Files
PiCloud/serverless_cloud_blueprint.md
MechaCat02 e375735796 docs(blueprint+gate): drop hstore from Tech Stack; note gate-vs-timeout interaction
Two review-pass nits from the v1.1.0-foundation review:

  - Blueprint §6 Tech Stack table still listed the database as
    "PostgreSQL + hstore" with an hstore-for-KV rationale — directly
    contradicting the §8.1 KV rewrite that explicitly rejected hstore
    in favour of JSONB. Updates the row so the high-level summary
    matches the §8.1 reasoning.
  - LocalExecutorClient::execute now documents the permit-vs-timeout
    interaction: when tokio::time::timeout fires the future drops and
    the permit returns, but the detached spawn_blocking thread keeps
    running until the Rhai script winds down. In-use blocking threads
    can briefly exceed the gate's permit count after a timeout. Calling
    it out so future readers don't read the implementation as buggy.

No behaviour change.

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.7 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
2026-05-30 20:10:05 +02:00

78 KiB
Raw Blame History

Project Blueprint: Lightweight Event-Based Serverless Cloud

Status: Phase 4 — Blueprint Complete
Last Updated: 2026-05-27
Audience: Solo developer (DIY self-hosted)


1. Project Overview

Vision

A lightweight, self-hosted, event-driven compute platform that allows developers to deploy and trigger Rhai scripts via HTTP endpoints. Scripts run in isolated containers, scale to zero when idle, and return structured responses. Optimized for resource efficiency on consumer hardware (< 100 functions).

Core Value Proposition

  • Simple deployment: Upload a Rhai script, get an HTTP endpoint
  • Minimal overhead: Containers spawn on-demand, no persistent services running
  • DIY-friendly: Run on modest hardware (single server, RPi-adjacent)
  • Extensible: Pluggable storage, compute, and messaging later

MVP Scope

In Scope:

  • Dashboard: script upload + metadata (name, description, version, config)
  • REST API: script CRUD operations
  • HTTP-triggered script execution
  • Request → Rhai script → JSON response
  • PostgreSQL for script storage
  • Docker for isolated execution
  • Execution logs and basic observability

Out of Scope (v1.1+):

  • Queue-based triggers
  • Scheduled jobs (cron)
  • Multi-user/projects
  • External HTTP calls from scripts
  • Metrics dashboards
  • Secrets management
  • Script versioning/rollback

Success Criteria

  1. Deploy a Rhai script in < 1 minute
  2. Script responds to HTTP requests within 500ms (p95)
  3. Runs on single modest server (2GB RAM, dual-core CPU)
  4. No background services consume CPU when idle

2. Architecture Overview

High-Level System Diagram

┌─────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────┐
│                         Self-Hosted Server                       │
├─────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────┤
│                                                                   │
│  ┌──────────────────────┐         ┌──────────────────────┐      │
│  │   Web Dashboard      │         │  Orchestrator API    │      │
│  │   (Alpine.js SPA)    │         │  (Rust + Axum)       │      │
│  │   Port 3000          │         │  Port 8080           │      │
│  └──────┬───────────────┘         └──────────┬───────────┘      │
│         │                                    │                   │
│         │ Upload script                      │ HTTP requests     │
│         │ Manage scripts                     │ Script metadata   │
│         │                                    │                   │
│         └────────────────┬────────────────────┘                  │
│                          │                                       │
│                  ┌───────▼────────┐                             │
│                  │  PostgreSQL    │                             │
│                  │  (scripts, MD)  │                             │
│                  └────────────────┘                             │
│                          │                                       │
│         ┌────────────────┼────────────────┐                     │
│         │                │                │                     │
│    ┌────▼────┐      ┌────▼────┐     ┌────▼────┐                │
│    │Container │      │Container │     │Container │              │
│    │ Instance │      │ Instance │     │ Instance │ (on-demand)  │
│    │(Rhai Ex.)│      │(Rhai Ex.)│     │(Rhai Ex.)│              │
│    └──────────┘      └──────────┘     └──────────┘              │
│         │                 │                │                    │
│         └─────────────────┼────────────────┘                    │
│                           │                                     │
│                  ┌────────▼────────┐                            │
│                  │ Docker Daemon   │                            │
│                  │ (container mgmt) │                            │
│                  └─────────────────┘                            │
│                                                                   │
└─────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────┘

Data Flow: HTTP Request → Response

  1. HTTP Request arrives at Orchestrator (POST /api/execute/{script_id})
  2. Orchestrator fetches script from PostgreSQL
  3. Docker daemon spawns container from pre-built executor image
  4. Container startup loads script into Rhai runtime + passes request context
  5. Rhai script executes, processes request, returns JSON object
  6. Orchestrator extracts statusCode, headers, body from response
  7. HTTP Response sent to client
  8. Container is destroyed (scale to zero)

3. Core Components

3.1 Orchestrator Service

Language: Rust
Framework: Axum
Port: 8080 (default)

Responsibilities:

  • HTTP server (REST API for script management + trigger)
  • Script lifecycle: fetch, validate, store
  • Container orchestration: spawn, monitor, cleanup
  • Request/response marshalling
  • Error handling & logging

Key Endpoints (MVP):

  • POST /api/scripts — upload script
  • GET /api/scripts — list all scripts
  • DELETE /api/scripts/{id} — delete script
  • POST /api/execute/{script_id} — trigger script execution (with request body/headers)

Internal Tasks:

  • Periodically clean up orphaned containers (optional, for MVP just GC on startup)
  • Log execution events to stdout/logs

3.2 Executor Container Image

Base: alpine:latest
Contents:

  • Rhai runtime (compiled binary or via package manager)
  • Minimal libc (musl on Alpine)
  • Script loader + executor wrapper
  • Logging utilities

Startup Flow:

# Pseudo-code
SCRIPT_CONTENT=$(passed via env var or stdin)
SCRIPT_PATH=/tmp/script.rhai
echo "$SCRIPT_CONTENT" > $SCRIPT_PATH

REQUEST_JSON=$(read from stdin or env)
rhai_executor --script $SCRIPT_PATH --request "$REQUEST_JSON"

Output: JSON response to stdout, captured by Orchestrator


3.3 Dashboard (Web UI)

Framework: Alpine.js (MVP), Svelte (v1.0+)
Port: 3000 (default)

Features (MVP):

  • Script upload form (file picker or textarea)
  • Script metadata input (name, description, version, config)
  • Config fields: timeout (s), memory limit (MB), enabled service access (DB/S3/queue/functions)
  • List of deployed scripts
  • Simple "Deploy" / "Delete" actions

Technology Stack:

  • HTML + CSS + Alpine.js
  • Fetch API to call Orchestrator
  • No build step (initially), just serve static files

3.4 PostgreSQL Database

Schema (MVP):

CREATE TABLE scripts (
  id UUID PRIMARY KEY DEFAULT gen_random_uuid(),
  name TEXT NOT NULL,
  description TEXT,
  version INT DEFAULT 1,
  script_content TEXT NOT NULL,
  
  -- Config
  timeout_seconds INT DEFAULT 30,
  memory_limit_mb INT DEFAULT 256,
  
  -- Service access (MVP: unused, future)
  access_db BOOLEAN DEFAULT false,
  access_s3 BOOLEAN DEFAULT false,
  access_queue BOOLEAN DEFAULT false,
  access_functions BOOLEAN DEFAULT false,
  
  -- Metadata
  created_at TIMESTAMP DEFAULT NOW(),
  updated_at TIMESTAMP DEFAULT NOW(),
  
  -- Execution tracking (MVP: optional)
  last_executed_at TIMESTAMP,
  execution_count INT DEFAULT 0
);

CREATE TABLE execution_logs (
  id UUID PRIMARY KEY DEFAULT gen_random_uuid(),
  script_id UUID REFERENCES scripts(id) ON DELETE CASCADE,
  request_path TEXT,
  request_headers JSONB,
  request_body JSONB,
  response_code INT,
  response_body JSONB,
  logs TEXT,
  duration_ms INT,
  status TEXT, -- 'success', 'timeout', 'error', etc.
  created_at TIMESTAMP DEFAULT NOW()
);

Rationale:

  • Simple, relational structure
  • execution_logs for audit trail + debugging (can be pruned later)
  • JSONB for flexible config/response storage

4. Data Model

Script Entity

{
  "id": "uuid",
  "name": "Process Payment",
  "description": "Webhook handler for payment processor",
  "version": 1,
  "script_content": "let req = request();\nlet amt = req.body.amount;\n{ statusCode: 200, body: { processed: amt } }",
  "timeout_seconds": 30,
  "memory_limit_mb": 256,
  "access_db": false,
  "access_s3": false,
  "access_queue": false,
  "access_functions": false,
  "interceptors": {
    "s3": { "before_write": false },
    "documents": { "before_create": false },
    "queue": { "before_send": false }
  },
  "created_at": "2026-04-10T12:00:00Z",
  "updated_at": "2026-04-10T12:00:00Z",
  "last_executed_at": "2026-04-10T12:05:00Z",
  "execution_count": 42
}

Execution Log Entity

{
  "id": "uuid",
  "script_id": "uuid",
  "request_path": "/api/execute/script-123",
  "request_headers": { "content-type": "application/json" },
  "request_body": { "amount": 100 },
  "response_code": 200,
  "response_body": { "processed": 100 },
  "logs": "[12:05:10] Script started\n[12:05:11] Processing...",
  "duration_ms": 145,
  "status": "success",
  "created_at": "2026-04-10T12:05:11Z"
}

