Files
certctl/docs/operator/security.md
T
shankar0123 a581e2d222 auth-bundle-2 Phase 16: docs updates (security.md OIDC + sessions + break-glass + auditor split sections; new migration/oidc-enable.md; CHANGELOG.md v2.1.0 Bundle 2 release notes)
Closes Phase 16 of cowork/auth-bundle-2-prompt.md. Three operator-
facing docs updated, one new migration guide ships, README nav row
added.

Files
=====

docs/operator/security.md (MODIFIED, Last reviewed bumped to 2026-05-10):
* Added 5 new Bundle 2 subsections under '## Authentication
  surface' after the Bundle 1 approval-bypass-closure entry:
  - 'OIDC federation (Bundle 2 Phases 1-7)' — alg allow-list,
    IdP-downgrade defense, iss/aud/azp/at_hash, single-use
    state+nonce, PKCE-S256 mandatory, JWKS rotation handling,
    encrypted client_secret at rest with the v3 blob format
    pinned by an integration test, pointer to oidc-runbooks/
    for per-IdP setup.
  - 'Sessions + back-channel logout (Bundle 2 Phases 4-6)' —
    length-prefixed HMAC cookie wire format, HttpOnly + Secure
    + SameSite cookie hardening, idle/absolute timeouts, CSRF
    defense, signing-key rotation primitive, fail-fatal
    EnsureInitialSigningKey at server boot, OpenID Connect
    Back-Channel Logout 1.0 (NOT RFC 8414).
  - 'OIDC first-admin bootstrap (Bundle 2 Phase 7)' — coexists
    with Bundle 1's env-var-token bootstrap, group-scoped via
    CERTCTL_BOOTSTRAP_ADMIN_GROUPS + CERTCTL_BOOTSTRAP_OIDC_PROVIDER_ID,
    one-shot per tenant.
  - 'Break-glass admin (Bundle 2 Phase 7.5)' — default-OFF,
    surface invisibility via 404-not-403, Argon2id with OWASP
    2024 params, lockout state machine, constant-time-via-
    verifyDummy, WARN log at boot, runbook pointer for
    operator drill.
  - 'Migrating an existing deployment to OIDC' — pointer to
    the new migration/oidc-enable.md walkthrough.

docs/migration/oidc-enable.md (NEW, Last reviewed 2026-05-10):
* Step-by-step migration guide for an operator on a Bundle-1-merged
  deployment to enable OIDC SSO. Pre-reqs (CERTCTL_CONFIG_ENCRYPTION_KEY,
  admin actor with auth.oidc.create + auth.oidc.edit, IdP tenant)
  + 7 numbered steps (pin encryption key, complete IdP-side per
  runbook, configure certctl-side OIDCProvider, add group→role
  mappings with fail-closed warning, optional first-admin bootstrap,
  verify with single test user, announce SSO endpoint).
* Rollback section covering the 4-step disable flow + the 409
  Conflict on provider-delete-while-sessions-exist + the
  existing-sessions-keep-working-until-expiry semantics.
* Troubleshooting section pinning 8 most-common failure modes
  (discovery doc fetch fails / IdP downgrade defense rejects /
  no roles assigned / iss mismatch / pre-login expired / state
  mismatch / sessions revoked but user can hit API / JWKS
  rotation breaks login).
* Database row count drift documented so operators know what to
  expect after OIDC is live (10 Bundle 2 tables enumerated).
* Cross-references to oidc-runbooks/ + security.md +
  auth-threat-model.md + auth-benchmarks.md + auth-standards-implemented.md.

CHANGELOG.md (MODIFIED):
* v2.1.0 section title bumped from 'Auth Bundle 1: RBAC primitive'
  to 'Auth Bundles 1 + 2: RBAC primitive + OIDC SSO + sessions'.
* Replaced the Bundle 1 closing-bullet ('Bundle 2 starts after
  Bundle 1 lands on master') with 18 new Bundle 2 entries:
  - OIDC + sessions + back-channel logout + break-glass overview.
