# Fabric Live Audit 2026-05-18 Status: live operational audit of the current fabric. This document records the real state observed on 2026-05-18 and explicitly calls out where runtime behavior still differs from the target architecture. The target layering model referenced by this audit is documented in [FABRIC_SERVICE_OVER_TRANSPORT_MODEL.md](\\nas\\MST\\codex\\rdp-proxy\\docs\\architecture\\FABRIC_SERVICE_OVER_TRANSPORT_MODEL.md). The current execution sequence derived from this audit is maintained in [FABRIC_EXECUTION_PLAN_2026-05-19.md](\\nas\\MST\\codex\\rdp-proxy\\docs\\architecture\\FABRIC_EXECUTION_PLAN_2026-05-19.md). ## Current confirmed state - Inter-node transport for the live node-agent fleet is `QUIC over UDP`. - The `0.2.327-registrybootstraprewrite` rollout initially exposed a backend ingestion defect: fresh `home-*` / `test-*` heartbeats were returning HTTP `500`, not because QUIC or registry bootstrap was broken, but because PostgreSQL rejected `\u0000` inside heartbeat JSON with `unsupported Unicode escape sequence (SQLSTATE 22P05)`. - Backend heartbeat ingestion now sanitizes `\u0000` before persistence. - After that fix, `home-*` and `test-*` resumed normal heartbeat flow and converged onto the new release line with live registry promotion. - The active node set - `home-1` - `home-2` - `home-3` - `test-1` - `test-2` - `test-3` - `usa-los-1` - `ifcm-rufms-s-mo1cr` currently spans: - `home-*`, `test-*`, and `usa-los-1` on `0.2.327-registrybootstraprewrite`; - `ifcm-rufms-s-mo1cr` still remaining on `0.2.322-controlendpointsrewrite`. - `ifcm-rufms-s-mo1cr` recovered through the compatibility recovery path and is no longer stale. - `ifcm-rufms-s-mo1cr` has already migrated off compat overlap `http://vpn.cin.su:19191/api/v1` and now reports `https://vpn.cin.su/api/v1`, but it still has not advanced to the new registry-aware release line. - `home-*` and `test-*` now report: - `reported_version = 0.2.327-registrybootstraprewrite` - `peer_cache_peers = 7` - `fabric_registry_runtime_report.status = active` - `usa-los-1` is already on `0.2.327-registrybootstraprewrite` but still reports `fabric_registry_runtime_report.status = missing`, which means this node remains a runtime bootstrap/config rewrite gap rather than a version-gap. - After repairing malformed `RAP_MESH_ADVERTISE_ENDPOINTS_JSON` on `home-1/home-2/home-3`, the `home` area now emits enriched heartbeat metadata again instead of falling back to the thin `c3` payload. - Live stale-risk snapshot at `2026-05-18T19:39Z` now reports: - `compat_control_dependency_nodes = 1` (`ifcm-rufms-s-mo1cr`) - `registry_candidate_only_nodes = 1` (`ifcm-rufms-s-mo1cr`) - `direct_peer_alert_nodes = 5` - `area_diversity_alert_nodes = 6` - Live heartbeat/update status snapshot after the `0.2.325-updatehintwake` rollout still shows: - `ifcm-rufms-s-mo1cr` heartbeat fresh at `2026-05-18 23:08:44 UTC` - `fabric_control_endpoint = http://vpn.cin.su:19191/api/v1` - `peer_cache_peers = 7` - latest update status still stuck at `2026-05-18 20:50 UTC` - this is now classified as `updater_wake_unsupported`, not just a generic stale or compat-control symptom ## Why TCP traffic is still visible Visible TCP traffic is not coming from the inter-node fabric transport. It is coming from the temporary compatibility recovery overlap that is still active. Observed live listeners: - `docker-test` - `19191/tcp` - compatibility `Control API/downloads` bridge - `18080/tcp` - web-admin - `18090/tcp` - release files - `18121/tcp` - backend Control API - `19132/udp`, `19133/udp`, `19134/udp` - QUIC fabric listeners - `usa-los-1` - `19131/udp` - QUIC fabric listener - `19191/tcp` - external compatibility bridge currently held open so compat recovery contracts can still reach `Control API/downloads` Therefore: - `TCP` is still present by design for recovery overlap. - `UDP/QUIC` is the current node-to-node transport. - The statement "the fabric is fully UDP-only" is not yet true at the