5. API Specification (MVP)

5.1 Upload Script

POST /api/scripts
Content-Type: application/json

{
  "name": "string",
  "description": "string",
  "script_content": "string",
  "timeout_seconds": 30,
  "memory_limit_mb": 256
}

Response: 201 Created
{
  "id": "uuid",
  "name": "...",
  ...
}

5.2 List Scripts

GET /api/scripts

Response: 200 OK
[
  { id: "...", name: "...", ... },
  { id: "...", name: "...", ... }
]

5.3 Delete Script

DELETE /api/scripts/{script_id}

Response: 204 No Content

5.4 Execute Script (via HTTP Endpoint)

POST /api/execute/{script_id}
Content-Type: application/json
[any headers]

[any request body]

Response: [script-returned status code]
{
  "..." : "..."
}

Notes:

  • Script receives full HTTP request (path, headers, body)
  • Response is script's JSON object (assumes { statusCode, headers, body })
  • On error (timeout, crash): { statusCode: 500, body: "Server error" }

6. Rhai SDK (MVP Stub)

For MVP, scripts have access to:

Core Request/Response

  • ctx object: Contains execution metadata + request data (see below)
  • Return value: { statusCode: int, headers: object, body: object }

Context Object (Available Globally)

// Execution metadata
ctx.execution_id       // UUID of this execution
ctx.script_id          // UUID of the script being run
ctx.script_name        // Name of the script
ctx.request_id         // Request ID for tracing
ctx.trace_id           // For call graphs (v1.2+)
ctx.invocation_type    // 'http', 'function', 'scheduled', etc.
ctx.parent_execution_id // For function hierarchies (v1.2+)

// Request context
ctx.request.path       // HTTP path
ctx.request.headers    // HTTP headers object
ctx.request.body       // Request body (parsed JSON or raw)

Structured Logging (v1.0+)

log.info("Processing order", { order_id: 123, user: "alice" });
log.warn("Rate limit approaching", { remaining: 10 });
log.error("Payment failed", { error: "timeout", retry_count: 2 });
log.debug("Internal state", { state: { ... } });

Output: Captured in execution logs, searchable in dashboard

Error Handling & Retry (v1.1+)

// Retry a function with exponential backoff
let result = retry::call(
  || { invoke("process-data", { item: 123 }) },
  {
    max_attempts: 3,
    backoff: "exponential",  // or "linear"
    initial_delay_ms: 100,
    max_delay_ms: 5000
  }
);

// Retry an HTTP call
let response = retry::http_call(
  || { http.post("https://api.example.com/webhook", body) },
  {
    max_attempts: 5,
    backoff: "exponential",
    on_retry: |attempt, error| {
      log.warn("Retry attempt", { attempt, error });
    }
  }
);

// Manual error handling
try {
  let data = invoke("might-fail", {});
} catch err {
  log.error("Invocation failed", { error: err });
  return { statusCode: 500, body: { error: "Service unavailable" } };
}

6.1 Future: Document Schema Validation (v1.2+)

For documents, allow optional schema definitions similar to MongoDB:

// Define schema when creating
docs.create("users", 
  { name: "Alice", email: "alice@example.com" },
  {
    schema: {
      name: "string",
      email: "string",
      age: "number?",  // optional
      tags: "array"
    }
  }
);

// Validate before update
docs.update("users", user_id,
  { age: 31 },
  { schema: { age: "number" } }
);

6.2 Example Script: Full SDK Usage

// Get execution and request context
let user_id = ctx.request.body.user_id;

// Log start
log.info("Processing request", { 
  script: ctx.script_name, 
  execution_id: ctx.execution_id
});

// Call another function with retry
let user_data = retry::call(
  || { invoke("fetch-user", { id: user_id }) },
  { max_attempts: 2, backoff: "linear" }
);

if user_data.statusCode != 200 {
  log.error("Failed to fetch user", { response: user_data });
  return { statusCode: 500, body: { error: "User fetch failed" } };
}

// Store in KV cache
kv.set("user-cache", `user:${user_id}`, user_data.body, 3600);

// Store in documents
let doc = docs.create("user-requests", {
  user_id: user_id,
  request_at: "2026-04-10T12:00:00Z",
  status: "processed"
});

// Log completion
log.info("Request processed", { 
  doc_id: doc,
  user_id: user_id
});

return {
  statusCode: 200,
  headers: { "Content-Type": "application/json" },
  body: { user: user_data.body, cached: true }
};

8.4 User Management Service

Purpose: Built-in user authentication, management, and invitations with secure password handling.

PostgreSQL Schema:

CREATE EXTENSION IF NOT EXISTS pgcrypto;  -- For password hashing

CREATE TABLE users (
  id UUID PRIMARY KEY DEFAULT gen_random_uuid(),
  email TEXT NOT NULL UNIQUE,
  password_hash TEXT NOT NULL,
  password_salt TEXT NOT NULL,
  
  -- Profile
  name TEXT,
  locked BOOLEAN DEFAULT false,
  
  -- Roles & Permissions
  roles TEXT[] DEFAULT '{}',  -- e.g., ["admin", "moderator"]
  permissions JSONB DEFAULT '{}',  -- Custom permissions structure
  
  -- Metadata
  metadata JSONB DEFAULT '{}',  -- Custom user data (profile pic URL, preferences, etc.)
  
  -- Audit
  created_at TIMESTAMP DEFAULT NOW(),
  updated_at TIMESTAMP DEFAULT NOW(),
  last_login_at TIMESTAMP,
  last_password_change_at TIMESTAMP
);

-- Invitations & password reset tokens
CREATE TABLE user_tokens (
  id UUID PRIMARY KEY DEFAULT gen_random_uuid(),
  user_id UUID REFERENCES users(id) ON DELETE CASCADE,
  token_type TEXT NOT NULL,  -- 'invite', 'password_reset', 'login_link'
  token_hash TEXT NOT NULL UNIQUE,
  expires_at TIMESTAMP NOT NULL,
  used_at TIMESTAMP,
  created_at TIMESTAMP DEFAULT NOW()
);

CREATE INDEX idx_users_email ON users(email);
CREATE INDEX idx_user_tokens_user_id ON user_tokens(user_id);
CREATE INDEX idx_user_tokens_type ON user_tokens(token_type);

Rhai SDK (v1.1+):

// ===== CREATE & INVITE =====

// Create user with password
let user_id = users.create({
  email: "alice@example.com",
  password: "secure-password",
  name: "Alice Smith",
  roles: ["user"],
  metadata: { profile_pic: "https://..." }
});

// Send invite link (creates token, sends email)
users.send_invite(email) → { token_sent: true, expires_in_days: 7 }

// Set password from invite/reset token
users.set_password_from_token(token, new_password) → { user_id, success: true }

// ===== AUTHENTICATION =====

// Authenticate user
let user = users.authenticate(email, password);
if user {
  let user_id = user.id;
  let roles = user.roles;
} else {
  // Authentication failed
}

// Send password reset link
users.send_password_reset(email) → { sent: true, expires_in_hours: 24 }

// Send login link (passwordless)
users.send_login_link(email) → { sent: true, expires_in_minutes: 15 }

// Verify login link token
let user = users.verify_login_token(token);

// ===== READ & SEARCH =====

// Get user by ID
let user = users.get(user_id);

// Find user by email
let user = users.find_by_email("alice@example.com");

// Search users
let results = users.search({
  query: "alice",  // Searches email, name
  limit: 50,
  offset: 0
});

// List users with filtering
let users_list = users.list({
  roles: ["admin"],  // Filter by roles
  locked: false,     // Include/exclude locked users
  limit: 100,
  offset: 0
});

// ===== UPDATE =====

// Update user data (except password)
users.update(user_id, {
  name: "Alice Johnson",
  roles: ["user", "moderator"],
  metadata: { theme: "dark", notifications: true }
});

// Update password (requires old password or token)
users.update_password(user_id, old_password, new_password) 
  → { success: true } or { error: "Wrong password" }

// ===== LOCK & DELETE =====

// Lock user (disable login)
users.lock(user_id) → { success: true }

// Unlock user
users.unlock(user_id) → { success: true }

// Delete user
users.delete(user_id) → { success: true }

// ===== PERMISSIONS & ROLES =====

// Check if user has role
if users.has_role(user_id, "admin") {
  // Allow admin action
}

// Check if user has permission
if users.has_permission(user_id, "posts:delete") {
  // Allow deletion
}

// Grant role to user
users.add_role(user_id, "moderator");

// Revoke role
users.remove_role(user_id, "moderator");

// Set custom permissions
users.set_permissions(user_id, { 
  "posts:create": true, 
  "posts:delete": false,
  "comments:moderate": true 
});

User Object (returned from get/auth/find):

{
  "id": "uuid",
  "email": "alice@example.com",
  "name": "Alice Smith",
  "roles": ["user", "moderator"],
  "permissions": { "posts:create": true },
  "metadata": { "theme": "dark" },
  "locked": false,
  "created_at": "2026-04-10T12:00:00Z",
  "updated_at": "2026-04-10T12:05:00Z",
  "last_login_at": "2026-04-10T11:55:00Z"
}

Use Cases:

