent --agent-id=agent-local-01

Documentation

Guide Description
Concepts TLS certificates explained from scratch — for beginners who know nothing about certs
Quick Start Get running in 5 minutes with accurate API examples
Demo Walkthrough 5-7 minute guided stakeholder presentation
Advanced Demo Issue a certificate end-to-end with technical deep-dives
Architecture System design, data flow diagrams, security model
Connectors Build custom issuer, target, and notifier connectors

Architecture

flowchart TB
    subgraph "Control Plane (certctl-server)"
        DASH["Web Dashboard\nReact SPA"]
        API["REST API\nGo 1.22 net/http"]
        SVC["Service Layer"]
        REPO["Repository Layer\ndatabase/sql + lib/pq"]
        SCHED["Scheduler\nRenewal · Jobs · Health · Notifications"]
    end

    subgraph "Data Store"
        PG[("PostgreSQL 16\n17 tables\nTEXT primary keys")]
    end

    subgraph "Agents"
        AG["certctl-agent\nKey generation · CSR · Deployment"]
    end

    DASH --> API
    API --> SVC --> REPO --> PG
    SCHED --> SVC
    AG -->|"Heartbeat + CSR"| API
    API -->|"Cert + Chain"| AG

Key Design Decisions

  • Private keys isolated from the control plane. Agents generate ECDSA P-256 keys locally and submit CSRs (public key only). The server signs the CSR and returns the certificate — private keys never touch the control plane. Server-side keygen is available via CERTCTL_KEYGEN_MODE=server for demo/development only.
  • TEXT primary keys, not UUIDs. IDs are human-readable prefixed strings (mc-api-prod, t-platform, o-alice) so you can identify resource types at a glance in logs and queries.
  • Handler → Service → Repository layering. Handlers define their own service interfaces for clean dependency inversion. No global service singletons.
  • Idempotent migrations. All schema uses IF NOT EXISTS and seed data uses ON CONFLICT (id) DO NOTHING, safe for repeated execution.

Database Schema

Table Purpose
managed_certificates Certificate records with metadata, status, expiry, tags
certificate_versions Historical versions with PEM chains and CSRs
renewal_policies Renewal window, auto-renew settings, retry config, alert thresholds
issuers CA configurations (Local CA, ACME, etc.)
deployment_targets Target systems (NGINX, F5, IIS) with agent assignments
agents Registered agents with heartbeat tracking, OS/arch/IP metadata
jobs Issuance, renewal, deployment, and validation jobs
teams Organizational groups for certificate ownership
owners Individual owners with email for notifications
policy_rules Enforcement rules (allowed issuers, environments, metadata)
policy_violations Flagged non-compliance with severity levels
audit_events Immutable action log (append-only, no update/delete)
notification_events Email and webhook notification records
certificate_target_mappings Many-to-many cert ↔ target relationships
certificate_profiles Named enrollment profiles with allowed key types, max TTL, crypto constraints
agent_groups Dynamic device grouping by OS, architecture, IP CIDR, version
agent_group_members Manual include/exclude membership for agent groups

Configuration

All server environment variables use the CERTCTL_ prefix:

Variable Default Description
CERTCTL_SERVER_HOST 127.0.0.1 Server bind address
CERTCTL_SERVER_PORT 8080 Server listen port
CERTCTL_DATABASE_URL postgres://localhost/certctl PostgreSQL connection string
CERTCTL_DATABASE_MAX_CONNS 25 Connection pool size
CERTCTL_LOG_LEVEL info Log level: debug, info, warn, error
CERTCTL_LOG_FORMAT json Log format: json or text
CERTCTL_AUTH_TYPE api-key Auth mode: api-key, jwt, or none
CERTCTL_AUTH_SECRET Required for api-key and jwt auth types
CERTCTL_KEYGEN_MODE agent Key generation mode: agent (production) or server (demo only)
CERTCTL_ACME_DIRECTORY_URL ACME directory URL (e.g., Let's Encrypt staging)
CERTCTL_ACME_EMAIL Contact email for ACME account registration
CERTCTL_ACME_CHALLENGE_TYPE ACME challenge type: http-01 (default) or dns-01
CERTCTL_CA_CERT_PATH Path to CA certificate for sub-CA mode
CERTCTL_CA_KEY_PATH Path to CA private key for sub-CA mode
CERTCTL_STEPCA_URL step-ca server URL
CERTCTL_STEPCA_PROVISIONER step-ca JWK provisioner name

Agent environment variables:

Variable Default Description
CERTCTL_SERVER_URL http://localhost:8080 Control plane URL
CERTCTL_API_KEY Agent API key
CERTCTL_AGENT_NAME certctl-agent Agent display name
CERTCTL_AGENT_ID Registered agent ID (required)
CERTCTL_KEY_DIR /var/lib/certctl/keys Directory for storing private keys (agent keygen mode)

Docker Compose overrides these for the demo stack (see deploy/docker-compose.yml): port 8443, auth type none, database pointing to the postgres container.