  - OIDC token validation pinned at three layers (alg allow-list,
    IdP-downgrade defense, OIDC Core §3.1.3.7 re-verification).
  - Length-prefixed HMAC session cookies.
  - CSRF double-submit + hashed-token-on-row.
  - OIDC client_secret AES-256-GCM v3 blob at rest +
    integration-test invariant.
  - OIDC first-admin bootstrap.
  - Default-OFF break-glass admin (Argon2id + lockout +
    constant-time + surface invisibility).
  - GUI: 4 new pages + login-page IdP buttons + sidebar logout.
  - 11 new MCP tools for OIDC + session management.
  - 6 per-IdP runbooks (Keycloak / Authentik / Okta / Auth0 /
    Entra ID / Google Workspace).
  - Threat model extended with 5 new defense subsections + 8 new
    threat-catalogue subsections.
  - Performance baselines documented (4 benchmarks; 3 measured
    + 1 operator-runs).
  - Standards-and-RFC implementation table (13 RFCs + 14 CWEs;
    NOT a compliance-mapping doc).
  - Coverage gates held at floor 90 across all 4 Bundle 2
    packages (anti-Bundle-1-mistake invariant).
  - Multi-tenant query CI guard (ratchet baseline 32).
  - Phase 10 Keycloak testcontainers integration test + optional
    Okta smoke test.
  - OpenAPI cookieAuth security scheme + 13 new endpoints + 4
    break-glass endpoints.
  - Bundle-1-only compat regression CI guard +
    Bundle-1-to-2-upgrade regression CI guard.
* Final paragraph updated to point at oidc-enable.md alongside
  api-keys-to-rbac.md as the two migration walkthroughs.

docs/README.md (MODIFIED):
* Added the new oidc-enable.md migration row under '## Migration'
  alongside the existing api-keys-to-rbac.md entry, with a
  one-line description flagging it as the Bundle 2 OIDC
  onboarding walkthrough.

Verification
============

* Last-reviewed on security.md + oidc-enable.md: 2026-05-10.
* Internal-link sweep on oidc-enable.md: 0 broken (every relative
  link resolves via shell-loop verification).
* Internal-link sweep on docs/README.md: 0 broken (all .md
  references resolve).
* No Go-side impact, make verify gate unchanged.

Bundle 2 documentation deliverables now complete: security.md +
auth-threat-model.md + oidc-runbooks/ + auth-benchmarks.md +
auth-standards-implemented.md + api-keys-to-rbac.md + oidc-enable.md
+ CHANGELOG.md v2.1.0. The full Bundle 2 surface is operator-
discoverable from docs/README.md root nav.
2026-05-10 17:07:27 +00:00

360 lines
16 KiB
Markdown

# certctl Security Posture & Operator Guidance
> Last reviewed: 2026-05-10
This document collects the operator-facing security guidance that the source
code's per-finding comment blocks reference. Each section names the audit
finding it closes, the threat model, and the operator action required (if
any).
## OCSP responder availability
**Audit reference:** Bundle C / M-020. CWE-770 (uncontrolled resource
consumption); RFC 6960 (OCSP); RFC 7633 (Must-Staple).
certctl ships an OCSP responder at `/.well-known/pki/ocsp/{issuer_id}/{serial}`
that signs a fresh response per request. Pre-Bundle-C the unauth handler
chain had no rate limit, so an attacker could DoS the responder and force
fail-open relying parties to accept revoked certificates as valid. Bundle C
adds the same per-key rate limiter to the unauth chain that the authenticated
chain has used since Bundle B. Per-IP keying applies because OCSP traffic is
unauthenticated.
The rate limiter alone does not solve the underlying revocation-bypass risk.
**The architectural fix is for issued certificates to carry the OCSP
Must-Staple TLS Feature extension** (RFC 7633, OID 1.3.6.1.5.5.7.1.24). When
present, conforming TLS clients refuse to negotiate a session unless the
server staples a fresh signed OCSP response in the TLS handshake. This shifts
revocation enforcement from the client's discretion (which most fail-open by
default) to a hard requirement that the connection cannot complete without
proof of non-revocation.