  • User registration with email verification
  • Login flows (password or passwordless)
  • Password reset flows
  • Role-based access control (RBAC)
  • User search/directory
  • Account management (lock, delete)

Layer Technology Rationale
Orchestrator Rust + Axum Performance, safety, async-first; minimal overhead
Dashboard Alpine.js + vanilla HTML/CSS Zero dependencies, simple to deploy, fast enough for MVP
Database PostgreSQL 15+ (pgcrypto) Robust ACID database; JSONB carries data-plane values (v1.1+). See §8.1.
Container Runtime Docker (Docker daemon) Industry standard, simple CLI
Executor Image Alpine Linux + Rhai Minimal image size (~50-100MB), fast startup
Scripting Rhai Lightweight, embedded-friendly, safe by default
Deployment Docker Compose (local) / systemd (production) Simple multi-service orchestration

11. Deployment Model (MVP)

Local Development

# Clone repo
git clone <repo> serverless-cloud
cd serverless-cloud

# Start all services (Orchestrator + Dashboard + Postgres)
docker-compose up

# Dashboard: http://localhost:3000
# Orchestrator: http://localhost:8080

Production (Single Server)

# On target machine:
# 1. Install Docker, Docker Compose
# 2. Deploy docker-compose.yml
# 3. Optionally: use systemd service to auto-restart on reboot

docker-compose -f docker-compose.prod.yml up -d

docker-compose.yml (MVP Template)

version: '3.8'
services:
  postgres:
    image: postgres:15-alpine
    environment:
      POSTGRES_DB: serverless
      POSTGRES_USER: app
      POSTGRES_PASSWORD: changeme
    volumes:
      - postgres_data:/var/lib/postgresql/data
    ports:
      - "5432:5432"

  orchestrator:
    build: ./orchestrator
    environment:
      DATABASE_URL: postgres://app:changeme@postgres:5432/serverless
      DOCKER_HOST: unix:///var/run/docker.sock
    ports:
      - "8080:8080"
    volumes:
      - /var/run/docker.sock:/var/run/docker.sock

  dashboard:
    image: nginx:alpine
    volumes:
      - ./dashboard/dist:/usr/share/nginx/html
    ports:
      - "3000:80"

volumes:
  postgres_data:

11.4 Admin Auth (Phase 3a) — Shipped

Status: shipped. Implementation lives in crates/manager-core/src/{auth,auth_*,admin_user_repo,admin_session_repo,admin_users_api}.rs; migration 0004_admin_auth.sql.

Purpose: gate the admin API (/api/v1/admin/*) and dashboard (/admin/*) behind per-user authentication. Before this phase the surface was open — anyone reaching the bound port could create, edit, and delete scripts.

Why per-user, not a shared secret: shared admin passwords get shared between humans, leave no audit trail, and can't be revoked per-person. Per-user accounts solve all three. The initial cut deliberately stops there — no roles, no per-app permissions — because that scope is small enough to ship in a single phase without blocking Phase 3b. Roles + per-app permissions are queued for v1.3+.

Naming: admin_users vs users

We reserve the unqualified users table for the v1.1+ Rhai SDK feature (script-level end users — see §8.4). Platform-operator accounts live in admin_users. They are different concepts and never share rows, even when a PiCloud install hosts apps that themselves run user management.

Schema

CREATE TABLE admin_users (
  id              UUID PRIMARY KEY DEFAULT gen_random_uuid(),
  username        TEXT NOT NULL UNIQUE,
  password_hash   TEXT NOT NULL,       -- Argon2id (PHC string)
  is_active       BOOLEAN NOT NULL DEFAULT TRUE,
  created_at      TIMESTAMPTZ NOT NULL DEFAULT NOW(),
  updated_at      TIMESTAMPTZ NOT NULL DEFAULT NOW(),
  last_login_at   TIMESTAMPTZ
);

CREATE TABLE admin_sessions (
  token_hash      TEXT PRIMARY KEY,    -- SHA-256(hex) of the bearer token; raw token only exists in the login response + cookie
  user_id         UUID NOT NULL REFERENCES admin_users(id) ON DELETE CASCADE,
  created_at      TIMESTAMPTZ NOT NULL DEFAULT NOW(),
  expires_at      TIMESTAMPTZ NOT NULL,
  last_used_at    TIMESTAMPTZ NOT NULL DEFAULT NOW()
);

CREATE INDEX admin_sessions_user_idx   ON admin_sessions (user_id);
CREATE INDEX admin_sessions_expiry_idx ON admin_sessions (expires_at);

is_active was added to the shipped cut so admins can be deactivated (login rejected, sessions wiped) without losing audit history; deletion still cascades sessions through the FK.

Password hashing: Argon2id with default OWASP parameters. This also resolves the v1.1+ open question about user-password hashing (§10) — the platform settles on Argon2id once, here.

Bootstrap

On startup, if admin_users is empty, the manager reads PICLOUD_ADMIN_USERNAME plus a password from env (or a config file) and inserts the row. Two password env vars are accepted, in this precedence:

  1. PICLOUD_ADMIN_PASSWORD_HASH (recommended) — pre-computed Argon2id PHC-format hash. The platform validates the string parses, then inserts it as-is. This avoids the raw password ever being written into env/compose files or process listings.
  2. PICLOUD_ADMIN_PASSWORD (fallback) — raw password. The platform hashes it with Argon2id defaults and discards the raw value. Simpler for first-time setup; less ideal for committed configs.

If both are set, the hash wins and the raw value is ignored (with a warning logged). If neither is set on a fresh install, startup fails with a clear error pointing at the env vars.

Once that bootstrap row exists, the env vars become inert — restarting with different values does not change the password. This is deliberate: the env var is a one-time setup hatch, not a recovery backdoor (a backdoor would let anyone with systemd-unit or compose-file access override any admin's password).

Recovery is a separate manual flow:

picloud admin reset-password <username>

This requires shell access on the host (and therefore implies the operator already controls the box).

Login & Session

POST /api/v1/admin/auth/login
{ "username": "...", "password": "..." }

→ 200 OK
Set-Cookie: picloud_session=<token>; HttpOnly; Secure; SameSite=Lax; Path=/
{ "user": { "id": "...", "username": "..." }, "token": "<token>", "expires_at": "..." }

Token format: opaque random string (32 bytes base64). Stored hashed; the raw value lives only in the login response and the session cookie. The same token works as a bearer credential for non-browser clients:

Authorization: Bearer <token>

One token system serves both dashboard and CLI/CI clients — no separate "API token" concept. Personal long-lived API tokens can be added later as a distinct admin_api_tokens table if demand appears.

Session TTL is a 24-hour sliding window: each authenticated request bumps expires_at to now + ttl and last_used_at to now. The TTL itself is configurable per deploy via PICLOUD_SESSION_TTL_HOURS (default 24). A separate background sweep deletes rows where expires_at < now(); until that sweep runs, expired rows are also rejected at auth-check time (so a stuck sweep can't extend session lifetime past expiry).

Companion endpoints:

  • POST /api/v1/admin/auth/logout — deletes the session row.
  • GET /api/v1/admin/auth/me — returns the current authenticated user.

Admin User Management

GET    /api/v1/admin/admins             — list
POST   /api/v1/admin/admins             — create  ({ username, password })
GET    /api/v1/admin/admins/{id}        — get
PATCH  /api/v1/admin/admins/{id}        — update ({ username?, password?, is_active? })
DELETE /api/v1/admin/admins/{id}        — delete

Initial cut: every authenticated admin can call all of these. No self-elevation concerns because there are no privilege levels yet. The PATCH and DELETE handlers both refuse to leave the system with zero active admins (422 Unprocessable Entity with a clear message); PATCH that transitions is_active from true to false also wipes that user's sessions immediately.

Validation: username ^[a-z0-9._-]{2,32}$, password minimum 8 characters (no complexity rules — follows NIST 800-63B guidance).

Dashboard surface: /admin/login (unauthed), /admin/admins (user list with add / change-password / deactivate / reactivate / delete actions per row). The top-bar shows the logged-in admin and a logout button. Token is held in a Svelte store with a localStorage echo so a page refresh doesn't sign you out; cookie-based auth works in parallel for non-SPA browser hits.

Forward Compatibility

Schema is intentionally simple so role/permission tables can be added without touching admin_users. Illustrative future shape:

CREATE TABLE admin_roles (
  id UUID PRIMARY KEY,
  name TEXT UNIQUE                       -- e.g., 'super_admin', 'app_editor', 'app_viewer'
);

CREATE TABLE admin_user_roles (
  admin_user_id UUID REFERENCES admin_users(id) ON DELETE CASCADE,
  role_id       UUID REFERENCES admin_roles(id) ON DELETE RESTRICT,
  app_id        UUID REFERENCES apps(id) ON DELETE CASCADE,   -- nullable for global roles
  PRIMARY KEY (admin_user_id, role_id, app_id)
);

Permission checks land in middleware that initially only enforces "authenticated"; the same middleware is the seam where role checks slot in later. Don't pre-build the role tables — but keep the middleware shape such that adding them is a localized change.


11.5 App Scoping (Phase 3b) — Shipped

Status: shipped. Implementation lives in:

  • crates/shared/src/{app,ids,script,route}.rsApp, AppDomain, AppId, app_id fields on Script/Route/ExecutionLog.
  • crates/manager-core/src/{app_repo,app_domain_repo,apps_api,app_bootstrap}.rs — repos + admin API + Hello-World seed.
  • crates/orchestrator-core/src/routing/{app_domains,pattern,table}.rsAppDomainTable, parse_app_domain, per-app RouteTable.
  • Migration 0005_apps.sql.

