Account deletion removed all local data but left the Ory Kratos
identity intact — an orphaned identity that can still authenticate.
Close the gap:
- kratos.Client gains the admin API: NewClient(publicURL, adminURL)
and DeleteIdentity (DELETE /admin/identities/{id}; a 404 is treated
as success so a retry after a partial failure is idempotent).
- AuthService.DeleteAccount deletes the Kratos identity FIRST; if that
call fails it aborts before touching local data, so the operation is
retryable rather than partially applied.
- KRATOS_ADMIN_URL config (default http://kratos:4434) + router wiring.
- kratos NetworkPolicy split: the api pods may now reach the admin API
:4434 (Traefik still reaches only the public API :4433).
- kratos CORS: allow_credentials + OPTIONS so the web browser flows
(ory_kratos_session cookie) work; origins stay an explicit allowlist.
- Regression tests: identity teardown happens, and a Kratos failure
aborts the deletion instead of orphaning local data.
Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.7 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
Delegates all credential management (login, register, password reset,
email verification, social sign-in) to Ory Kratos. The Go API now acts
as a resource server: the new KratosAuth middleware validates sessions
against the Kratos whoami endpoint, writes the local User mirror into
Echo context, and all existing domain handlers continue working
unchanged. Hand-rolled token auth, AuthToken model, apple_auth/
google_auth services, and the auth refresh flow are removed. Tests are
updated to use the fake-token middleware pattern so existing integration
assertions require no rewrite.
Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.7 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
Every public method on these five services now takes ctx context.Context as
the first arg and routes its repo calls through .WithContext(ctx). With
TaskService and ResidenceService already migrated, this means every
in-process service that touches Postgres now produces a flame graph in
Jaeger where the SQL spans nest under the parent HTTP request span.
Endpoints now fully traced (HTTP → service → SQL):
- /api/auth/login, /register, /logout, /me, /verify-email, /resend-verification
- /api/auth/forgot-password, /verify-reset, /reset-password, /update-profile
- /api/contractors/* (CRUD + favorite + by-residence + tasks)
- /api/documents/* (CRUD + activate/deactivate + image upload/delete)
- /api/notifications/* (list, count, mark-read, prefs, devices)
- /api/subscription/* (status, purchase, cancel, triggers, promotions)
- All previously-migrated /api/tasks/* and /api/residences/* paths
Internal helpers also threaded:
- TaskService.sendTaskCompletedNotification → forwards ctx
- TaskService.UpdateUserTimezone → forwards ctx to NotificationService
- ResidenceService.CreateResidence → forwards ctx to SubscriptionService.CheckLimit
- NotificationService.registerAPNSDevice / registerGCMDevice → both take ctx
~75 method signatures, ~120 handler/test call sites updated. Tests pass
green; the only failure is the pre-existing flaky TaskHandler_QuickComplete
SQLite race that fails ~60% of runs on master.
Step 3 of the observability plan is now genuinely complete: every API
endpoint backed by a Go service emits a per-request flame graph with
HTTP → service → SQL spans, plus B2/APNs/FCM/asynq spans where applicable.
Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.7 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>