full system level while `19191/tcp` compatibility recovery remains enabled. ## Why nodes were still falling away ### 1. Nodes do not yet operate from a fully active signed registry gossip plane Observed on the live `ifcm-rufms-s-mo1cr` heartbeat after the backend/runtime refresh: - `fabric_registry_runtime_report.status = candidate_only` - `resolved_service_count = 0` - `resolved_services.control-api = no_active_record` - `resolved_services.update-store = no_active_record` - `resolved_services.update-cache = no_active_record` This means the current runtime still depends on compatibility control URLs more than the target architecture allows. The node is alive in the fabric, but not yet operating from a fully resolved active registry view. ### 2. Compat control/download contracts are still real dependencies Observed on the live `ifcm-rufms-s-mo1cr` heartbeat after recovery: - `mesh_outbound_session_report.fabric_control_endpoint = http://vpn.cin.su:19191/api/v1` This confirms the root recovery lesson: - a NAT node without manual host access was still anchored to the old recovery contract; - until that contract was temporarily restored, the node could not advance; - the node did not disappear because QUIC failed; it disappeared because the recovery/control overlap was removed before the node had converged. ### 3. Direct peer resilience is still below the intended threshold Observed from the live stale-risk snapshot at `2026-05-18T19:39Z`: - `ifcm-rufms-s-mo1cr` - `peer_connection_ready = 2` - `peer_connection_relay_ready = 3` - `target_ready_peers = 3` - `home-1` - `peer_connection_ready = 1` - `direct_ready_areas = [usa]` - `external_area_ready_count = 1/2` - `home-2` - `peer_connection_ready = 1` - `direct_ready_areas = [usa]` - `external_area_ready_count = 1/2` - `home-3` - `peer_connection_ready = 1` - `direct_ready_areas = [usa]` - `external_area_ready_count = 1/2` - `test-1/2/3` - `peer_connection_ready = 3` - but `direct_ready_areas = [usa]` - therefore each still triggers `external_area_deficit:1_of_2` - `usa-los-1` - `peer_connection_ready = 1` - `direct_ready_areas = [ifcm, home, test]` - `target_ready_peers = 3` This means the direct-path resilience target is not satisfied yet, even though the nodes are healthy. The practical reason is simple: - the cluster has only a small number of externally reachable direct QUIC endpoints; - some nodes still advertise only private/LAN-reachable direct candidates; - relay-ready adjacency is masking direct peer deficit, but it does not replace the requirement for at least three direct-ready peers. ### 3.1 Public endpoint confirmation must be cross-area, not local hairpin The live `home/test` topology also exposed a verification mistake in the runtime model: - `home` and `test` sit behind the same public router address `94.141.118.222`; - some public QUIC candidates are valid only when tested from another area such as `usa` or `ifcm`; - a same-area probe can fail purely because the local router does not support hairpin NAT / NAT reflection. Operational consequence: - a public endpoint marked as `external-network-required` must be treated as non-authoritative when the failure came from `self` or `same_area`; - the public candidate should be confirmed or rejected by `cross_area` observers instead. ### 4. Observability is still heterogeneous Live heartbeat coverage is now richer than it was earlier in the day, but it is still not fully converged in behavior: - `test-*`, `ifcm`, `usa-los-1`, and now repaired `home-*` expose endpoint, peer recovery, and registry sections again. - `ifcm` is still the only node that currently reports `compat control` and `registry candidate_only`, so the observability gap has narrowed into a real single-node convergence issue instead of a fleet-wide blind spot. ## What is true right now 1. The fleet is converged on one live node-agent version. 2. QUIC/UDP is the actual node-to-node transport. 3. Compatibility `19191/tcp` is still required for recovery overlap. 