Deviations from the design below: none of substance. Two operational notes:

  • The Hello-World seed lives in crates/manager-core/seeds/hello.rhai and is inserted by a Rust bootstrap step (seed_hello_world_if_fresh) rather than from the migration — keeps it testable and gives the dashboard editor real source to render. The migration always inserts the default app + localhost claim; the seed only fires when that app is otherwise empty.
  • Per-app admin roles/permissions are deferred — every authenticated admin can act on every app. The middleware seam (auth_middleware::require_admin) is the place where role checks slot in later.

Purpose: PiCloud hosts multiple independent applications on one platform. Each app is the isolation boundary for scripts, routes, domains, and (later) data — App A cannot see or modify App B's resources except through HTTP calls between them.

Why this slot: pulled forward from the original v1.3+ "multi-user / project namespacing" bullet. Adding the app_id scoping dimension to schemas while the surface is small is cheap; retrofitting it after KV, docs, users, etc. ship is a multi-table migration on populated data.

Apps Own Scripts

Every script belongs to exactly one app (scripts.app_id, non-null). Script IDs remain globally unique UUIDs — the API operates on script IDs directly without needing app_id in the URL. The dashboard nests scripts under their app in URLs (see "Dashboard URL Layout" below) but the script ID alone is still enough to resolve them server-side.

Cross-app script reuse is not done by linking. A future duplicate-to-app feature may copy a script's content and config into another app under a new ID, with snapshot semantics: the copy is independent, and changes to the original do not propagate. Genuine cross-app integration goes through HTTP calls (and, much later, an explicit export/import model for shared data).

Apps Own Domains

Routes can no longer claim arbitrary hostnames freely. Each app declares a set of domain claims:

Form Example Matches
Exact host app.example.com only that exact host
Single-label wildcard *.example.com one label deep: foo.example.com, not a.b.example.com
Parameterized {tenant}.example.com same shape as wildcard; binds tenant into request context

Syntax convention: domain parameters use {name} (curly braces); route-path parameters use :name (colon). These are deliberately distinct so docs and conflict messages never confuse the two.

Every app also implicitly carries the reserved claim __internal__, granting access to /api/v1/execute/{id}/* for that app's scripts. An app with no public domain still works for execute-by-id (and, later, cron triggers, queue triggers, etc.).

When a route is created, its host must match one of the parent app's domain claims. The dashboard's route-creation UI offers a selector populated from the app's claims rather than a free-text host field.

Conflict Rules — Checked at Claim Time

Domain-claim collisions are detected when a domain is added to an app, not when requests arrive:

  • Exact vs identical exact → reject ("domain already claimed").
  • Exact vs wildcard → allowed. foo.example.com (App A) coexists with *.example.com (App B); at request time the more-specific match wins, so A handles foo.example.com, B handles every other subdomain.
  • Wildcard vs wildcard at the same shape → reject. Two apps cannot both claim *.example.com. {tenant}.example.com has the same shape as *.example.com for this check — the parameter name is a binding, not a discriminator.

Route-conflict errors are strictly intra-app. A user creating a route inside App A never sees an error that references App B. The only cross-app surface is "this domain is already claimed" at domain-claim time, which is honest and unavoidable.

Runtime Dispatch

Request handling becomes a two-phase lookup:

  1. Host → app: pick the app whose claim most-specifically matches the request's Host header (exact beats wildcard; ties are impossible by the claim rules above).
  2. Path → route: run that app's route trie unchanged using the existing matcher.

The orchestrator's route matcher does not learn about apps — it just operates on whichever app's table was selected in step 1. This keeps the existing conflict-detection logic intact.

Local Development

On localhost, localhost is treated as a regular domain claimed by exactly one app, defaulting to a bootstrap "default" app installed at first run. Dev and prod use the same dispatch model — no second mental model.

Cross-App Data Sharing — Deferred

Per-app isolation is the default and only mode in the initial cut. KV collection users in App A is distinct from KV collection users in App B; App B cannot read App A's data without an HTTP endpoint that App A explicitly exposes.

A formal export/import model — where App B exports a collection under a public name and admin grants App A read or read-write access — is a future addition. Until it ships, the escape hatch is function-to-function HTTP calls. Sharing is easier to add than to retract; isolation comes first.

Schema Sketch

CREATE TABLE apps (
  id UUID PRIMARY KEY DEFAULT gen_random_uuid(),
  slug TEXT NOT NULL UNIQUE,    -- URL-safe; used in dashboard paths
  name TEXT NOT NULL,           -- display name; can be edited freely
  description TEXT,
  created_at TIMESTAMP DEFAULT NOW(),
  updated_at TIMESTAMP DEFAULT NOW()
);

CREATE TABLE app_domains (
  id UUID PRIMARY KEY DEFAULT gen_random_uuid(),
  app_id UUID NOT NULL REFERENCES apps(id) ON DELETE CASCADE,
  pattern TEXT NOT NULL,        -- 'app.example.com' | '*.example.com' | '{tenant}.example.com'
  shape TEXT NOT NULL,          -- 'exact' | 'wildcard' | 'parameterized'
  shape_key TEXT NOT NULL,      -- normalized form for collision check (parameterized → wildcard form)
  created_at TIMESTAMP DEFAULT NOW(),

  UNIQUE (shape_key)            -- two apps cannot share the same shape-key
);

ALTER TABLE scripts ADD COLUMN app_id UUID NOT NULL REFERENCES apps(id) ON DELETE RESTRICT;
ALTER TABLE routes  ADD COLUMN app_id UUID NOT NULL REFERENCES apps(id) ON DELETE CASCADE;

-- Existing route uniqueness checks remain unchanged; they are now scoped within an app.

The UNIQUE (shape_key) constraint enforces the "same shape" rule at the DB level. Exact-vs-wildcard coexistence is allowed because exact hosts produce a different shape_key from wildcards.

Bootstrap & Migration

The migration's behavior depends on whether the install already has user content:

  • Fresh install (no pre-existing scripts or routes): seed a "Hello World" app with localhost as its sole domain claim, a hello.rhai script that returns a greeting, and a /hello GET route. This serves as the reference example for new users — they can hit http://localhost:<port>/hello immediately after first boot and see something work. The seed is intentionally minimal; future iterations may flesh it out.
  • Upgrading install (pre-existing scripts or routes): create a "default" app with slug = 'default', localhost as its sole domain claim, and assign every existing script and route to it. The Hello World seed is not added in this case — adding it would pollute the user's existing content.

The branch point is detected by inspecting whether scripts had any rows before the migration ran.

Dashboard URL Layout

The dashboard is app-hierarchical, using the app's slug for human-readable URLs:

/admin/apps                          — app list
/admin/apps/new                      — create app
/admin/apps/{slug}                   — app overview
/admin/apps/{slug}/scripts           — scripts in this app
/admin/apps/{slug}/scripts/{id}      — script detail (script ID still globally unique; slug is for breadcrumbs)
/admin/apps/{slug}/routes            — routes in this app
/admin/apps/{slug}/domains           — domain claims for this app
/admin/apps/{slug}/settings          — app settings

Renaming an app changes its slug. The previous slug stays as a permanent redirect to the renamed app, persisting until another app (a new app or another rename) tries to claim that retired slug. When such a collision happens, the dashboard shows a warning before letting the operator proceed: "old-slug currently redirects to app bar — using it here will break any external links that still target the old slug." If the operator confirms, the redirect row is dropped and the slug is reused.

Implementation sketch:

CREATE TABLE app_slug_history (
  slug TEXT PRIMARY KEY,                       -- the retired slug
  current_app_id UUID NOT NULL REFERENCES apps(id) ON DELETE CASCADE,
  retired_at TIMESTAMP DEFAULT NOW()
);

Slug lookup order:

  1. apps.slug = {slug} → render the page directly.
  2. app_slug_history.slug = {slug}301 redirect to /admin/apps/{current_app.slug}/<rest>.
  3. Neither → 404.

Slug claim order (create or rename to a slug S):

  1. If S matches a current app's slug → reject as a conflict (the usual unique-constraint error).
  2. If S matches a row in app_slug_history → return a "needs confirmation" response. Dashboard surfaces the warning; on confirm, delete the history row inside the same transaction as the create/rename.
  3. Otherwise → proceed normally; if this was a rename, insert the old slug into app_slug_history.

A rename back to an app's own retired slug is a special case: just delete the row from app_slug_history and don't warn.

API URL Layout

The HTTP API stays flat:

GET    /api/v1/admin/apps                     — list apps
POST   /api/v1/admin/apps                     — create app
GET    /api/v1/admin/apps/{id_or_slug}        — get app
PATCH  /api/v1/admin/apps/{id_or_slug}        — update app
DELETE /api/v1/admin/apps/{id_or_slug}        — delete app
GET    /api/v1/admin/apps/{id_or_slug}/domains   — list/manage domain claims
POST   /api/v1/admin/apps/{id_or_slug}/domains
DELETE /api/v1/admin/apps/{id_or_slug}/domains/{domain_id}

GET    /api/v1/admin/scripts                  — list scripts (now supports ?app={id_or_slug} filter)
GET    /api/v1/admin/scripts/{id}             — unchanged; script IDs are globally unique
... (rest of scripts/routes endpoints unchanged)

The scripts and routes endpoints keep their existing shape — this avoids forcing API consumers to a v2 migration. The new app-management endpoints are additive. Clients that want app context can use the ?app= filter.


