Introduce a Supervisor trait (async-trait) so the agent manages games with different models behind one wire contract. ProcessSupervisor (spawned process: rust/conan/soulmask) and the new DockerComposeSupervisor (dune) both impl it; Agent.supervisors is now HashMap<String, Arc<dyn Supervisor>> and instancecmd dispatch is game-agnostic — start/stop/restart/status identical across games, selected by a per-game factory in main. InstanceState moved to the shared supervisor module. DockerComposeSupervisor drives docker-compose up-d / stop / restart against the instance's compose project, with -f/-p/single-service support and a configurable compose binary. New [instance.docker_compose] config block. First cut = lifecycle + cached state; container crash-detection + restart adoption deferred to Phase 3b (reconcilable with a compose ps probe). Trait choice (dyn over enum) per Commander: scales to future planes (kubectl, AMP/podman, SSH) as new struct+impl, no central match. 56 tests green (6 new docker-compose mock-binary tests + 5 refactored process tests), zero warnings. Live verification pending a real Dune stack. Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.8 <noreply@anthropic.com>
9.6 KiB
Corrosion Wire Protocol v2
Status: Phase 0 + Phase 1 process control implemented (host heartbeat, host commands, going-offline beacon, per-instance start/stop/restart/status with push state events). RCON, SteamCMD, file ops, and game adapters are specified but not yet implemented.
Design
One host agent per machine supervises N game instances. Subjects are scoped license-first, then by addressee:
corrosion.{license_id}.host.* host-level (the agent itself)
corrosion.{license_id}.{instance_id}.* instance-level (one game server)
instance_id is a config-defined slug ([a-z0-9_-]{1,64}), validated at
agent start. host is a reserved segment and can never be an instance id.
Payloads are JSON. Every heartbeat carries "schema": 2 so consumers can
distinguish v2 from the legacy Go companion protocol (which used
corrosion.{license_id}.companion.heartbeat, no schema field).
Host-level subjects (Phase 0 — live)
corrosion.{license_id}.host.heartbeat (agent → backend, publish)
Published every heartbeat_seconds (default 60, jittered ±20%).
{
"schema": 2,
"timestamp": "2026-06-11T18:00:00Z",
"agent": {
"version": "2.0.0-alpha.1",
"commit": "a8722a7",
"os": "linux",
"arch": "x86_64",
"uptime_seconds": 86400
},
"host": {
"hostname": "asgard-01",
"cpu_percent": 12.5,
"cpu_cores": 80,
"mem_total_mb": 262144,
"mem_used_mb": 81920,
"uptime_seconds": 1209600,
"disks": [
{ "mount": "/", "total_mb": 1907729, "free_mb": 1532211 }
]
},
"instances": [
{
"id": "rust-main",
"game": "rust",
"label": "Main 2x Vanilla",
"state": "configured",
"root_disk_free_mb": 1532211
}
],
"probe": {
"timestamp": "2026-06-11T17:58:00Z",
"results": [
{ "name": "corrosion-cdn", "host": "cdn.corrosionmgmt.com", "port": 443, "ok": true, "latency_ms": 18 }
]
}
}
All telemetry is measured, never fabricated. Fields the agent cannot measure
are omitted (probe before the first probe completes, hostname if
unavailable).
Instance state values — process-managed (an executable is configured):
running, stopped, starting, stopping, crashed; unmanaged
(telemetry-only): configured (root exists), missing_root. Each instance
also reports uptime_seconds (0 unless running).
corrosion.{license_id}.host.cmd (backend → agent, request-reply)
Request: { "func": "<name>" }. Reply: { "status": "success" | "error", ... }.
| func | Reply payload |
|---|---|
ping |
version, commit, uptime_seconds |
probe |
report — fresh ProbeReport (also cached for heartbeat) |
sysinfo |
snapshot — full heartbeat payload, collected on demand |
update |
{ "func": "update", "url": "https://cdn.corrosionmgmt.com/host-agent/.../corrosion-host-agent-<plat>" } → downloads the binary + <url>.minisig, verifies the minisign signature against the agent's EMBEDDED public key, atomically swaps (with .old rollback), replies { status: success, message: "...relaunching" }, then relaunches the new binary. Rejects anything not signed by the release key and any URL that isn't https://cdn.corrosionmgmt.com. |
Unknown funcs return status: "error" with a message listing supported funcs.
corrosion.{license_id}.host.going_offline (agent → backend, publish)
Best-effort beacon (500ms budget) on graceful shutdown so the panel can flip
the host to offline immediately instead of waiting out heartbeat staleness.
Payload: {}.
Instance-level subjects
corrosion.{license_id}.{instance_id}.cmd (backend → agent, request-reply) — LIVE
Lifecycle and control for one game instance.
The same start/stop/restart/status funcs work for every game: the
agent picks a Supervisor impl per game — a spawned-process supervisor for
Rust/Conan/Soulmask, a docker-compose supervisor for Dune (docker compose up -d / stop / restart against the instance's compose project, configured
via [instance.docker_compose]). The wire contract is identical; only the
management model behind it differs.
