# ADR-010: ALPN Router and Endpoint ## Status Accepted ## Context ADR-001 establishes ALPN-based protocol dispatch: a single endpoint accepts connections, and the ALPN negotiated during the TLS handshake routes each connection to the correct `ProtocolHandler`. ADR-002 defines the `ProtocolHandler` trait. ADR-006 establishes one ALPN per connection. ADR-007 defines `Connection` and `BiStream`. The question now is: **how does the endpoint work?** What accepts connections, negotiates ALPN, and hands connections to handlers? This is the central runtime piece of alknet-core — every handler depends on it. ### Multiple connectivity modes, not multiple transports The reference implementation supports three connectivity modes that serve **fundamentally different deployment contexts**: 1. **QUIC+TLS (public)** — The node has a public IP and open ports. TLS provides protocol routing via ALPN negotiation. The TLS certificate is the node's **network-facing identity** — it's what clients verify when connecting to `alknet.example.com:4433`. This is the mode for replicators, VPS hosts, service providers. SSH key auth still handles **authentication** — the TLS cert is not the auth identity, it's the network identity. 2. **iroh P2P (NAT traversal)** — The node has no public IP or open ports. iroh's relay handles NAT traversal and connection brokering. Node identity comes from iroh's `NodeId` (Ed25519 key pair). The relay is a signaling service, not a proxy — it helps peers establish direct QUIC connections. This is the mode for home servers, IoT devices, anything behind NAT. 3. **TCP (local/dev)** — Bare SSH over TCP. Port 22. No TLS, no ALPN, no certs. SSH key exchange handles both identity and authentication. This is the mode for local network access and development. These are not interchangeable "transports" to be abstracted behind a trait. They are **different ways a node can be reached**, each with different identity and authentication implications: | Mode | Identity source | Auth mechanism | Requires public IP | Use case | |------|-----------------|----------------|-------------------|----------| | QUIC+TLS | TLS cert (network) + SSH key (auth) | SSH key, API key | Yes | VPS, replicators | | iroh P2P | NodeId (Ed25519) | NodeId, SSH key | No | Home servers, NAT | | TCP | SSH host key | SSH key | Yes (local) | Dev, LAN | ### What the old "stealth mode" actually was The reference implementation's "stealth mode" is **SSH-over-TLS on port 443**. The TLS cert is NOT the node's identity — it's **camouflage**. The purpose is to make port 443 look like a web server to port scanners and DPI systems. Non-SSH traffic gets a fake nginx 404. SSH auth still happens via SSH key exchange *inside* the TLS tunnel. In the new ALPN model, this concept maps to: the endpoint speaks QUIC+TLS with ALPN, and the `alknet/http` handler can serve a decoy website on `h2`/`http/1.1` while real services use `alknet/ssh`, `alknet/call`, etc. The ALPN router does the "stealth" job — unknown ALPNs get the HTTP handler, which can serve whatever fronting content is desired. No byte-peeking needed. ### iroh produces QUIC connections with ALPN iroh's `Endpoint::accept()` produces incoming QUIC connections with ALPN negotiation (step 4 of iroh's connection establishment). The `iroh::Endpoint` supports `set_alpns()` to configure which ALPNs the endpoint advertises — the same mechanism iroh's own `Router` uses internally. This means the iroh integration is not a separate dispatch path. It uses the **same ALPN dispatch** as the quinn path. The `iroh::Endpoint` accepts connections, negotiates ALPN, and our `HandlerRegistry` dispatches to the right handler — exactly like iroh's own `Router` does with its `ProtocolMap`. We do NOT wrap iroh's `Router`. We use `iroh::Endpoint` directly and run our own accept loop, because: - Our `HandlerRegistry` is shared between quinn and iroh connection sources - Our `AuthContext` construction differs per connection source - Our shutdown and error handling patterns are our own The relationship is: **iroh's Router is a reference implementation of the pattern we're building.