11.6 Users, roles, and bearer-token auth (Phase 3.5) — ✓ Shipped

Status: shipped, ahead of the originally planned slot. Lives in crates/manager-core/src/{authz,api_keys_api,api_key_repo}.rs, the extended auth_middleware.rs, shared types under crates/shared/src/auth.rs, and migration 0006_users_authz.sql. can(principal, capability) and require(principal, capability) are the single gate every admin handler goes through.

Purpose: bridge Phase 3b → Phase 4. Phase 4's v1.1 SDKs (KV, docs, HTTP, cron) each gate access on the calling principal. Without a real authorization model in place, every SDK addition has to either invent its own gate or stay open. Phase 3.5 lands can(principal, capability) as the single check every future SDK + admin endpoint goes through, so v1.1 work focuses on data plane shape, not on re-litigating auth.

Why this slot: same logic as Phase 3b. Adding a Principal parameter and a capability check to surfaces that don't exist yet is free; retrofitting them onto live SDK services after v1.1 ships is a refactor of every gate.

Principal Model

One Principal value represents a human admin user. Service accounts (CI bots, Rhai scripts calling out) get schema room in this phase but no runtime support — users.kind style differentiation lands when Phase 4's users.* SDK arrives. Until then, every authenticated request resolves to exactly one admin row, whether the credential is a session cookie or a bearer API key.

pub struct Principal {
    pub user_id:       UserId,             // alias of AdminUserId for the transition
    pub instance_role: InstanceRole,
    pub scopes:        Option<Vec<Scope>>, // None = cookie session (full role authority)
                                           // Some = API key (intersect with role)
    pub app_binding:   Option<AppId>,      // API key bound to one app; denies other apps
}

Instance Roles (one per user)

Role Powers
owner full instance control, manage other owners, implicit app_admin on every app. Multiple owners allowed.
admin create apps, invite users, implicit app_admin on every app. Cannot manage instance-wide settings (sandbox ceiling, etc.) or other owners.
member invited into specific apps only. Cannot create apps, cannot invite. Strict isolation enforced at SQL — list endpoints WHERE app_id IN (SELECT app_id FROM app_members WHERE user_id = $1); the API never returns apps a member isn't part of.

The current Phase 3a admin_users rows all become owner via DEFAULT 'owner' on the new column. Multi-owner installs get a startup tracing::warn! listing the active owner usernames so the operator can demote extras via PATCH /api/v1/admin/admins/{id}.

App-Scoped Roles (zero-to-many per user × app)

Role Grants
app_admin settings, domain claims, delete app, delete scripts
editor create + edit scripts, routes, sandbox config (no script delete)
viewer read scripts + execution logs

Implicit grants from instance role: every owner and every admin is app_admin on every app — a single-human install would otherwise have to add itself to each new app's app_members. Explicit app_members rows are the only path for member users.

Script save uses AppWriteScript (editor+); script delete uses AppAdmin (app_admin+). Editors can iterate on a script's source freely but cannot remove it — destructive cleanup stays with the role that also owns the app.

Auth Methods — Same Principal, Different Extractor

Two credential types feed the same middleware:

  1. Session cookie (Phase 3a, unchanged) — picloud_session=<token>. Extracted by header or cookie. SHA-256 lookup against admin_sessions.token_hash. Sliding 24h TTL. Produces Principal { scopes: None, app_binding: None }.

  2. Bearer API key (new) — Authorization: Bearer pic_<base32(32 random bytes)>. The pic_ prefix is the discriminator: present → API key path; absent → session path. The 8 chars immediately after pic_ are indexed (api_keys.prefix); the full body after pic_ is Argon2id-verified against each candidate's hash. Last-used timestamp updates inline.

Both paths converge on the same Principal extension; handlers cannot tell which credential was presented unless they introspect principal.scopes.

API Key Format & Storage

  • Raw form: pic_<base32(32 random bytes, no padding)> — ~56 chars total.
  • Stored: 8-char prefix + Argon2id PHC hash of the body. Raw value returned exactly once in the POST /api/v1/admin/api-keys response; never logged, never readable again.
  • Optional expires_at. Lookup queries always filter expires_at IS NULL OR expires_at > NOW().
  • Optional app_id ("bound key") — every App*(other_app) capability is denied for this key, regardless of the user's role.

Scope Set (intentionally narrow)

Exactly seven scopes; no further subdivision until a real use case appears:

script:read, script:write, route:write, domain:manage, log:read, app:admin, instance:admin

Mint-time validation rejects unknown values. Bound keys (app_id set) cannot carry instance:* scopes — the combination is irreconcilable (a bound credential cannot claim instance-wide authority) and is rejected with 422.

Effective Capability — can(principal, capability)

allow = role_grants(principal.instance_role, capability)
      ∧ (principal.scopes.is_none()  required_scope(capability) ∈ principal.scopes)
      ∧ (principal.app_binding.is_none()  capability.app_id() == principal.app_binding)

role_grants collapses the three tables (instance role + implicit app grants + explicit app_members) into a single yes/no. Each handler calls state.authz.require(&principal, Capability::AppWrite(script.app_id)) after loading the resource (so the capability binds to the resource's actual app_id, not a path param the caller controls).

Deactivation Symmetry

Phase 3a's set_active(false) wipes that user's admin_sessions. Phase 3.5 extends it to also set expires_at = NOW() on every row in api_keys WHERE user_id = $1 — both credential surfaces become inert at the same moment, no enumeration window.

CLI Auth Posture (forward note)

The eventual picloud CLI authenticates by paste-the-token, not OAuth: the user runs picloud login, the dashboard mints a fresh key (or the user mints one via POST /api/v1/admin/api-keys), and the CLI prompts for the raw token. The CLI binary itself is deferred; the dashboard surface and the bearer credential type land here so the CLI is a thin wrapper when it arrives.

Schema (Migration 0006)

ALTER TABLE admin_users
  ADD COLUMN instance_role TEXT NOT NULL DEFAULT 'owner'
    CHECK (instance_role IN ('owner','admin','member')),
  ADD COLUMN email TEXT UNIQUE,
  ADD COLUMN mfa_secret TEXT;          -- reserved slot, not built

CREATE TABLE app_members (
  app_id      UUID NOT NULL REFERENCES apps(id) ON DELETE CASCADE,
  user_id     UUID NOT NULL REFERENCES admin_users(id) ON DELETE CASCADE,
  role        TEXT NOT NULL CHECK (role IN ('app_admin','editor','viewer')),
  created_at  TIMESTAMPTZ NOT NULL DEFAULT NOW(),
  PRIMARY KEY (app_id, user_id)
);
CREATE INDEX app_members_user_id_idx ON app_members (user_id);

CREATE TABLE api_keys (
  id            UUID PRIMARY KEY DEFAULT gen_random_uuid(),
  user_id       UUID NOT NULL REFERENCES admin_users(id) ON DELETE CASCADE,
  hash          TEXT NOT NULL,                            -- Argon2id PHC
  prefix        TEXT NOT NULL,                            -- first 8 chars after `pic_`
  name          TEXT NOT NULL,
  scopes        TEXT[] NOT NULL,                          -- intersected with role at check time
  app_id        UUID NULL REFERENCES apps(id) ON DELETE CASCADE,
  expires_at    TIMESTAMPTZ NULL,
  last_used_at  TIMESTAMPTZ NULL,
  created_at    TIMESTAMPTZ NOT NULL DEFAULT NOW()
);
CREATE INDEX api_keys_prefix_idx  ON api_keys (prefix);
CREATE INDEX api_keys_user_id_idx ON api_keys (user_id);

-- Reserved (not built this phase):
--   invites (token, email, instance_role, app_id, app_role, invited_by, expires_at, consumed_at)
--   service_accounts (id, name, owning_user_id, …)

New Endpoints (additive — no API major bump)

POST   /api/v1/admin/api-keys        — { name, scopes[], app_id?, expires_at? }
                                       → 201 { …, raw_token }   (raw returned exactly once)
GET    /api/v1/admin/api-keys        — list caller's own keys (no raw)
DELETE /api/v1/admin/api-keys/{id}   — caller's own only

Every existing /api/v1/admin/* endpoint is re-gated from "any authed admin" to a specific Capability. Request/response shapes are unchanged; what changes is the set of callers each endpoint accepts (a member now gets 403 on app surfaces they're not part of, where before they would have been 401-or-200 depending only on session validity).

App Member Management Endpoints

Exposes the app_members table as a first-class CRUD surface so app admins can manage who they share an app with from the dashboard, not just from SQL.