### Operator action
For certificates issued to systems where revocation correctness matters:
1. **Configure the issuer profile to set `must-staple: true`.** Out-of-the-box
profiles in `migrations/seed.sql` do not set this; operators add it at
profile-creation time via the API or by editing seed data.
2. **Confirm the relying party honors the extension.** OpenSSL ≥ 1.1.0,
Firefox, and Chrome 84+ all enforce Must-Staple. Older clients silently
ignore it.
3. **Confirm the deployment target is configured for OCSP stapling** so the
server can actually deliver the stapled response in the handshake.
- **nginx:** `ssl_stapling on; ssl_stapling_verify on;`
- **Apache:** `SSLUseStapling on`
- **HAProxy:** `set ssl ocsp-response /path/to/response.der`
- **Envoy:** `ocsp_staple_policy: must_staple`
### What this does NOT cover
- **CRL fallback.** Must-Staple does not affect CRL behavior. Operators with
CRL-based relying parties should use the rate-limit + caching defense
alone; there is no client-side equivalent to Must-Staple for CRLs.
- **Self-issued certs in air-gapped networks.** When the relying party
cannot reach the OCSP responder at all (the threat model the audit
cited), Must-Staple is the only mechanism that closes the bypass. CRL
distribution similarly requires the relying party to fetch the CRL,
which is also subject to the same network-availability concern.
## Postgres transport encryption
See [docs/database-tls.md](database-tls.md). Bundle B / M-018.
## Encryption at rest
Bundle B / M-001. PBKDF2-SHA256 at 600,000 rounds (OWASP 2024 Password
Storage Cheat Sheet floor) for the operator-supplied passphrase that
derives the AES-256-GCM key for sensitive config columns. v3 blob format
with a per-ciphertext random salt; v1/v2 read fallback for legacy rows.
See [internal/crypto/encryption.go](../../internal/crypto/encryption.go) and
the accompanying tests for the format spec.
## Authentication surface
Bundle B / M-002. Two layers decide auth-exempt status:
1. **Router layer:** `internal/api/router/router.go::AuthExemptRouterRoutes`
- the endpoints registered via direct `r.mux.Handle` without going
through the middleware chain (`/health`, `/ready`, `/api/v1/auth/info`,
`/api/v1/version`, plus `/api/v1/auth/bootstrap` GET + POST per
Bundle 1 Phase 6).
2. **Dispatch layer:** `internal/api/router/router.go::AuthExemptDispatchPrefixes`
- URL-prefix routing in `cmd/server/main.go::buildFinalHandler` for
`/.well-known/pki/*`, `/.well-known/est/*`, `/.well-known/est-mtls`,
and `/scep[/...]*` (incl. `/scep-mtls`).
Both lists have AST-walking regression tests (`auth_exempt_test.go`) that
fail CI if a new bypass lands without updating the documented constant.
### RBAC primitive (Bundle 1)
Bundle 1 ships role-based authorization on top of API-key
authentication. Every gated handler routes through the
`auth.RequirePermission` middleware (or its router-level wrap
`rbacGate`); the middleware resolves the actor's effective
permissions via the service-layer `Authorizer.CheckPermission`
and returns HTTP 403 BEFORE the handler body runs on miss. The
seven default roles (`admin` / `operator` / `viewer` / `agent` /
`mcp` / `cli` / `auditor`), 33-permission canonical catalogue,
and the auditor split (`r-auditor` holds only `audit.read` +
`audit.export`) are seeded by migration 000029.
For the operator how-to, see [`rbac.md`](rbac.md). For the
threat model + compliance mapping, see
[`auth-threat-model.md`](auth-threat-model.md). For the upgrade
flow from a pre-Bundle-1 deployment, see
[`docs/migration/api-keys-to-rbac.md`](../migration/api-keys-to-rbac.md).
