Replaces LICENSE (GPLv3 -> AGPLv3) and prepends
`SPDX-License-Identifier: AGPL-3.0-or-later` to every source file
across decnet/, decnet_web/, tests/, scripts/, and tools/.
Rationale: closes the GPLv3 ASP loophole so any party operating a
modified DECNET as a network service must offer their modified
source. Personal copyright (Samuel Paschuan) + inbound=outbound
contributions make a future unilateral relicense infeasible.
- LICENSE: full AGPL-3.0 text (gnu.org/licenses/agpl-3.0.txt)
- COPYRIGHT: project copyright notice
- tools/add_spdx_headers.py: idempotent header injector
(shebang- and PEP 263-aware)
Touches 1565 source files (.py, .ts, .tsx, .js, .jsx, .css, .sh).
No behavior change; comments only.
Five list columns (greynoise_tags, abuseipdb_categories, threatfox_threat_types,
threatfox_ioc_types, threatfox_malware_families) and four dict columns
(*_raw) are now Column(JSON) with list/dict type annotations and
default_factory=list/dict. Providers return native Python objects; the
application-layer json.dumps/json.loads round-trip and _decode_json_list
helpers are gone. to_intel_event_payload() reads columns directly.
Also caps pytest xdist at -n 4 and excludes tests/api from norecursedirs
to prevent schemathesis workers from OOM-killing the dev loop.
New MalHashProvider sibling ABC (decnet/intel/base.py) since SHA-256
is a different keyspace from IntelProvider's IPs. MalwareBazaarProvider
mirrors FeodoProvider's bulk-feed shape: 24h refresh via _ensure_fresh
/ _refresh, in-memory set[str] of hex-lowercased hashes, set-membership
lookup. Auth-keyed via DECNET_MALWAREBAZAAR_AUTH_KEY; absent key
silent-no-ops the lane (single warning, no HTTP traffic).
Per-hash observations persist to a new observed_attachments table.
DECNET is a honeypot platform — every attachment hash an attacker
delivers is intel, regardless of whether anyone classified it. Verdict
is sticky: True never downgrades to False/None on subsequent
observations. Out of scope: API surface, federation export, retention.
Ingester _publish_email_received calls the provider for each attachment
sha256, sets mal_hash_match on the bus payload (omitted entirely when
the message had no attachments — keeps R0046's `is True` predicate
silent on hash-less mail, matching pre-paydown behavior), and upserts
the row regardless of provider availability.
The TTP worker forwards the bus payload verbatim to the IntelLifter as
TaggerEvent.payload. The pre-audit publish payload only carried
{attacker_uuid, attacker_ip, aggregate_verdict, providers}, so even with
the new AttackerIntel taxonomy columns populated the lifter still saw
nothing. Lift the relevant fields (categories / tags / threat_types /
malware family / score / classification) into the bus event and decode
JSON-string list columns back to native lists at the boundary.
The 2026-05-02 ship-time audit of the R0054-R0058 intel rule pack found
that AbuseIPDB / GreyNoise / ThreatFox stored only the aggregate verdict
(score / classification / listed-bool) plus the raw response blob. The
TTP IntelLifter expects per-provider taxonomy fields (categories, tags,
threat_types) that were never populated, so R0054 / R0055 / R0057
emitted zero tags in production despite passing unit tests.
Add typed columns: abuseipdb_categories, greynoise_tags, greynoise_name,
feodo_malware_family, threatfox_threat_types, threatfox_ioc_types,
threatfox_malware_families. Each provider now parses the relevant
taxonomy out of the upstream response and writes it through
column_updates. JSON-list columns ride as TEXT with default "[]" to
keep the SQLite/MySQL backend split honest, deserialised back to native
lists by the repo on read.
The threat-intel surface was IP-keyed on day one as an expedient — the
worker is woken by IP-bearing bus events. ANTI's call: don't carry that
debt. NO IPs as primary keys anywhere on the attacker-intel surface.
Schema:
- attacker_uuid is now the canonical key — UNIQUE + FK to attackers.uuid.
- attacker_ip stays as a denormalised, indexed, NON-UNIQUE value column.
Updated on every upsert; useful for SIEM payloads and audit lookups,
but explicitly NOT a key. Model docstring says so.