GET    /api/v1/admin/apps/{id_or_slug}/members              — list members (ordered by username),
                                                              joined with admin_users for
                                                              username / email / instance_role / is_active
POST   /api/v1/admin/apps/{id_or_slug}/members              — { user_id, role } → 201 enriched DTO
                                                              409 on duplicate (promotions go through PATCH)
                                                              422 if target user is_active = false
                                                              422 if target user instance_role != 'member'
                                                                  (owners/admins have implicit authority;
                                                                  an explicit row would be dead weight)
PATCH  /api/v1/admin/apps/{id_or_slug}/members/{user_id}    — { role } → 200 enriched DTO
                                                              404 if no existing membership
DELETE /api/v1/admin/apps/{id_or_slug}/members/{user_id}    — 204 (idempotent — 204 also when missing)

All four are gated on Capability::AppAdmin(app_id). Editors and viewers get 403 on list and never see the dashboard's Members tab.

my_role on the app lookup endpoint. GET /api/v1/admin/apps/{id_or_slug} now returns an additional my_role: Option<AppRole>, computed server-side from the principal: Owner → app_admin, Admin → editor, Member → app_members.role. The dashboard uses this single field to decide whether to render the Members tab (visible iff my_role == app_admin), keeping API and UI gate logic identical.

No last-app-admin guard. Unlike the last-owner protection on admin_users, removing the final app_admin row from app_members is allowed. Every owner instance-role user implicitly satisfies Capability::AppAdmin(_) via the top-level role_grants branch, so no app can become permanently orphaned — an owner can always re-issue grants. The admin instance role is only implicit editor, so it does not provide a fallback path; the owner guarantee alone is what makes the no-guard position safe.

Dead-row sweep on promotion (deferred). Promoting a user from memberadmin/owner leaves their app_members rows in place. They become inert (implicit grants supersede), but are not auto-deleted. A future hook can sweep them; harmless for now.

Additive within /api/v1/admin/... — no API major bump per docs/versioning.md.

Out of Scope (Phase 3.5)

Schema room only, not built:

  • Invites — email-based join flow; invites table reserved in the migration comment block.
  • MFA / TOTPmfa_secret column reserved on admin_users.
  • Service accounts — reserved as a future table; for now, every API key belongs to a human admin_users row.

Defer to follow-up sessions: dashboard surfaces for invites / key minting (curl is the supported interface this phase — member management has a dashboard tab; see above), OIDC / SAML / SCIM, the picloud CLI binary itself, email/SMTP delivery of invites, audit log shipping.


12. Development Roadmap

Phase 1: MVP ✓ (Shipped)

  • Manager: REST API for script CRUD + executions log
  • Orchestrator: HTTP ingress, route resolution, dispatch
  • Executor: embedded Rhai engine with sandbox limits (replaces the original Docker-per-execution model — embedded gives better latency and less infra)
  • Dashboard (SvelteKit): script upload, edit, routing config, execution log viewer
  • PostgreSQL: scripts, routes, execution_logs; embedded migrations
  • Caddy reverse proxy in front of everything

Delivered beyond original MVP scope: custom routing (exact / prefix / param + host-aware) with conflict detection, per-script Rhai sandbox config, four-tab dashboard detail UI, structured versioning scheme (product + SDK + API + schema + wire) with /version self-report, Rhai editor with autocomplete / goto / find-usages / formatter, SDK contract + schema snapshot + integration test suites.


Phase 2: v1.0 (Polish & Usability) ✓ (Shipped)

  • Execution history dashboard
  • Better error messages (Rhai parse errors, sandbox limits, timeouts)
  • Timeout / resource-limit enforcement (per-script sandbox config)
  • Rhai SDK docs current through SDK 1.1

(Script versioning + rollback remains deferred — see Phase 6.)


Phase 3: v1.0.x — Foundations ✓ (Shipped)

Three foundation pieces that must land before the v1.1 service expansion, because retrofitting them later is expensive.

3a. Admin auth — ✓ shipped. See section 11.4. Per-user admin_users (not a shared secret), Argon2id passwords, env-var bootstrap of the first admin, session-token doubling as bearer token for API. No roles in this cut; schema is forward-compatible with later RBAC.

3b. Multi-app scoping — ✓ shipped. See section 11.5. apps, app_domains, app_slug_history tables; app_id columns on scripts, routes, execution_logs. Migration assigns existing data to a default app and always claims localhost; a Rust-side bootstrap inserts a Hello World script + /hello route when the default app is empty. Orchestrator dispatch is two-phase (Host → app → route trie). /api/v1/execute/{id}/* continues to work without a public domain claim. Dashboard is app-hierarchical (/admin/apps, /admin/apps/{slug}/...); API stays flat with new endpoints under /api/v1/admin/apps/* and a ?app= filter on script listing. Per-app admin roles deferred.

3c. Users, roles, and bearer-token auth (Phase 3.5) — ✓ shipped. See section 11.6. Adds instance_role to admin_users (owner/admin/member), app_members for per-app app_admin/editor/viewer grants, and api_keys for Authorization: Bearer pic_… credentials. Unifies cookie-session and API-key paths behind a single can(principal, capability) gate; list endpoints filter by membership at SQL for member users. Dashboard surfaces, invites, MFA, service accounts, and the picloud CLI binary are deferred — schema room only.

Why all three before v1.1: every v1.1 service (KV, docs, users, etc.) needs both an app_id scoping key in its schema and a Principal to authorize against. Adding both now is one migration each on a small surface; adding them after the SDKs ship is many migrations on populated data plus a re-gate of every SDK call.


Phase 4: v1.1 (Expand Capabilities & Services) — Current focus

Released in patch steps (v1.1.0 → v1.1.8), each landing one focused capability. The split lets each release ship behind tests + docs without long-lived branches. SDK shape (handle pattern, :: namespace, error convention, ExecutionGate, SdkCallCx, ServiceEventEmitter — see §7.5 and docs/sdk-shape.md) is fixed in v1.1.0; every subsequent release fills in the contents without re-litigating the shape.

Version Capability
v1.1.0 Foundation & Standard Library — SDK shape (Services bundle, SdkCallCx, ExecutionGate, ServiceEventEmitter trait shape); stdlib utilities (regex, random, time, json, base64, hex, url).
v1.1.1 Storage & Events — KV store keyed (app_id, collection, key); triggers framework (outbox + dispatcher + trigger CRUD + ctx.event + depth limit); KV trigger kinds.
v1.1.2 Documentsdocs::collection(name).create/find/update/delete/list with docs:* triggers.
v1.1.3 Modulesscripts.kind, per-app resolver replaces DummyModuleResolver, AST cache + dep-graph invalidation.
v1.1.4 Outbound HTTP & Scheduled Taskshttp::* with SSRF deny-list; cron triggers.
v1.1.5 Files & Messaging — filesystem-backed blobs with files:* triggers; pub/sub via LISTEN/NOTIFY with pubsub:* triggers.
v1.1.6 Configuration & Email — encrypted per-app secrets; outbound email::send / send_html + inbound email:receive trigger.
v1.1.7 User Managementusers::* for in-script CRUD, auth, roles, invites, password reset.
v1.1.8 Durable Queues & Function Compositionqueue::* with queue:receive trigger; invoke() + retry::* (closures-as-args, re-entrant Rhai).

Phase 5: v1.2 (Advanced Workflows & Hierarchies)

  • Function workflows (DAG execution, conditional branching, error handling)
  • Nested workflows
  • Call graph visualization + execution tracing
  • Advanced query support for document store (docs.query() with filters: $gt, $or, etc.)
  • Service interceptors (see section 9.4)

Phase 6: v1.3+ (Scaling, Security, Observability)

  • Cluster mode (split-process manager + per-node orchestrator + executor); cluster-mode wire protocol versioning
  • Cross-app data sharing (explicit export/import model — see section 11.5)
  • Script versioning + rollback (keep N historical versions in a side table; rollback endpoint)
  • Rate limiting on endpoints
  • Auth (richer model: API keys, OAuth, etc.)
  • Metrics + monitoring dashboard
  • Distributed tracing (OpenTelemetry)
  • Webhooks for execution events
  • S3 integration (object storage reads/writes)

7. Complete Rhai SDK Reference (MVP → v1.1+)

Storage & Data

Component Methods Availability
KV Store kv.get(collection, key), kv.set(collection, key, value, ttl?), kv.delete(collection, key), kv.has(collection, key) v1.1
Documents docs.create(collection, data, schema?), docs.find(collection, id), docs.update(collection, id, data, schema?), docs.delete(collection, id), docs.list(collection, opts?), docs.query(collection, filter?) v1.1
S3 s3.get(key), s3.put(key, data), s3.delete(key), s3.list(prefix?) v1.1
Users users.create(data), users.get(id), users.find_by_email(email), users.search(query, limit, offset), users.list(filters), users.update(id, data), users.authenticate(email, password), users.update_password(id, old, new), users.lock/unlock(id), users.delete(id), users.send_invite(email), users.send_password_reset(email), users.send_login_link(email), users.has_role/permission(id, role/perm), users.add/remove_role(id, role) v1.1

Communication

Component Methods Availability
Email email.send(to, subject, body), email.send_html(to, subject, html, text?) v1.1
HTTP http.get(url, opts?), http.post(url, body, opts?), http.put(...), http.delete(...) v1.1

Functions & Execution

Component Methods Availability
Invoke invoke(function_id, args, opts?), invoke_async(function_id, args) v1.1
Queue queue.send(queue_name, message), queue.send_batch(queue_name, messages) v1.1
Retry retry::call(fn, opts), retry::http_call(fn, opts) v1.1

Observability & Context

Component Methods Availability
Logging log.info(msg, data?), log.warn(msg, data?), log.error(msg, data?), log.debug(msg, data?) v1.0
Context context().execution_id(), context().script_id(), context().request_id(), context().trace_id(), context().invocation_type(), context().parent_execution_id() v1.0+

Request/Response & Context

Component Structure Availability
ctx (global) ctx.execution_id, ctx.script_id, ctx.script_name, ctx.request_id, ctx.trace_id, ctx.invocation_type, ctx.parent_execution_id, ctx.request.path, ctx.request.headers, ctx.request.body MVP+
Response Return { statusCode, headers?, body } MVP

7.5 SDK Architecture (v1.1.x foundation)

Stateful Rhai SDK services (KV, docs, HTTP, …) hang off a common shape laid down by the v1.1.0 SDK foundation PR. Full reference lives in docs/sdk-shape.md; this section sketches the moving parts so other sections can refer to them by name.