** Our `AlknetEndpoint` generalizes it to support multiple connection sources with the same dispatch. ### Key design questions 1. **How many endpoints can a node have?** A node may need to listen on quinn (public QUIC+TLS) AND iroh (P2P relay) simultaneously. These are not alternatives — they're complementary connectivity modes. 2. **Handler registration**: Static (at startup) or dynamic (at runtime)? 3. **Connection lifecycle**: Who owns the endpoints? How does graceful shutdown work? 4. **Error handling**: What happens when a handler panics? When ALPN negotiation fails? ## Decision ### A node can have multiple endpoints `AlknetEndpoint` manages one or more QUIC connection sources. Each source produces connections that feed into the same `HandlerRegistry`: ```rust pub struct AlknetEndpoint { // One or more QUIC connection sources quinn: Option, // Public QUIC+TLS iroh: Option, // P2P relay-assisted handlers: Arc, dynamic: Arc>, identity_provider: Arc, shutdown: watch::Receiver, } ``` A node that has a public IP runs with `quinn: Some(...)` — it listens on a public address with TLS+ALPN. A node behind NAT runs with `iroh: Some(...)` — it connects to a relay and accepts P2P connections. A node that has both runs with both — it's reachable via either path, and both feed into the same ALPN router. **TCP mode is not an endpoint concern.** TCP mode in the reference implementation is SSH over raw TCP on port 22. This is not QUIC and doesn't have ALPN. In the new model, TCP access to SSH is handled by the SSH handler directly — it can listen on a TCP socket independently of the ALPN endpoint. This is a handler-specific concern, not a core endpoint concern. ### HandlerRegistry maps ALPN strings to ProtocolHandler instances ```rust pub struct HandlerRegistry { handlers: HashMap<&'static [u8], Arc>, } ``` Registration is static at startup (OQ-04). The CLI binary constructs a `HandlerRegistry`, inserts handlers, and passes it to `AlknetEndpoint::new()`. The ALPN strings for the quinn endpoint's TLS `ServerConfig` are derived from the registry's keys. The iroh endpoint's ALPN strings are also derived from the registry — both endpoints advertise the same set of ALPNs. ### Accept loop: accept from all sources, dispatch by ALPN The endpoint runs accept loops for each active connection source. All loops dispatch through the same `HandlerRegistry`: ``` // Quinn accept loop (if configured) loop { incoming = quinn_endpoint.accept().await connection = incoming.await // TLS handshake + ALPN negotiation dispatch(connection) } // iroh accept loop (if configured) loop { incoming = iroh_endpoint.accept().await connection = incoming.await // iroh QUIC connection + ALPN dispatch(connection) } fn dispatch(connection) { alpn = connection.alpn() handler = registry.get(alpn) match handler { Some(h) => { auth = AuthContext::from_connection(&connection) conn = Connection::from_quinn(connection) // or from_iroh tokio::spawn(h.handle(conn, &auth)) } None => connection.close() } } ``` Both accept loops are `tokio::select!`-ed against the shutdown signal. ### TLS certificate and the distinction between network identity and auth identity For the quinn endpoint, the TLS cert serves as **network-facing identity** — it's what clients verify when connecting to a domain name. It is NOT the node's authentication identity. Authentication is handled by handlers (SSH key exchange, API tokens, etc.). This is the same model as the reference implementation's TLS mode: the cert makes the port look legitimate and encrypts traffic, but SSH key exchange handles the actual authentication. The ALPN model extends this: the cert + ALPN routing is the network layer, handler-specific auth is the application layer. For the iroh endpoint, the `NodeId` serves as network identity. No TLS cert is needed — iroh's QUIC uses the NodeId for connection verification. ### RFC 7250: Raw Public Keys in TLS iroh uses RFC 7250 raw public keys instead of X.509 certificates for TLS. The implementation is strikingly simple (see `iroh/iroh/src/tls/resolver.rs`): take an Ed25519 key, wrap its SPKI public key as a `CertificateDer`, and tell rustls `only_raw_public_keys() -> true`. No X.509, no CAs, no domain names, no cert renewal. rustls already supports RFC 7250. This means the quinn endpoint can also use raw Ed25519 public keys instead of X.509 certs. The implications: 1. **No domain required.