Address security review findings by adding explicit constraints to specs
and implementation specialist role:
Architectural constraints (spec updates):
- metadata does not propagate through OperationEnv::invoke() — fresh
HashMap for nested calls, closes the back-door leak channel where a
handler that puts a secret in metadata would leak it to children and
across from_call to remote nodes (ADR-014)
- Config reload must be authenticated/local-only — malicious reload =
root-equivalent privilege grant (config.md)
- from_call trust is transitive — scoped env bounds reachability, not
what the remote op does (operation-registry.md)
- Token entropy ≥128 bits — prefix is lookup aid not secret, offline
hash verification requires high-entropy tokens (auth.md)
Implementation constraints (auth.md security constraints section + role spec):
- OsRng for cryptographic nonces (AES-GCM IV reuse is catastrophic)
- CachedKey derives Zeroize/ZeroizeOnDrop (no secrets in freed heap)
- No unwrap()/expect() outside tests (poisoned lock recovery, not crash)
- Implementation specialist role spec updated with all four constraints
- Rewrite OQ-12: separate two distinct TLS identity use cases (RFC 7250
raw keys as default for P2P, X.509 for domain-hosted/browsers) instead
of conflating them as 'file paths now, ACME later'. ACME is a proven
pattern from the reverse-proxy project, not speculative future work.
- Resolve OQ-13 and OQ-14: remove 'Phase 1' framing from core crate
specs. /{service}/{op} is the correct design for alknet-call, not a
simplification. Batch as correlated call.requested events is the correct
protocol design. Core crates need to be done right from the start.
- Add ADR-013: Rust as canonical implementation language. TypeScript
@alkdev/operations is a reference that informed the design, not a
parallel implementation. The only JS use case is browser SDK adaptation.
Five reasons: memory safety, LLM competence, supply chain attacks,
performance, browser-only JS.
- Add alknet-agent crate to the crate graph (depends on alknet-call, not
alknet-core). Agent service uses call protocol client for tool dispatch
and vault/derive for provider keys — no env vars for secrets. ALPN
alknet/agent added to the registry.
- Add OQ-15: call protocol client and adapter contract. alknet-call needs
both server (CallAdapter) and client (remote invocation over QUIC), plus
the adapter traits (from_*, to_*) that enable composition.
- Clarify alknet-napi as thin NAPI projection layer, not business logic.
- Fix bugs: ProtocolController → ProtocolHandler typo, OperationEnv
invoke() path format inconsistency, RateLimitConfig comment confusion.
- Update endpoint.md TLS section: comprehensive identity model comparison
table, RFC 7250 as default mode, ACME as proven pattern.
iroh uses RFC 7250 raw Ed25519 public keys for TLS instead of X.509
certificates. rustls already supports this. This means the quinn
endpoint can also use raw public keys — same key-based identity model
as iroh, but with direct QUIC over UDP. X.509 is optional, needed
only for domain-facing identity (browser/WebTransport clients).
Update StaticConfig with TlsIdentity enum (X509, RawKey, SelfSigned)
and add iroh_relay field. Remove 'iroh deferred' language — iroh is
a first-class connectivity mode.