Services bundle (picloud_shared::Services) — an #[non_exhaustive] struct constructed once at startup. v1.1.0 ships it empty; each subsequent v1.1.x PR adds one Arc<dyn KvService> / Arc<dyn DocsService> / … field. Held on Engine, passed by reference to the per-call registration hook.

Per-call context (picloud_shared::SdkCallCx) — every stateful service trait method takes &SdkCallCx as its first non-self argument. Carries app_id, Option<Principal>, execution_id, request_id, and the trigger_depth / root_execution_id slots that the triggers framework populates. Services derive app_id from the cx — never from script-passed args. That rule is the cross-app isolation boundary; scripts cannot name another app's data.

Handle pattern — collection-scoped services expose kv::collection("widgets").get("k"), not kv::get("widgets", "k"). Removes the wrong-collection-name foot-gun and lets implementations cache per-collection state. (app_id, collection, key) is the identity tuple for KV; (app_id, collection, id) for docs. Collections are mandatory.

Error convention — throw on failure, () for absent, bool for predicates. Uniform across every v1.1.x service. Scripts opt into handling errors via Rhai's try/catch.

ExecutionGate (orchestrator-core::gate::ExecutionGate) — single global semaphore capping concurrent script executions. Default 32, override via the PICLOUD_MAX_CONCURRENT_EXECUTIONS env var. Non-blocking — on overflow, the orchestrator returns HTTP 503 with Retry-After: 1 immediately. No queue. Rationale: Rhai runs under spawn_blocking, so unbounded concurrency would park every blocking thread and starve every other workload.

ServiceEventEmitter (picloud_shared::ServiceEventEmitter) — every mutating service method emits a ServiceEvent { source, op, collection, key, payload, old_payload }. v1.1.0 ships NoopEventEmitter; the real outbox-backed dispatcher lands with v1.1.1 (see 7.5.1).

7.5.1 Trigger architecture (sketch)

Triggers fire scripts in response to service events. Three locked properties; full design and CRUD endpoints land with v1.1.1.

  1. Async outbox: services emit events synchronously into a Postgres outbox table; a separate dispatcher worker reads, matches them against registered triggers, and fans out script executions. Service writes don't block on trigger fan-out.
  2. Depth-limited: each trigger-spawned execution increments cx.trigger_depth. The dispatcher refuses to fan out beyond a configured ceiling to prevent runaway feedback loops. cx.root_execution_id preserves the originating execution id for audit grouping.
  3. Trigger model: a trigger is (service, event, filter) → script, stored in a triggers table. The filter is the dispatcher's match predicate on the emitted ServiceEvent.

8.1 KV Store Service

Purpose: Simple key-value persistence organized by collections, scoped per app and shared across script invocations and scripts within that app.

PostgreSQL Schema:

CREATE TABLE kv_store (
  app_id     UUID NOT NULL REFERENCES apps(id) ON DELETE CASCADE,
  collection TEXT NOT NULL,
  key        TEXT NOT NULL,
  value      JSONB NOT NULL,
  expires_at TIMESTAMP,
  created_at TIMESTAMP DEFAULT NOW(),
  updated_at TIMESTAMP DEFAULT NOW(),

  PRIMARY KEY (app_id, collection, key)
);

CREATE INDEX idx_kv_app_collection ON kv_store(app_id, collection);
CREATE INDEX idx_kv_expires ON kv_store(expires_at)
  WHERE expires_at IS NOT NULL;

Why JSONB + mandatory collections + app_id first:

  • (app_id, collection, key) is the identity tuple. The PK begins with app_id so the index is naturally per-app; cross-app reads can't happen even if the service layer has a bug.
  • Collections are mandatory — every set / get / delete names one. The same key can legitimately live in multiple collections within one app (sessions:abc and counters:abc are distinct rows).
  • JSONB carries arbitrary script-side values (nested objects, arrays) without a separate serialization step. hstore was considered and ruled out — it doesn't carry nested types and would force a second JSONB column the moment a script writes a structured value.

Value-size cap: 64 KiB per value, enforced at the service layer (script-visible error on overflow). The cap keeps KV "small fast values, not blob storage"; the v1.1.5 files SDK is the right home for large payloads.

Rhai SDK (handle pattern — see docs/sdk-shape.md):

let sessions = kv::collection("sessions");
sessions.set("user:123", #{ token: "abc", created: "2026-04-10" });
let val = sessions.get("user:123");          // value or () if absent
sessions.delete("user:123");
sessions.set("user:123", #{ token: "xyz" }, 3600);   // TTL in seconds
if sessions.has("user:123") { ... }

// Distinct collections in one script — different handles.
let counters = kv::collection("counters");
counters.set("api:calls", 42);

Use Cases:

  • Cache frequently accessed data
  • Store user session state
  • Counters, flags, feature toggles
  • Rate limiting state (hit counts)

8.2 Document Store Service

Purpose: Flexible NoSQL-like storage for complex JSON documents, organized by collections.

PostgreSQL Schema:

CREATE TABLE documents (
  id UUID PRIMARY KEY DEFAULT gen_random_uuid(),
  collection TEXT NOT NULL,
  data JSONB NOT NULL,
  created_at TIMESTAMP DEFAULT NOW(),
  updated_at TIMESTAMP DEFAULT NOW(),
  
  UNIQUE(collection, id)
);

CREATE INDEX idx_docs_collection ON documents(collection);
CREATE INDEX idx_docs_data ON documents USING GIN(data);

Rhai SDK:

// Create a document
let doc_id = docs.create("users", { 
  name: "Alice", 
  email: "alice@example.com",
  tags: ["vip", "beta"]
});

// Find by ID
let user = docs.find("users", doc_id);

// Update document
docs.update("users", doc_id, { 
  last_login: "2026-04-10T12:00:00Z" 
});

// Delete document
docs.delete("users", doc_id);

// Query by field (simple equality, v1.2+ advanced queries)
let admins = docs.query("users", { role: "admin" });

// List all in collection (with pagination)
let all_users = docs.list("users", { limit: 100, offset: 0 });

Use Cases:

  • User profiles, orders, transactions
  • Event log / audit trail
  • Content (posts, articles, comments)
  • Configuration documents
  • Workflow state

8.3 Email Service

Purpose: Send outgoing emails via SMTP.

Configuration (stored in orchestrator config):

email:
  smtp_host: "smtp.gmail.com"
  smtp_port: 587
  smtp_user: "your-email@gmail.com"
  smtp_password: "app-password"  # Or from secrets manager
  from_address: "noreply@yourdomain.com"
  from_name: "Serverless Cloud"

Rhai SDK:

// Simple send
email.send({
  to: "user@example.com",
  subject: "Welcome!",
  body: "Hello, welcome to our service."
});

// HTML body
email.send({
  to: "user@example.com",
  subject: "Welcome!",
  html: "<h1>Welcome!</h1><p>Hello user.</p>",
  text: "Welcome! Hello user."  // Fallback
});

// With CC, BCC, reply-to
email.send({
  to: "user@example.com",
  cc: "admin@example.com",
  bcc: "archive@example.com",
  reply_to: "support@example.com",
  subject: "Notification",
  body: "..."
});

// Template-like (basic string interpolation)
let name = req.body.name;
email.send({
  to: req.body.email,
  subject: `Welcome, ${name}!`,
  body: `Hi ${name},\n\nWelcome to our service.`
});

Use Cases:

  • Welcome emails on sign-up
  • Notifications (password reset, order status)
  • Alerts from scripts
  • Digest emails from queued data

9. v1.2+ Future Vision: Workflows & Hierarchies

9.1 Function Workflows (DAG Execution)

Concept: Chain multiple functions together in a directed acyclic graph (DAG).