API Overview

All endpoints are under /api/v1/ and return JSON. List endpoints support pagination (?page=1&per_page=50).

Certificates

GET    /api/v1/certificates              List (filter: status, environment, owner_id, team_id)
POST   /api/v1/certificates              Create
GET    /api/v1/certificates/{id}          Get
PUT    /api/v1/certificates/{id}          Update
DELETE /api/v1/certificates/{id}          Archive (soft delete)
GET    /api/v1/certificates/{id}/versions Version history
POST   /api/v1/certificates/{id}/renew    Trigger renewal → 202 Accepted
POST   /api/v1/certificates/{id}/deploy   Trigger deployment → 202 Accepted

Agents

GET    /api/v1/agents                     List
POST   /api/v1/agents                     Register
GET    /api/v1/agents/{id}                Get
POST   /api/v1/agents/{id}/heartbeat      Record heartbeat
POST   /api/v1/agents/{id}/csr            Submit CSR for issuance
GET    /api/v1/agents/{id}/certificates/{certId}  Retrieve signed certificate
GET    /api/v1/agents/{id}/work            Poll for pending deployment jobs
POST   /api/v1/agents/{id}/jobs/{jobId}/status  Report job completion/failure

Infrastructure

GET    /api/v1/issuers                    List issuers
POST   /api/v1/issuers                    Create
GET    /api/v1/issuers/{id}               Get
PUT    /api/v1/issuers/{id}               Update
DELETE /api/v1/issuers/{id}               Delete
POST   /api/v1/issuers/{id}/test          Test connectivity

GET    /api/v1/targets                    List deployment targets
POST   /api/v1/targets                    Create
GET    /api/v1/targets/{id}               Get
PUT    /api/v1/targets/{id}               Update
DELETE /api/v1/targets/{id}               Delete

Organization

GET    /api/v1/teams                      List teams
POST   /api/v1/teams                      Create
GET    /api/v1/teams/{id}                 Get
PUT    /api/v1/teams/{id}                 Update
DELETE /api/v1/teams/{id}                 Delete
GET    /api/v1/owners                     List owners
POST   /api/v1/owners                     Create
GET    /api/v1/owners/{id}                Get
PUT    /api/v1/owners/{id}                Update
DELETE /api/v1/owners/{id}                Delete

Operations

GET    /api/v1/jobs                       List (filter: status, type)
GET    /api/v1/jobs/{id}                  Get
POST   /api/v1/jobs/{id}/cancel           Cancel

GET    /api/v1/policies                   List policy rules
POST   /api/v1/policies                   Create
PUT    /api/v1/policies/{id}              Update (enable/disable)
DELETE /api/v1/policies/{id}              Delete
GET    /api/v1/policies/{id}/violations   List violations for rule

GET    /api/v1/audit                      Query audit trail
GET    /api/v1/notifications              List notifications
POST   /api/v1/notifications/{id}/read    Mark as read

Auth

GET    /api/v1/auth/info                  Auth mode info (no auth required)
GET    /api/v1/auth/check                 Validate credentials

Health

GET    /health                            Server health check
GET    /ready                             Readiness check

Supported Integrations

Certificate Issuers

Issuer Status Type
Local CA (self-signed + sub-CA) Implemented GenericCA
ACME v2 (Let's Encrypt, Sectigo) Implemented (HTTP-01 + DNS-01) ACME
step-ca Implemented StepCA
OpenSSL / Custom CA Planned (V2)
Vault PKI Planned
DigiCert Planned

Note: ADCS integration is handled via the Local CA's sub-CA mode — certctl operates as a subordinate CA with its signing certificate issued by ADCS.

Deployment Targets

Target Status Type
NGINX Implemented NGINX
Apache httpd Implemented Apache
HAProxy Implemented HAProxy
F5 BIG-IP Interface only (V2) F5
Microsoft IIS Interface only (V2) IIS
Kubernetes Secrets Planned

Notifiers

Notifier Status Type
Email (SMTP) Implemented Email
Webhooks Implemented Webhook
Slack Planned

Development

# Install dev tools (golangci-lint, migrate CLI, air)
make install-tools

# Run tests
make test

# Run with coverage
make test-coverage

# Lint
make lint

# Format
make fmt

Docker Compose

make docker-up          # Start stack (server + postgres + agent)
make docker-down        # Stop stack
make docker-logs-server # Server logs
make docker-logs-agent  # Agent logs
make docker-clean       # Stop + remove volumes

Security

Private Key Management

  • Agent keygen mode (default): Agents generate ECDSA P-256 keys locally and store them with 0600 permissions in CERTCTL_KEY_DIR (default /var/lib/certctl/keys). Only the CSR (public key) is sent to the control plane. Private keys never leave agent infrastructure.
  • Server keygen mode (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.