** A node without a domain name can use raw public keys for the quinn path — the same key-based identity model as iroh, but with direct QUIC over UDP instead of relay-assisted connections. 2. **Key = identity.** The Ed25519 public key IS the node's identity. No CA trust chain, no cert expiry, no renewal. The key is derived from alknet-vault or generated at startup. 3. **X.509 is optional.** Domain-facing identity (for replicators, public services) uses X.509 certs. Key-based identity (for personal nodes, P2P) uses raw public keys. Both work with the same quinn endpoint. 4. **Browser compatibility.** Browsers don't support RFC 7250 — they require X.509. For browser/WebTransport clients, X.509 certs are needed. For alknet-native clients, raw public keys work fine. This reframes the connectivity model. The quinn and iroh paths are not distinguished by their identity model (both can use Ed25519 keys). They're distinguished by how the connection is established: | Path | Connection establishment | Identity model (v1) | Identity model (future) | |------|------------------------|--------------------|-------------------------| | quinn | Direct UDP, public IP | X.509 (domain) | X.509 or RFC 7250 raw key | | iroh | Relay-assisted P2P | RFC 7250 raw key (NodeId) | Same | ### Error taxonomy ```rust pub enum EndpointError { BindFailed(io::Error), TlsConfig(io::Error), HandlerNotFound(Vec), // ALPN string with no registered handler } pub enum HandlerError { ConnectionClosed, StreamError(io::Error), AuthRequired, Internal(Box), } ``` - `EndpointError`: Problems starting or running the endpoint. Fatal — the endpoint cannot accept connections. - `HandlerError`: Problems within a handler's `handle()` method. Non-fatal — the connection is closed, but the endpoint keeps running. ## Consequences **Positive:** - A node can be reachable via multiple paths simultaneously (public QUIC+TLS, iroh P2P) - ALPN router is transport-agnostic — dispatches by ALPN string regardless of connection source - Adding a handler is registering an ALPN string — no endpoint code changes - Handler panics are isolated — one bad handler can't take down the endpoint - "Stealth mode" maps naturally to the HTTP handler serving decoy content on `h2`/`http/1.1` - Both iroh and quinn produce QUIC connections — same `Connection` type works for both **Negative:** - alknet-core depends on both quinn and iroh (mitigated: both are feature-gated; a node that only needs one doesn't compile the other) - The endpoint is more complex than a single quinn listener — it manages multiple accept loops - TLS identity provisioning has two distinct use cases: RFC 7250 raw keys (default for P2P/key-based identity) and X.509 certs (for domain-hosted services and browsers). ACME auto-provisioning for X.509 is a proven pattern from the reverse-proxy project, not speculative future work. See OQ-12. - No runtime handler registration without regenerating the TLS config (mitigated: two-way door, start static, add ArcSwap later if needed) ## References - ADR-001: ALPN-based protocol dispatch - ADR-002: ProtocolHandler trait - ADR-006: ALPN string convention and connection model - ADR-007: BiStream type definition (Connection, SendStream, RecvStream) - ADR-009: One-way door decision framework - OQ-04: Dynamic handler registration (two-way door, start static) - OQ-05: Multi-transport endpoint (now: multi-connectivity endpoint) - iroh Router pattern: `docs/research/references/iroh/` - Reference implementation: `alknet-main/crates/alknet-core/src/server/serve.rs` - Reference stealth mode: `alknet-main/crates/alknet-core/src/server/stealth.rs` - Reference iroh transport: `alknet-main/crates/alknet-core/src/transport/iroh_transport.rs`