### Day-0 admin bootstrap (Bundle 1 Phase 6)
Fresh deployments where no admin actor exists yet can mint the
first admin via `POST /api/v1/auth/bootstrap` - set
`CERTCTL_BOOTSTRAP_TOKEN`, POST a single curl with the token, and
the server returns the plaintext key value once. The token is
constant-time-compared; the strategy is one-shot via mutex; the
admin-existence probe re-closes the path once an admin lands.
The token is NEVER logged. The minted plaintext key flows only
into the HTTP response body. See
[`rbac.md`](rbac.md#day-0-bootstrap-first-admin-path) for the
full flow.
### Approval-bypass closure (Bundle 1 Phase 9)
`CertificateProfile.RequiresApproval=true` profiles route both
issuance/renewal AND profile edits through the
`ApprovalService` two-person integrity gate (Phase 9 closes the
flip-flop loophole where an admin could disable approval, mutate,
re-enable). Same-actor self-approve is rejected at the service
layer with `ErrApproveBySameActor`. See
[`docs/reference/profiles.md`](../reference/profiles.md) for the
full gate semantics.
### OIDC federation (Bundle 2 Phases 1-7)
Bundle 2 adds OIDC SSO on top of the API-key + RBAC foundation.
Operators configure one or more identity providers (Keycloak,
Authentik, Okta, Auth0, Entra ID, or Google Workspace via Keycloak
broker); end users sign in at the IdP, certctl validates the
returned ID token, and a session cookie is minted.
The token-validation pipeline pins:
- Algorithm allow-list: RS256 / RS512 / ES256 / ES384 / EdDSA only.
HS256 / HS384 / HS512 / `none` are rejected at the service-layer
sentinel level.
- IdP-downgrade-attack defense at provider creation AND every
RefreshKeys: the IdP's advertised
`id_token_signing_alg_values_supported` is intersected with the
allow-list; a provider that advertises HS-family is rejected
before any token is signed under the weak alg.
- Exact `iss` match (`ErrIssuerMismatch`).
- `aud` membership + `azp` for multi-aud tokens (per OIDC core
§3.1.3.7 step 5).
- `at_hash` REQUIRED-when-access_token-present (Phase 3 tightening
of the spec MAY → MUST so a substituted access token cannot
ride alongside a clean ID token).
- Single-use state + nonce (32-byte random server-generated;
atomic `DELETE...RETURNING` on consume).
- PKCE-S256 mandatory; `plain` rejected.
- Configurable `iat` window (default 300s, capped 600s).
- JWKS cache with operator-triggered RefreshKeys + auto-refresh on
TTL expiry (default 3600s); JWKS-fetch failure during a key
rotation returns 503 to the in-flight login (existing sessions
untouched).
OIDC `client_secret` is encrypted at rest via AES-256-GCM (v3 blob
format: magic 0x03 + salt(16) + nonce(12) + ciphertext+tag) using
the `CERTCTL_CONFIG_ENCRYPTION_KEY` passphrase. The encryption
invariant is pinned by an integration test
(`internal/repository/postgres/oidc_encryption_invariant_test.go`)
that asserts ciphertext != plaintext + correct blob shape +
round-trip recovery + wrong-passphrase fails.
Per-IdP setup guides at
[`oidc-runbooks/index.md`](oidc-runbooks/index.md) cover Keycloak,
Authentik, Okta, Auth0, Entra ID, and Google Workspace.
### Sessions + back-channel logout (Bundle 2 Phases 4-6)
Successful OIDC login mints a session cookie:
`v1.<session_id>.<signing_key_id>.<base64url-no-pad(HMAC-SHA256)>`.
The HMAC input is **length-prefixed** as `len:sid:len:kid` to defeat
concatenation-collision attacks on bare-concat designs. Cookie
attributes:
- `HttpOnly=true` (no JS access; defends XSS cookie theft).
- `Secure=true` (HTTPS-only; defends network MITM).
- `SameSite=Lax` default (configurable to Strict via
`CERTCTL_SESSION_SAMESITE`).
- `Path=/`, host-only.