Implemented funcs: start, stop (graceful with 30s budget, then force
kill — process supervisor; Dune maps stop to docker compose stop), restart,
status (returns state + uptime_seconds), and
rcon — { "func": "rcon", "command": "<console command>" } returns
{ "status": "success", "output": <server response> }. Protocol per game:
WebRCON (WebSocket JSON) for rust, Source RCON (Valve TCP) for
conan/soulmask; explicit kind override available in the instance's
[instance.rcon] config. Always targets 127.0.0.1 (agent is co-located).
Errors reply { "status": "error", "message": ... } — including start on an
unmanaged instance, double start, missing rcon config, and unknown funcs.
Also implemented: steam_update — { "func": "steam_update" } runs
SteamCMD for the instance's game (app ids: rust 258550, conan 443030,
soulmask 3017310/3017300; dune rejects — Docker images, no SteamCMD),
streaming progress lines to corrosion.{license}.{instance}.steam_status
and replying on completion.
Planned funcs: oxide_install (rust), plus game-adapter-specific
commands (Dune: RabbitMQ admin-bus commands, Coriolis reset, Postgres admin
surface). Dune lifecycle is already covered by the shared
start/stop/restart funcs above; container crash-detection and state adoption on
agent restart land with Phase 3b.
corrosion.{license_id}.{instance_id}.steam_status (agent → backend, publish) — LIVE
Per-line SteamCMD stdout during a steam_update, so the panel can show
live update progress. Payload: { "timestamp", "instance_id", "line" }.
corrosion.{license_id}.{instance_id}.files.cmd (backend → agent, request-reply) — LIVE
Jailed file manager, confined to the instance root (two-stage check:
lexical normalize + canonicalize, defeating ../ traversal and symlink
escape). Request { "op": "list|read|write|delete|rename|mkdir|mkfile|move|copy", "path": "rel/path", "dest"?, "content"?, "name"? }; reply
{ "status": "success", "data": ... } or { "status": "error", "message": ... }.
read caps at 5 MiB. Replaces the Go agent's UNJAILED legacy files API,
which is retired and will not be ported.
corrosion.{license_id}.{instance_id}.status (agent → backend, publish) — LIVE
State-change events so the panel does not wait for the next heartbeat.
Payload: { "timestamp", "instance_id", "event": { "state": ..., "exit_code"? } }.
Semantics: keep-latest state sync, not a lossless transition ledger —
near-instant transient states (e.g. starting when spawn succeeds
immediately) may coalesce into the following state. Consumers should treat
each event as "current state is now X".
Known Phase 1 limitation: the supervisor does not yet persist/adopt PIDs — if
the agent itself restarts while a game server is running, the game process
survives but reports stopped until restarted through the panel. PID
adoption is queued with the service-install work.
corrosion.{license_id}.{instance_id}.console (agent → backend, publish)
Live console/log lines for the panel console view.
corrosion.{license_id}.{instance_id}.files.cmd (backend → agent, request-reply)
VueFinder-style file manager ops, jailed to the instance root. Carries over
the Go agent's jailed filemanager semantics (fm_list, fm_save, ...); the
legacy UNJAILED files.get/put/delete/list API is retired and will not be
ported.
Backend mapping notes (Phase 0)
- The NestJS NATS bridge subscribes
corrosion.*.host.heartbeatandcorrosion.*.host.going_offline. - Until the license→host→instance schema lands, the backend may map the host
heartbeat onto the existing single
server_connectionsrow per license:companion_last_seen← heartbeat arrival,connection_status← connected/offline, resources ←host.cpu_percent/mem_*/ first disk. Instance-level mapping activates with the fleet schema.
Probing — scope honesty
The Phase 0 prober measures outbound reachability from the host (TCP
connect + latency). It cannot verify inbound port-forwarding (the thing
players hit). Inbound verification requires a backend-side reverse probe
service that attempts connections to the customer's public IP/ports on
request; that is specified as a Phase 1+ feature and will reuse this report
format with direction: "inbound".
Authentication & tenant isolation
The broker enforces per-license auth: an agent connects with user = license_id,
password = HMAC-SHA256(license_id, NATS_TOKEN_SECRET) (shown on the panel
Server page), and is scoped to corrosion.{license_id}.> only. The backend uses
a privileged internal user. This makes cross-tenant access impossible at the
broker, not just by convention.
Reply-subject rule: per-license users have NO _INBOX permission (granting
it would let one license read another's request-reply traffic). Therefore any
backend→agent request-reply MUST use a reply subject inside the license
namespace — e.g. corrosion.{license_id}.reply.<id> — never the client's
default global _INBOX. The agent is unaffected: it responds to whatever
msg.reply it receives. The constraint is on the requester (the internal user
has full access). The contract/CI tests run against an unauthenticated broker
and use the default inbox; production request-reply must follow this rule.
Versioning
- The agent embeds semver + git hash + build timestamp (
--version, heartbeatagentblock). - Schema changes bump
schemaand are additive where possible.