Example:

Function A (process raw data)
    ↓
Function B (validate data)
    ↓
Function C (store in DB + send notification)

Workflow Definition (YAML, v1.2+):

name: "data-pipeline"
description: "Process, validate, store data"

steps:
  - name: "process"
    function: "process-raw-data"
    input: "{{ trigger.body }}"
    
  - name: "validate"
    function: "validate-data"
    input: "{{ steps.process.output }}"
    on_error: "fail"  # or "skip", "retry"
    
  - name: "store"
    function: "store-and-notify"
    input: "{{ steps.validate.output }}"
    timeout: 60
    retry:
      attempts: 3
      backoff: "exponential"

output: "{{ steps.store.output }}"

Features:

  • Sequential execution (A → B → C)
  • Parallel execution (B & C in parallel after A)
  • Conditional branching (if A succeeds, run B; else run C)
  • Error handling (fail fast, skip, retry with backoff)
  • Data passing between steps (output of A → input of B)
  • Workflow state tracking + execution history
  • Timeout per step + total timeout

Schema (PostgreSQL):

CREATE TABLE workflows (
  id UUID PRIMARY KEY DEFAULT gen_random_uuid(),
  name TEXT NOT NULL UNIQUE,
  description TEXT,
  definition JSONB NOT NULL,  -- YAML parsed as JSON
  created_at TIMESTAMP DEFAULT NOW(),
  updated_at TIMESTAMP DEFAULT NOW()
);

CREATE TABLE workflow_executions (
  id UUID PRIMARY KEY DEFAULT gen_random_uuid(),
  workflow_id UUID REFERENCES workflows(id),
  status TEXT,  -- 'pending', 'running', 'success', 'failed'
  steps_state JSONB,  -- { "process": { output: ... }, "validate": { output: ... } }
  error_message TEXT,
  started_at TIMESTAMP,
  completed_at TIMESTAMP
);

9.2 Function Hierarchy (Parent/Child Invocation)

Concept: Functions can invoke other functions and wait for results (like microservice calls).

Example:

Parent Function A
  ├─ Child Function B (sync call, waits)
  ├─ Child Function C (sync call, waits)
  └─ Child Function D (async, fire-and-forget)

Rhai SDK:

// Synchronous invoke (waits for result)
let result_b = invoke("function-b", { param: "value" });
let result_c = invoke("function-c", { param: "value" });

// Process results
if result_b.statusCode == 200 {
  let data = result_b.body;
  // ... process
}

// Asynchronous invoke (fire-and-forget)
invoke_async("function-d", { param: "value" });

// Invoke with timeout
let result = invoke("function-b", { param: "value" }, { timeout: 30 });

Orchestrator Behavior:

  • Parent function execution starts container
  • Child function invocation: spawn new container (nested execution)
  • Sync: parent waits; async: parent continues
  • Error handling: propagate up or catch locally
  • Timeout cascading: child timeout ≤ parent timeout

Call Graph Tracking:

Function Execution Tree:
  parent-func-exec-123
  ├─ child-b-exec-456 (sync, 200ms)
  ├─ child-c-exec-789 (sync, 500ms)
  └─ child-d-exec-012 (async, initiated)
  
Total execution: 700ms (max of child times)

Schema (PostgreSQL):

ALTER TABLE execution_logs ADD COLUMN (
  parent_execution_id UUID REFERENCES execution_logs(id),
  invocation_type TEXT,  -- 'http', 'parent_sync', 'parent_async'
  call_depth INT DEFAULT 0  -- Track nesting level
);

CREATE INDEX idx_execution_parent ON execution_logs(parent_execution_id);

9.4 Service Interceptors & Middleware (v1.2+)

Concept: A script can act as middleware to intercept and validate/transform service operations before they execute.

Use Cases:

  • Auth function intercepts S3 writes: validate user permissions
  • Audit function intercepts document updates: log all mutations
  • Rate-limiting function intercepts queue sends: enforce quotas
  • Data validation function intercepts DB operations: enforce schema

Script Configuration (at upload):

{
  "name": "auth-interceptor",
  "description": "Authorize S3 writes",
  "version": 1,
  "script_content": "...",
  
  "interceptors": {
    "s3": {
      "before_write": true,
      "before_read": false
    },
    "queue": {
      "before_send": true
    },
    "documents": {
      "before_create": true,
      "before_update": true,
      "before_delete": true
    },
    "kv": {
      "before_set": false,
      "before_delete": false
    }
  }
}

Interceptor Script Execution: When another script calls s3.put("bucket", "key", data):

  1. Orchestrator checks if any interceptor is registered for s3.before_write
  2. If yes, spawn interceptor script with context:
    ctx.operation = {
      service: "s3",
      action: "write",
      bucket: "bucket",
      key: "key",
      caller_script_id: "...",
      caller_execution_id: "..."
    }
    ctx.data = { ... }  // The data being written
    
  3. Interceptor script returns: { allowed: true/false, reason: "...", data: {...} }
  4. If allowed: false, reject the operation → error to caller
  5. If allowed: true, use potentially modified data → execute s3.put()

Interceptor Script Example:

// Auth interceptor for S3
let user_id = ctx.request.body.user_id;
let key = ctx.operation.key;

// Check if user owns this key
let allowed = kv.get("permissions", `user:${user_id}:s3:${key}`);

if allowed {
  log.info("S3 write authorized", { user_id, key });
  {
    allowed: true,
    data: ctx.data  // Optionally transform/add metadata
  }
} else {
  log.warn("S3 write denied", { user_id, key });
  {
    allowed: false,
    reason: "User does not have write permission"
  }
}

Availability Matrix (v1.2+):

Service Before Operations
S3 read, write, delete, list
Documents create, read, update, delete, query
KV set, get, delete
Queue send, send_batch
Email send
HTTP get, post, put, delete
Functions (invoke) call, call_async
Users create, update, authenticate, lock, delete

Notes:

  • HTTP triggers have NO before interceptors (they're entry points)
  • Interceptors are per-script, opt-in (scripts only intercept what they explicitly configure)
  • Failed interceptors return { allowed: false } → original caller gets error
  • Interceptor failures are logged in audit trail
  • v1.3+ consideration: Global policies / RBAC layer on top of interceptors

10. Open Questions & Notes

Architecture

  • Container image caching: Should we keep a warm executor image in memory between requests? (v1.1 optimization)
  • Script isolation: Do we need process-level isolation beyond Docker (seccomp, AppArmor)?
  • Networking: Can scripts initiate outbound connections? (deferred to v1.1)

v1.1 Services

  • KV expiration: Background cleanup task for expired keys, or lazy deletion?
  • Document queries: Start with simple equality, or support complex filters (v1.2)?
  • Email retries: If SMTP fails, retry strategy (exponential backoff)?
  • SMTP configuration: Environment variables, config file, or dashboard UI?
  • User password hashing: Use bcrypt, Argon2, or scrypt? What cost factor?
  • User invitations: Email template customization? Configurable expiration?
  • Passwordless login: Email-based or SMS-based login links?
  • Session management: Sessions table for tracking login tokens/refresh tokens?
  • 2FA/MFA: In-scope for v1.1 or defer to v1.2?

v1.2+ Workflows & Hierarchies

  • Workflow DAG format: YAML, JSON, or domain-specific language (DSL)?
  • Branching logic: Simple if/else, or complex conditions (switch/case)?
  • Workflow versioning: Support multiple versions with rollback?
  • Call graph limits: Max depth of nested function calls (prevent runaway recursion)?
  • Timeout cascading: How strictly to enforce (child ≤ parent)?
  • Observability: Generate trace IDs for call graphs, visualize in dashboard?

v1.2+ Service Interceptors

  • Interceptor chaining: If multiple scripts intercept same operation, execution order?
  • Performance: Interceptor overhead on every service call — caching/optimization needed?
  • Interceptor failures: If interceptor times out, fail the entire operation or allow bypass?
  • Circular dependencies: Prevent interceptor A calling service that triggers interceptor B calling A?
  • Audit trail: Log all interceptor decisions (allowed/denied) automatically?
  • Debugging: How to trace interceptor execution in logs/dashboard?

Rhai & SDK

  • Module loading: Can scripts import external Rhai modules? (probably no for MVP)
  • File system access: Can scripts read/write to local filesystem? (no for MVP)
  • Request/response sizes: Max payload size? (set sensible default, e.g., 10MB)

Operations

  • Container logs: Capture executor stdout/stderr → attach to execution log? (yes, nice to have)
  • Script parsing errors: Fail at upload time or runtime? (recommend: upload validation in Rhai)
  • Garbage collection: How often to prune old execution logs? (optional MVP, monthly default)

Future Integrations

  • Metrics backend: Prometheus, InfluxDB, or local file?
  • Log aggregation: ELK, Loki, or just local files?
  • Secrets backend: Hashicorp Vault, local encrypted file, or built-in?

13. Success Metrics (MVP)

  1. Deployment ease: Script uploaded and responding to HTTP in < 1 minute
  2. Performance: p95 latency < 500ms (including container startup)
  3. Resource efficiency: Server CPU/memory stays < 30% at rest, scales only on active requests
  4. Reliability: 99.5% uptime, no memory leaks or orphaned containers
  5. Developer experience: Dashboard feels responsive, errors are clear

14. Assumptions & Dependencies

Assumptions:

  • Single server, modest hardware (2GB+ RAM, dual-core CPU)
  • Rhai is mature enough for MVP (checked v1.12+)
  • Docker daemon available on target machine
  • PostgreSQL can be containerized (not separate managed service)

Dependencies:

  • Docker (for executor runtime)
  • Rust 1.70+ (for Orchestrator build)
  • Rhai crate (script execution)
  • Axum crate (HTTP framework)
  • PostgreSQL client library (sqlx or tokio-postgres)
  • Alpine Linux (executor base image)

16. Next Steps

  1. Clarify any ambiguities in this blueprint
  2. Spike: Rhai executor image — build minimal Alpine + Rhai image, test startup time
  3. Spike: Axum API — scaffold REST endpoints for script CRUD
  4. Spike: PostgreSQL schema — finalize schema, migrations
  5. Build Phase 1: Orchestrator → Dashboard → Executor → docker-compose integration

Document Control

Version Date Author Notes
1.0 2026-04-10 Blueprint MVP scope, architecture, tech stack locked