README:
- Rewrite Status block: drop the stale 'federated identity not yet
shipped' line; flag v2.1.0 OIDC + sessions + back-channel logout
+ break-glass as early-access; encourage GitHub issues for IdP
rough edges. (A1 framing — keep early-access umbrella, no
SAML/WebAuthn/JIT roadmap teaser.)
- Add OIDC SSO bullet to 'What it does' covering per-IdP runbooks,
group-claim → role mapping, AES-256-GCM client_secret encryption,
JWKS auto-refresh, PKCE-S256, RFC 9700 §4.7.1 pre-login binding,
RFC 9207 iss check, __Host- cookies, CSRF rotation, idle+absolute
expiry, BCL, break-glass admin.
- Update Security paragraph: three auth paths (API keys / OIDC /
break-glass), HMAC-signed sessions, CSRF rotation, RFC OIDC BCL.
- Correct CI coverage thresholds against
.github/coverage-thresholds.yml (service 70%, handler 75%,
crypto 88%, auth packages 85-95%); 'static analysis' replaces
the inflated '11 linters' claim (actual count is 4 active).
Docs B3 sweep — strip operator-facing 'Bundle N' / 'Phase N' tags:
- docs/operator/auth-threat-model.md — rewrite intro; rename 5 H2
sections (API-key + RBAC defenses / OIDC + sessions + break-glass
defenses / OIDC + sessions threat catalogue / Closed federated-
identity threats / Future-work threats); clean ~12 H3/prose hits.
- docs/operator/rbac.md — strip Bundle 1 framing from intro,
scope_id deferral note, MCP tools section, day-0 bootstrap, and
'Where to look next'.
- docs/operator/auth-benchmarks.md — drop 'Phase 14' framing from
title intro, hardware floor caption, result table caption,
methodology, and pre-merge audit section.
- docs/operator/security.md — already cleaned earlier this session
(RBAC / day-0 / approval-bypass / OIDC federation / sessions /
OIDC first-admin / break-glass H3s).
- docs/operator/oidc-runbooks/{index,keycloak,authentik,okta,
azure-ad}.md — strip Auth Bundle 2 framing + Phase 10/3/4
references; replace with feature-name prose.
- docs/operator/legacy-clients-tls-1.2.md — drop Bundle F / M-023
audit-reference framing; keep CWE-326.
- docs/operator/database-tls.md — drop Bundle B / M-018 framing
from intro + Helm section.
- docs/operator/runbooks/disaster-recovery.md — drop 'Production
hardening II Phase 10' status callout.
- docs/migration/oidc-enable.md — retitle 'Enable OIDC SSO';
strip Bundle 1/2 framing from prereqs, troubleshooting, related
docs; update __Host- cookie callout from 'audit MED-14' to
v2.1.0-BREAKING.
- docs/migration/api-keys-to-rbac.md — strip Bundle 1 framing from
intro, migration table, IsAdmin section, and cross-references.
- docs/migration/acme-from-cert-manager.md — strip residual
'Phase 5' tags from cert-manager integration test references.
- docs/reference/configuration.md — retitle Auth section.
- docs/reference/profiles.md — strip Bundle 1 Phase 9 framing
from RequiresApproval section + Related list.
- docs/reference/auth-standards-implemented.md — rewrite intro
(API-key + RBAC + OIDC + sessions + back-channel logout +
break-glass); rename 'Bundle 1 (RBAC) standards covered
separately' H2; clean per-row Phase references.
- docs/README.md — rewrite nav-table entries to drop Bundle 1/2
parentheticals; retitle 'Enable OIDC SSO' migration entry.
No code or test changes; pure operator-facing prose polish for
the v2.1.0 tag.
13 KiB
Disaster recovery runbook
Last reviewed: 2026-05-05
Status (this document): Operator runbook codifying the fail-safe behaviors that already exist in the codebase and the procedures for recovering from common failure modes. Nothing in this runbook requires new code — if a procedure here doesn't work as documented, that's a bug in docs (file an issue).
This runbook is the on-call deliverable: it tells reviewers and on-call operators what to do when a piece of certctl's state corrupts, when a CA key needs rotation, or when Postgres needs a point-in-time restore. Read it once when you set up certctl; print the DR checklist and pin it near your on-call rotation.