Idle timeout default 1h; absolute timeout default 8h; both
configurable via `CERTCTL_SESSION_IDLE_TIMEOUT` and
`CERTCTL_SESSION_ABSOLUTE_TIMEOUT`. The scheduler's
`sessionGCLoop` (default 1h interval) sweeps expired rows.
CSRF defense: plaintext CSRF token in the JS-readable
`certctl_csrf` cookie (intentionally `HttpOnly=false` for the GUI
to echo into the `X-CSRF-Token` header); SHA-256 hash on the
session row; `subtle.ConstantTimeCompare` in `CSRFMiddleware`.
API-key actors are CSRF-exempt (no session row in context).
Session signing keys rotate via `RotateSigningKey`; the old key
stays valid for `CERTCTL_SESSION_SIGNING_KEY_RETENTION` (default
24h) so existing cookies validate during rollover. Past retention,
the old key's row is dropped and any cookie still signed under it
returns `ErrSigningKeyNotFound`. `EnsureInitialSigningKey` is
fail-fatal at server boot.
Back-channel logout per **OpenID Connect Back-Channel Logout 1.0**
(NOT RFC 8414): `POST /auth/oidc/back-channel-logout` accepts a
JWT-signed logout token from the IdP, validates the JWT against
the IdP's JWKS (same alg allow-list as login), pins required
claims (`iss` / `aud` / `iat` / `jti` / `events`; exactly one of
`sub` / `sid`; `nonce` MUST be absent), defeats replay via
`jti`-based deduplication, and revokes matching sessions.
For threat-model coverage of these surfaces, see
[`auth-threat-model.md`](auth-threat-model.md). For the
operator-runnable performance baselines, see
[`auth-benchmarks.md`](auth-benchmarks.md).
### OIDC first-admin bootstrap (Bundle 2 Phase 7)
Coexists with Bundle 1's env-var-token bootstrap. When the
operator sets `CERTCTL_BOOTSTRAP_ADMIN_GROUPS` + (optionally)
`CERTCTL_BOOTSTRAP_OIDC_PROVIDER_ID`, the first user with one of
those IdP groups becomes admin on first login per tenant.
Subsequent users go through normal mapping. The admin-existence
probe ensures only one wins between the two bootstrap paths;
once any actor holds `r-admin`, the OIDC bootstrap hook silently
falls through to normal mapping. Audit row on every grant
(`bootstrap.oidc_first_admin`, `event_category=auth`).
### Break-glass admin (Bundle 2 Phase 7.5)
Default-OFF (`CERTCTL_BREAKGLASS_ENABLED=false`). When enabled,
the local-password admin path bypasses OIDC + group-claim layers;
intended ONLY for SSO-broken incidents.
- Argon2id with OWASP 2024 params (m=64 MiB, t=3, p=4, 16-byte
salt, 32-byte output, per-password random salt, PHC-format
hash). Hash column is `json:"-"` so handlers cannot wire-leak.
- Lockout state machine: 5 failures (default; configurable via
`CERTCTL_BREAKGLASS_LOCKOUT_THRESHOLD`) within 1h reset window
(`_LOCKOUT_RESET_INTERVAL`) trips a 30s lockout (`_LOCKOUT_DURATION`).
Atomic single-statement IncrementFailure defeats concurrent
racing attempts.
- Constant-time across all failure paths via `verifyDummy()`
wrong-password / locked-account / no-actor all take statistically
indistinguishable time.
- Surface invisibility: when disabled, ALL four endpoints return
HTTP 404 (NOT 403). Scanners cannot distinguish "endpoint
disabled" from "endpoint doesn't exist".
- WARN log at server boot when `ENABLED=true`; audit row on every
break-glass login (`auth.breakglass_login_*`,
`event_category=auth`); WebAuthn/FIDO2 second factor pairing
on the v3 roadmap (Decision 12).
Operator should DISABLE break-glass within 24h of SSO recovery
to avoid a permanent backdoor; the runbook at
[`auth-threat-model.md#break-glass-risks-phase-75`](auth-threat-model.md)
documents the full state machine.