- Pre-v1, no Alembic migration needed. SQLModel.metadata.create_all()
builds the new shape on fresh DBs.
Repo:
- upsert_attacker_intel now keys on attacker_uuid.
- get_attacker_intel_by_ip → get_attacker_intel_by_uuid.
- get_unenriched_attacker_ips → get_unenriched_attackers, returning
[{uuid, ip}] tuples so the worker writes by UUID and dispatches
provider calls by IP without a second round-trip.
Worker:
- _enrich_one(uuid, ip, ...) — UUID lands on the row, IP rides for
provider egress.
- attacker.intel.enriched bus payload gains attacker_uuid alongside
attacker_ip — webhook → SIEM consumers benefit; no removal.
API:
- GET /api/v1/attackers/{ip}/intel deleted outright (rip-and-replace,
never deployed beyond dev).
- GET /api/v1/attackers/{uuid}/intel is the only public route, matching
every other /attackers/* route.
Frontend:
- <IntelPanel uuid={id!} /> uses the URL param directly, fetches in
parallel with the rest of AttackerDetail rather than waiting on
attacker.ip.
Tests: re-keyed in place, 39 passed (same coverage as before the
refactor). Provider-impl tests untouched.
DEBT-041: closed in DEBT.md (entry preserved as historical rationale,
summary table flipped to ✅, remaining-open list shortened by one).
Mirrors decnet-reuse-correlator.service.j2: same hardening posture
(NoNewPrivileges, ProtectSystem=full, etc.), same restart policy, same
log file convention. The decnet init renderer picks it up automatically
via the decnet-*.service.j2 glob.
Also reconciles a naming inconsistency I shipped earlier: the heartbeat
name was 'intel' (the package) but the CLI command and unit are 'enrich'
(the action). Renamed the heartbeat to 'enrich' so the workers panel
displays the same string the operator types and the same string in the
systemd unit file. Convention across the project: heartbeat name =
registry key = unit basename = CLI command name.
Registers 'enrich' in worker_registry.KNOWN_WORKERS and in the
start-all preferred order. The decnet.target Wants= list also picks
up the new unit so 'systemctl start decnet.target' brings everything
up together.
Four concrete IntelProvider impls — three per-IP queries plus one bulk
feed:
* GreyNoiseProvider — community endpoint, optional API key for higher
rate limit. 404 = unknown (cache the absence so we don't re-query).
* AbuseIPDBProvider — score threshold mapping (>=75 malicious, >=25
suspicious, else benign). Self-disables with a clear error when no
API key is configured rather than burning quota.
* FeodoProvider — fetches the bulk botnet C2 IP feed once per refresh
window and answers every lookup from an in-memory set. Listed = C2.
* ThreatFoxProvider — POST /api/v1/ search_ioc query, optional Auth-Key
header. Match in data[] = malicious; no_result = absence-not-benign.
Every provider routes through decnet.net.http.stealth_client so the
egress UA never leaks 'DECNET'.
run_intel_loop fans out across configured providers per IP, writes the
aggregate row, and publishes attacker.intel.enriched. Mirrors the
correlation/reuse_worker.py wake-on pattern: subscribes to
attacker.observed and attacker.scored for sub-second latency, falls back
to a 60s poll when the bus is unavailable. Heartbeat + control-listener
wired so the workers panel sees it like every other supervised worker.
Aggregate verdict picks the strongest provider tier (malicious >
suspicious > benign > unknown). Provider-level errors land in
IntelResult.error and are logged without poisoning the row — partial
success is the expected case for free-tier providers under their daily
caps.
Concrete provider impls land in follow-up commits; the worker is fully
exercised here against fake providers so the framing is locked in.
IntelProvider is async-first (every concrete provider does HTTP), bounded
by a per-provider asyncio.Semaphore, and contractually never raises —
errors land in IntelResult.error so a single provider's outage doesn't
poison the worker pass for an entire IP.
Factory returns a list (not a singleton like geoip) because intel
enrichment fans out across all enabled providers per IP, with row-level
partial-success handling. Lazy imports keep the module dependency-free
when intel is disabled.
Concrete providers (greynoise/abuseipdb/feodo/threatfox) land in
follow-up commits — factory references them via lazy import so tests
covering the disabled and unknown-name paths pass on their own.