Contents
- Overview — what's already automatic
- CRL cache recovery
- OCSP responder cert recovery
- OCSP response cache recovery
- CA private-key rotation
- Postgres restore
- Trust-bundle reload semantics (SCEP / EST / Intune)
- DR checklist
Overview
certctl is engineered so most failure modes are auto-recoverable without operator action. The fail-safes in the codebase:
- CRL cache corruption — the scheduler's
crlGenerationLoopregenerates the CRL for every issuer on its tick (default 1h viaCERTCTL_CRL_GENERATION_INTERVAL). A corrupt or missingcrl_cacherow causes the next HTTP fetch to fall through to the live-signing path; the scheduler then writes the fresh CRL back to cache. - OCSP responder cert missing —
ensureOCSPResponderlazily bootstraps the responder cert on the first OCSP request after a missing row. The CA-key signing operation is rare (only at bootstrap / 7-day rotation cycle), so this is fast even on a cold cache. - OCSP response cache corruption — the read-through facade in
CAOperationsSvc.GetOCSPResponseWithNoncefalls through to live signing on cache miss + writes the fresh response back. Operators canDELETE FROM ocsp_response_cache;and the cache rebuilds organically as relying parties query. - Trust anchor reload after a half-rotation —
TrustAnchorHolder(used by SCEP/Intune + EST mTLS) keeps the OLD pool in place when a SIGHUP-triggered reload fails (parse error, expired cert). The GUI reload modal surfaces the typed error so the operator can correct the file and retry without taking the EST/SCEP endpoint down.
These fail-safes mean most of this runbook is "delete the corrupt row + wait for the next tick" rather than "restore from backup + manually re-issue." The runbook documents the full procedures anyway because reviewers need to see them written down.
CRL cache recovery
Symptom: GET /.well-known/pki/crl/{issuer_id} returns 500, or
the CRL it returns has the wrong revocations / wrong signature, or
parses as garbage.
Diagnosis:
# 1. Look at the cached row directly:
psql -c "SELECT issuer_id, length(crl_der), this_update, next_update,
generated_at, generation_duration_ms, revoked_count
FROM crl_cache WHERE issuer_id = 'iss-local';"
# 2. Look at recent generation events:
psql -c "SELECT started_at, succeeded, error, duration_ms
FROM crl_generation_events
WHERE issuer_id = 'iss-local'
ORDER BY started_at DESC LIMIT 10;"
Recovery:
# Force regeneration on next request by deleting the cache row.
# The next HTTP fetch falls through to the live-signing path AND the
# next crlGenerationLoop tick (≤1h by default) writes a fresh row.
psql -c "DELETE FROM crl_cache WHERE issuer_id = 'iss-local';"
# Verify:
curl -sS --cacert /path/to/ca.crt \
https://certctl.example.com:8443/.well-known/pki/crl/iss-local \
| openssl crl -inform DER -noout -text \
| head -20
Worst case — if the underlying revocation data in
certificate_revocations is also corrupt, restore Postgres
(see Postgres restore) and the CRL regenerates
from the restored data on the next tick.
OCSP responder cert recovery
Symptom: OCSP requests return 500 with errors like "responder not configured" or "failed to load responder key."
Diagnosis:
psql -c "SELECT issuer_id, cert_subject, not_before, not_after,
created_at, key_path
FROM ocsp_responder_certs
WHERE issuer_id = 'iss-local';"
# Check the on-disk responder key file (path from the row above):
ls -la /etc/certctl/ocsp-responder-keys/iss-local.key
Recovery:
# Delete the responder row. The next OCSP request triggers
# ensureOCSPResponder which generates a fresh keypair, signs a new
# responder cert with the CA key (rare CA-key use), and persists
# the new row + the on-disk key file (mode 0600 enforced).
psql -c "DELETE FROM ocsp_responder_certs WHERE issuer_id = 'iss-local';"
# If the on-disk key file is also corrupt, delete it first:
rm -f /etc/certctl/ocsp-responder-keys/iss-local.key
# Trigger the bootstrap by issuing one OCSP request:
curl -sS --cacert /path/to/ca.crt \
https://certctl.example.com:8443/.well-known/pki/ocsp/iss-local/00 \
> /dev/null
# Verify the new row + file:
psql -c "SELECT * FROM ocsp_responder_certs WHERE issuer_id = 'iss-local';"
ls -la /etc/certctl/ocsp-responder-keys/iss-local.key
The new responder cert carries the same id-pkix-ocsp-nocheck
extension as the original (per RFC 6960 §4.2.2.2.1) so relying
parties accept it without recursing through OCSP for the responder
itself.