Authentication

  • Agent-to-server: API key (registered at agent creation)
  • API key and JWT auth types supported; none for demo/development
  • Auth type and secret configured via CERTCTL_AUTH_TYPE and CERTCTL_AUTH_SECRET

Audit Trail

  • Immutable append-only log in PostgreSQL (audit_events table)
  • Every action attributed to an actor with timestamp and resource reference
  • No update or delete operations on audit records

Roadmap

V1 (v1.0.0 released)

All nine development milestones (M1M9) are complete. The backend covers the full certificate lifecycle: Local CA and ACME v2 issuers, NGINX/Apache/HAProxy/F5/IIS target connectors, threshold-based expiration alerting, agent-side ECDSA P-256 key generation, API auth with rate limiting, and a React dashboard with 16 pages wired to the real API. The CI pipeline runs build, vet, test with coverage gates (service layer 30%+, handler layer 50%+), frontend type checking, Vitest test suite, and Vite production build on every push. 330+ tests total: 277+ Go tests across service, handler, integration, and connector layers, plus 53 frontend Vitest tests covering API client functions and utility helpers. Docker images are published to GitHub Container Registry on every version tag via the release workflow.

V2: Operational Maturity

  • M10: Agent Metadata + Targets — agents report OS, architecture, IP, hostname, version via heartbeat; Apache httpd and HAProxy target connectors
  • M11: Crypto Policy + Profiles + Ownership — certificate profiles (named enrollment profiles with allowed key types, max TTL, crypto constraints), certificate ownership tracking (owners + teams + notification routing), dynamic agent groups (OS/arch/IP CIDR/version matching), interactive renewal approval (AwaitingApproval state)
  • M12: Sub-CA + DNS-01 + step-ca — Local CA sub-CA mode (enterprise root chain with RSA/ECDSA/PKCS#8), ACME DNS-01 challenges (script-based DNS hooks for any provider, wildcard cert support), step-ca issuer connector (native /sign API with JWK provisioner auth)
  • M13: GUI Operations — bulk cert operations (renew, revoke, reassign), deployment timeline, inline policy editor, target config wizard, audit export, short-lived credentials dashboard
  • M14: Enterprise Connectors — SSE/WebSocket real-time updates, F5 BIG-IP, IIS, ADCS, OpenSSL/Custom CA implementations
  • M15: Revocation Infrastructure — revocation API with reason codes, embedded OCSP responder, CRL endpoint, bulk revocation by profile/owner/agent, revocation webhooks
  • M16: Team Adoption — OIDC/SSO, RBAC (profile-gated), CLI tool, Slack/Teams/PagerDuty/OpsGenie notifiers, bulk cert import
  • M17: Observability — expiration calendar, health scores, compliance scoring, Prometheus metrics (issuance/revocation rates, OCSP latency), deployment rollback
  • M18: Integrations — MCP server (OpenClaw/Claude/Cursor), CT Log monitoring, DigiCert issuer, filesystem cert discovery

V3: Discovery, Visibility & Cloud

Discovery engine (passive/active scanning, cert chain validation, unknown cert detection, triage workflows), Kubernetes cert-manager external issuer, cloud targets (AWS ALB/IAM Roles Anywhere, Azure Key Vault/Managed Identity, Palo Alto, FortiGate, Citrix ADC, Kubernetes Secrets), extended issuers (Entrust, GlobalSign, Google CAS, EJBCA, Vault PKI), ServiceNow integration, Ansible module

V4+: Platform & Scale

Kubernetes CRD, Terraform provider, multi-region, HA control plane, HSM support, LDAP auth, API key scoping, multi-tenancy, SPIFFE/SPIRE federation, OPA policy backend, compliance reporting (NIST, SOC 2, PCI-DSS)

License

Certctl is licensed under the Business Source License 1.1. The source code is publicly available and free to use, modify, and self-host. The one restriction: you may not offer certctl as a managed/hosted certificate management service to third parties.

S
Description
certctl is a self-hosted platform that automates the entire certificate lifecycle — from issuance through renewal to deployment — with zero human intervention. It works with any certificate authority, deploys to any server, and keeps private keys on your infrastructure where they belong.
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