4. Signed registry gossip is not yet the sole active discovery/control source. 5. `ifcm` still depends on the compat `19191` control overlap. 6. The plain `3 direct peers` target is insufficient on its own; the live fleet now clearly shows that `cross-area direct diversity` is the next real gate. ## Control/API migration progress The codebase now carries a more explicit migration contract for control access: - install profiles prefer canonical `control_plane_endpoints` over a compat singleton `backend_url`; - host runtime env generation now exports removed control-plane endpoint env key; - node heartbeat/control reporting prefers that canonical endpoint set when it is present. - stale updater status behind a fresh heartbeat is now classified separately as `updater_subscription_gap`; - heartbeat update hints now have a second-stage recovery path: after writing `update-trigger.json`, a live node can also wake its local updater task/service. This does not instantly rewrite older runtime wrappers on already-installed nodes by itself. It does remove the same trap for the next install, reinstall, or update-service rewrite cycle. ## Operational rule until the next audit Do not remove the compatibility `19191/tcp` recovery overlap while any of the following remain true: - any live node still reports a `fabric_control_endpoint` on the `19191` contract; - any live node has `fabric_registry_runtime_report.status != active`; - any externally significant node has fewer than 3 direct-ready peers; - any node can only recover through compat `Control API/downloads` overlap. ## Required next work Update 2026-05-19: - `rap-node-agent 0.2.325-updatehintwake` was released with a local updater wake path driven by heartbeat update hints. - The release exists because `ifcm-rufms-s-mo1cr` showed that a node can keep sending fresh heartbeat while the updater subscription plane silently stops progressing. - This is now treated as a first-class recovery-plane problem, not as a vague stale-node symptom. - The live rollout already moved `home-*`, `test-*`, and `usa-los-1` onto `0.2.325-updatehintwake`. - `ifcm-rufms-s-mo1cr` is now the only remaining `updater_wake_unsupported` blocker. - Live `ifcm` peer telemetry also exposed a distinct transport-resilience defect: on one stale-relay/bootstrap path the node tried a relay endpoint with the certificate fingerprint from a different private direct candidate, producing `CRYPTO_ERROR ... quic peer certificate fingerprint mismatch`. - That bug is now fixed in the runtime line tracked as `0.2.332-relaycertintentfix`. ### A. Finish signed registry activation Each node must be able to resolve active records for at least: - `control-api` - `update-store` - `update-cache` without falling back to the `19191` compatibility contract. ### B. Promote full direct endpoint dissemination All nodes with public reachability must advertise every valid public direct QUIC endpoint, and nodes must retain enough live peer memory to reconnect without operator intervention. ### C. Enforce the direct-ready floor as a live alert If a node has fewer than 3 direct-ready peers, this must remain a real operational alert even when relay-ready peers exist. ### D. Normalize heartbeat observability Every production node must emit the same minimum audit surface: - endpoint candidates - peer recovery counts - registry runtime state - update runtime state without mixing rich and reduced heartbeat schemas across the fleet. ### E. Replace the naive peer-count rule The live fleet shows that a plain "3 links per node" rule is not a sufficient resilience model. The current corrective design is documented in [FABRIC_AREA_AND_PEER_STABILITY_MODEL.md](\\nas\\MST\\codex\\rdp-proxy\\docs\\architecture\\FABRIC_AREA_AND_PEER_STABILITY_MODEL.md) and introduces: - `area` as a failure-domain label; - direct-ready vs relay-ready separation; - cross-area diversity requirements; - full-directory retention for small fleets.