OCSP response cache recovery
Symptom: an OCSP request returns a stale response (e.g. "good"
for a cert you just revoked). This usually means the
InvalidateOnRevoke wire failed to fire — see the warning logs from
RevocationSvc.RevokeCertificateWithActor.
Recovery:
# Delete the stale cache entry. The next OCSP request falls through
# to live signing which reads the now-current revocation_status.
psql -c "DELETE FROM ocsp_response_cache
WHERE issuer_id = 'iss-local' AND serial_hex = 'deadbeef...';"
# Verify the next fetch returns "revoked":
curl -sS --cacert /path/to/ca.crt \
https://certctl.example.com:8443/.well-known/pki/ocsp/iss-local/deadbeef... \
| openssl ocsp -respin /dev/stdin -resp_text -CAfile /path/to/ca.crt \
| grep "Cert Status"
For a fleet-wide invalidation (e.g. you rotated the CA key — see next section), nuke the whole cache:
psql -c "TRUNCATE ocsp_response_cache;"
The cache rebuilds organically as relying parties query. There's no service-degradation window because the live-sign fallback is always available; only the per-request CPU cost goes up until the cache warms back up.
CA private-key rotation
Symptom: scheduled rotation cycle (annual or longer), or emergency rotation due to suspected compromise.
This procedure rotates the CA private key for the local issuer.
After rotation, every existing cert chains to the OLD CA cert which
remains trusted by relying parties until its notAfter (typical
10y); newly-issued certs chain to the NEW CA cert.
Procedure:
- Backup the current CA cert + key. The on-disk paths are
CERTCTL_CA_CERT_PATH/CERTCTL_CA_KEY_PATH(typically/etc/certctl/ca.crt+/etc/certctl/ca.key). Copy both to a secure offline location with at least 2y retention (relying parties may still send OCSP requests against certs the OLD CA issued). - Generate a new keypair + cert. For self-signed mode:
For sub-CA mode, generate a CSR and have your enterprise root sign it instead.
openssl ecparam -name prime256v1 -genkey -noout -out new-ca.key openssl req -x509 -key new-ca.key -days 3650 \ -subj "/CN=certctl Local CA" -out new-ca.crt - Stop certctl.
kill -TERM <pid>ordocker stop certctl. - Move the new files into place + back up the old:
mv /etc/certctl/ca.crt /etc/certctl/ca.crt.old-rotated-20XX-XX-XX mv /etc/certctl/ca.key /etc/certctl/ca.key.old-rotated-20XX-XX-XX mv new-ca.crt /etc/certctl/ca.crt mv new-ca.key /etc/certctl/ca.key chmod 0600 /etc/certctl/ca.key - Truncate the OCSP responder cert table so the responder
bootstrap re-fires against the new CA:
psql -c "DELETE FROM ocsp_responder_certs;" - Truncate the CRL cache so the next
crlGenerationLooptick regenerates the CRL signed by the new CA:psql -c "TRUNCATE crl_cache;" - Truncate the OCSP response cache so future OCSP requests
live-sign with the new CA's responder cert:
psql -c "TRUNCATE ocsp_response_cache;" - Start certctl. The startup preflight loads the new CA cert + key. The next HTTP request bootstraps a new responder cert.
- Verify:
# Issue a test cert curl ... new-cert # Confirm chain to the new CA openssl x509 -in new-cert -noout -issuer
Future: when the HSM/PKCS#11 driver bundle (planned; driver-prompt.md`) ships, this rotation procedure changes substantially — the HSM-backed key never moves, only the cert wrap rotates. The signer interface seam is the load-bearing prerequisite for that.