### Migrating an existing deployment to OIDC
A Bundle-1-merged deployment that wants to add OIDC follows the
step-by-step at
[`docs/migration/oidc-enable.md`](../migration/oidc-enable.md):
configure CERTCTL_CONFIG_ENCRYPTION_KEY, pick + configure an IdP
per the relevant runbook, configure the certctl-side OIDCProvider
+ group→role mappings, verify the login flow against a single
test user, then announce the SSO endpoint to the rest of the
organization.
## Per-user rate limiting
Bundle B / M-025. Authenticated callers are bucketed by API-key name;
unauthenticated callers (probes, OCSP relying parties, EST/SCEP enrollees)
are bucketed by source IP. `RPS` and `BurstSize` are per-key budgets.
`PerUserRPS` / `PerUserBurstSize` give authenticated clients a separate
budget when set non-zero.
## API key rotation
**Audit reference:** L-004. CWE-924 (improper enforcement of message integrity during transmission in a communication channel) - operator UX variant.
certctl's API keys are configured via the `CERTCTL_API_KEYS_NAMED` env var
(format `name1:key1,name2:key2:admin`) and parsed at startup into an
in-memory list. There is no DB-resident key store, no GUI, no `/api/v1/keys`
endpoint - the env var IS the key inventory.
Pre-Bundle-G the env var rejected duplicate names, so rotating a key
required: stop accepting OLDKEY → restart → roll NEWKEY out. Any client
polling against OLDKEY during the restart window hit a 401.
Bundle G adds a **double-key rotation window**: two entries can share a
name during the rollover, and both keys validate. Operators run the
rotation as:
1. **Generate the new key.** `openssl rand -hex 32` produces a 256-bit
value with sufficient entropy.
2. **Append the new entry to `CERTCTL_API_KEYS_NAMED`** alongside the
existing one:
```
CERTCTL_API_KEYS_NAMED="alice:OLDKEY:admin,alice:NEWKEY:admin"
```
Both entries MUST carry the same admin flag - startup fails loud if
they don't (a non-admin shouldn't share an identity with an admin).
3. **Restart certctl.** A startup INFO log confirms the rotation window
is active:
```
INFO api-key rotation window active name=alice entries=2 see=docs/security.md::api-key-rotation
```
4. **Roll the new key out to all clients.** Both keys validate during
this phase. Audit-trail actor + per-user rate-limit bucket stay
consistent across the rollover (both entries produce the same
`UserKey` context value, the shared name).
5. **Remove the old entry** from `CERTCTL_API_KEYS_NAMED`:
```
CERTCTL_API_KEYS_NAMED="alice:NEWKEY:admin"
```
6. **Restart certctl.** OLDKEY now fails with 401. Rotation complete.
The rotation window has no operator-set timeout - it lasts for as long
as both entries are in the env var. Best practice is a 24-72h window
covering a full deploy cadence; if a client hasn't rolled to NEWKEY by
the end of step 4, extend the window before step 5.
### What the contract guarantees
- Two entries with the same `name`: **allowed** if both have the same
`admin` flag.
- Two entries with the same `name` but mismatched admin: **rejected at
startup** (privilege escalation guard).
- Two entries with the same `(name, key)` pair: **rejected at startup**
(typo guard - rotation requires DIFFERENT keys under the same name).
- Single-entry steady state: unchanged from pre-Bundle-G behavior.
### What the contract does NOT do
- **No automatic expiration of OLDKEY.** The operator removes the entry
in step 5; certctl doesn't track timestamps. A future enhancement
could add a `rotated_at` annotation if operators ask for it.
- **No GUI / API for key management.** Keys are env-var only by design;
building a key-management surface is a separate feature project.
- **No revocation list.** If a key leaks, the only path is to remove it
from the env var and restart. That's appropriate for a small env-var
inventory; it would not scale to a per-user-key-issued model.
## Reporting a vulnerability
Email `certctl@proton.me`. Coordinated disclosure preferred; we will
acknowledge within 72h.