docs(infra): document team mkcert CA on vm-gitlab (cross-VM trust) #264

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julien merged 1 commits from docs/team-mkcert-ca into main 2026-06-01 23:30:56 +02:00
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@@ -270,6 +270,117 @@ Native `nx serve` (WSL / localhost) is **unaffected** — it keeps using the `de
When real DNS + corp-CA-signed certs arrive, the hostname can be reused as-is (Entra registrations are literal strings — they don't care who signs the cert). Drop the cert files back into `.secrets/` and remove the mkcert step.
### Team mkcert CA on `vm-gitlab` — sharing the trust root
The previous section is the **solo flow** (one dev mints their own CA, certs only trusted by their own workstation). It does not let a teammate browse another dev's VM without a certificate warning — every dev has their own private CA, none of which the others trust.
For a multi-dev team the canonical pattern is one shared CA held on `vm-gitlab`. The CA private key (`rootCA-key.pem`) stays on `vm-gitlab` — never copied to any workstation; only the public `rootCA.pem` is distributed to each developer's Windows trust store, and the R&D Lead mints per-VM certs on `vm-gitlab` when a new VM (or new developer) joins. Browsing any dev VM from any workstation then "just works" — green padlock, no warning.
This subsection assumes the per-dev workstation procedure of "HTTPS dev-server setup" above is what every developer will do **once**, with the rootCA.pem they receive from this shared CA.
#### Initial setup on `vm-gitlab` (one-time, by the R&D Lead)
```bash
# 1. Install mkcert on vm-gitlab (no service to run — mkcert is one-shot).
sudo curl -fsSL https://dl.filippo.io/mkcert/latest?for=linux/amd64 \
-o /usr/local/bin/mkcert
sudo chmod +x /usr/local/bin/mkcert
# 2. Create the shared CAROOT, root-only.
sudo mkdir -p /srv/apf-portal/mkcert-ca
sudo chown root:root /srv/apf-portal/mkcert-ca
sudo chmod 700 /srv/apf-portal/mkcert-ca
# 3. Generate the CA into that CAROOT. (`-install` here just touches
# the local trust store of vm-gitlab — cosmetic for an infra VM,
# no harm.)
sudo CAROOT=/srv/apf-portal/mkcert-ca mkcert -install
# 4. Verify.
sudo ls -la /srv/apf-portal/mkcert-ca/
# → rootCA.pem (-rw-r--r--), rootCA-key.pem (-rw-------, root only)
```
After this, the CA exists and is owned by `root` on `vm-gitlab`. Developers never touch it directly.
#### Minting a cert for a dev VM (R&D Lead, on `vm-gitlab`)
Repeat once per VM hostname (`apf-portal.dev-jg.local`, `apf-portal.dev-vc.local`, `apf-portal.dev.local`, …). Replace `<host>` and the SSH/scp target accordingly:
```bash
sudo CAROOT=/srv/apf-portal/mkcert-ca mkcert \
-key-file /tmp/<host>-tls.key \
-cert-file /tmp/<host>-tls.pem \
apf-portal.<host>.local
# Sanity check.
sudo openssl x509 -in /tmp/<host>-tls.pem -noout -subject -issuer
# subject CN must be apf-portal.<host>.local; issuer the mkcert CA name.
# Ship to the target VM, renaming to the path the `https` Nx serve
# configuration expects (.secrets/dev-tls.{key,pem}).
sudo scp /tmp/<host>-tls.key <vm>:~/Works/apf_portal/.secrets/dev-tls.key
sudo scp /tmp/<host>-tls.pem <vm>:~/Works/apf_portal/.secrets/dev-tls.pem
# Wipe the staging copies.
sudo rm /tmp/<host>-tls.*
```
The certificate is good for ~2 years (mkcert default). When it nears expiry, regenerate with the same command and re-`scp` — the dev-server picks up the new files on next restart.
#### Onboarding a new developer
A new teammate needs **three things**: a copy of `rootCA.pem` (public, low-sensitivity), a per-VM cert minted by the R&D Lead, and the same hosts-file + `.env` configuration every dev follows.
**R&D Lead side** — on `vm-gitlab`:
```bash
# Hand off the public CA cert to the new dev via a secure channel
# (1Password shared vault, Bitwarden, direct scp). Never plain e-mail.
sudo cat /srv/apf-portal/mkcert-ca/rootCA.pem
```
Then mint that dev's per-VM cert (see "Minting a cert for a dev VM" above) and ship it to their VM's `~/Works/apf_portal/.secrets/`.
**New developer side** — on their Windows workstation:
```powershell
# 1. Install mkcert (only to get the `-install` command — no need to
# generate certs on the workstation).
choco install mkcert -y
# 2. Drop the rootCA.pem they received into the local CAROOT path.
$caroot = mkcert -CAROOT
Copy-Item "C:\path\to\rootCA.pem" "$caroot\rootCA.pem"
# NB: only rootCA.pem — they do NOT receive rootCA-key.pem.
# 3. Register the team CA in their Windows trust store.
mkcert -install
# Confirm the Windows security dialog. Their machine now trusts every
# cert minted by the team CA on vm-gitlab.
```
Then they:
- Edit `C:\Windows\System32\drivers\etc\hosts` (admin) and add the entries for every VM they want to reach (their own + the others as needed):
```
10.100.201.20 apf-portal.dev-vc.local
10.100.201.21 apf-portal.dev-jg.local
10.100.201.22 apf-portal.dev.local
```
- Edit `apps/portal-bff/.env` on their VM so the four `ENTRA_*_REDIRECT_URI` values point at `https://apf-portal.<their-host>:{4200,4300}/...` (the matching URIs are already registered Entra-side — no action there).
- Set `NX_SERVE_CONFIGURATION=https` in `infra/local/.env` on their VM.
- `./infra/local/dev.sh down && ./infra/local/dev.sh up apps`.
Total onboarding budget: ~5 min of R&D Lead time on `vm-gitlab` (mint + transfer) + ~10 min of work on the new dev's workstation + VM. No SSH access to `vm-gitlab` is granted to developers — only the R&D Lead operates the CA.
#### Operational notes
- **Departures.** mkcert has no CRL; revoking trust on a former dev's machine isn't actionable from the CA side. The risk surface is what that dev could have signed before leaving — and they only ever had the public `rootCA.pem`, never the private key, so they cannot have signed anything in your trust circle. No action required when a dev leaves.
- **CA rotation.** Rare (audit, suspected compromise, annual hygiene). Regenerate the CA on `vm-gitlab`, re-mint every VM's cert, redistribute the new `rootCA.pem` to each dev. Each dev re-imports + re-`mkcert -install`. No `.env` or Entra change.
- **Per-VM cert rotation.** Same pattern as initial mint — regenerate, scp, `dev.sh restart portal-shell portal-admin`. No client-side action.
- **Migration to a corp-signed CA.** When the infra team issues an internal-CA-signed cert (already trusted by every domain-joined workstation, no mkcert step), drop those files into `.secrets/dev-tls.{key,pem}` and remove the team mkcert CA from each dev's trust store. Entra registrations are unchanged — they reference hostname + port, not the issuer.
### Service endpoints (defaults)
| Service | Host port | Purpose |