Postgres restore
certctl's full state lives in Postgres. The on-disk artifacts (CA cert/key, RA cert/key for SCEP, responder keys for OCSP, trust bundles for SCEP/Intune/EST mTLS) are operator-managed; everything else is in DB rows.
Restore procedure:
- Stop certctl.
kill -TERM <pid>ordocker stop certctl. - Restore the Postgres database from your point-in-time backup
(
pg_restoreor your managed-DB equivalent). - Run any migrations newer than the backup's snapshot:
migrate -path migrations/ -database "$DATABASE_URL" up - Truncate the caches that may now hold stale data referencing
pre-restore rows:
psql -c "TRUNCATE crl_cache;" psql -c "TRUNCATE ocsp_response_cache;" - Start certctl. The schedulers regenerate caches on their next ticks.
Recoverable from DB only: managed certificates, revocations, audit log, jobs, agents, owners, teams, profiles, issuer/target/ notifier configs, scheduled tasks, network scan results.
Operator-managed (NOT in DB):
- CA cert + key (
CERTCTL_CA_CERT_PATH/CERTCTL_CA_KEY_PATH) - SCEP RA cert + key per profile
- OCSP responder keys per issuer (
CERTCTL_OCSP_RESPONDER_KEY_DIR) - SCEP/Intune trust anchor PEM bundles
- EST mTLS client CA trust bundles
CERTCTL_API_KEY,CERTCTL_AGENT_BOOTSTRAP_TOKEN,CERTCTL_CONFIG_ENCRYPTION_KEY
Back these up out-of-band on the same cadence as your Postgres backups. Without them, a restored DB is unusable.
Trust-bundle reload semantics
This section codifies the fail-safe behavior that's already in code, for reviewers who need to see the procedure documented.
Pattern: every trust-bundle holder (internal/trustanchor.Holder,
used by SCEP/Intune dispatcher + EST mTLS sibling route) implements
the same SIGHUP-equivalent reload semantics:
- A bad reload (parse error, expired cert, empty bundle) keeps the OLD pool in place. The endpoint stays up; the operator sees the typed error in the GUI Reload modal.
- The reload is atomic. There's no window where the holder is empty or pointing at a half-loaded bundle.
- In-flight requests use a snapshot taken at request-start. A request that crosses a SIGHUP uses the OLD pool — no mid-request validation drift.
Operator workflow:
- Receive the new trust bundle (e.g., rotated Intune Connector signing cert, rotated EST mTLS client CA).
- Overwrite the on-disk PEM file at the configured path.
- Trigger reload via the GUI (
/scepProfiles tab → Reload trust anchor;/estProfiles tab → same) OR sendkill -HUP <certctl-pid>directly. - The Reload modal returns success or shows the typed error. On
error, fix the file (
openssl x509 -in trust.pem -noout -textto validate) and retry; the OLD pool stays in place between attempts.
DR checklist
Print this. Pin it near your on-call rotation.
☐ Backups: Postgres backup runs nightly + retention ≥ 30 days
☐ Backups: CA cert + key offsite + retention ≥ NotAfter + 2y
☐ Backups: OCSP responder keys offsite (or accept rotate-from-CA on restore)
☐ Backups: Trust anchor PEMs offsite
☐ Backups: Operator-managed env vars (API_KEY, BOOTSTRAP_TOKEN,
CONFIG_ENCRYPTION_KEY) in a separate secret manager
☐ Quarterly: dry-run a Postgres restore into a staging environment
☐ Quarterly: verify CA cert NotAfter > 1y
☐ Quarterly: rotate the OCSP responder cert (auto-handled by
ensureOCSPResponder; verify the rotation actually fires by
diffing the responder row's serial_number quarter-over-quarter)
☐ Annually: dry-run a full DR — restore Postgres + CA + responders
into a clean environment + issue + revoke a test cert end-to-end
☐ Annually: rotate API_KEY, AGENT_BOOTSTRAP_TOKEN
☐ Every 5y: rotate the CA private key (see CA rotation section above)
Related docs
crl-ocsp.md— CRL/OCSP responder operator guide.tls.md— control-plane TLS bootstrap.security.md— production-grade security posture.scep-intune.md— SCEP/Intune trust-anchor rotation specifics.est.md— EST mTLS trust-bundle rotation specifics.