The independent review reproduced a real hole: the production first-bind path
never pinned repository/org, so the drift checks it feeds were skipped.
Root cause
----------
gitea_whoami, gitea_get_runtime_context, gitea_resolve_task_capability and
gitea_activate_profile all seeded the session context without repository or
org. First-bind-wins then made the mutation gate's later seed a no-op, and
assess_session_context only compares repository/org when the bound fields are
non-null. Result, reproduced in production order with the real REMOTES:
after whoami: repository=None org=None
same-host repo=Other-Tools -> NOT BLOCKED
same-host org=Other-Org -> NOT BLOCKED
cross-host -> blocked (this part always worked)
Binding REMOTES defaults would not fix it: REMOTES['prgs'].repo is 'Timesheet'
(a default *target*, not an authorization scope, see #530), so pinning it fails
closed on every legitimate Gitea-Tools mutation. There was no trusted source
for repository scope, so this adds one.
Design
------
- New optional profile field `allowed_repositories`: canonical owner/repository
slugs. An authorization boundary, never the binding itself. Config-only —
no env var can widen or forge it.
- The session repository is derived from the verified, workspace-aligned git
remote, never from caller-supplied org/repo, and validated against that
allowlist. The session binds immutably to exactly one canonical slug; org is
derived from it. A profile authorizing several repositories still binds to
the single verified one.
- Every first-bind entry point now pins the same complete context. Activation
rejects an unauthorized/unverifiable workspace. Mutations fail closed when
repository/org is unverified, and a tool-level org/repo override that
disagrees with the binding is rejected before the write.
- A mutation request can no longer establish, complete, or replace the binding
(it previously seeded from `org or REMOTES[...]`, i.e. caller-controlled).
- Enforcement is opt-in per profile: a profile without the field keeps prior
behaviour, so existing static-profile namespaces stay functional.
First-bind-wins, immutability, the RLock, profile isolation, host/identity
validation and the private pytest-only reset are unchanged.
gitea_auth.get_profile() built an explicit whitelist dict and silently dropped
`allowed_repositories`; the new integration tests caught that the scope was
never enforced through the real path.
Tests
-----
New tests/test_issue_714_production_first_bind.py drives the real entry points
in production order rather than constructing _SessionContext directly. Covers
complete first bind via each entry point, same-host repo/org drift, Timesheet
and other-repo/other-org rejection, unverified and unauthorized workspaces,
caller values unable to establish the binding, concurrent init selecting one
repository, and the PR #715 author path staying functional. Mutation-verified:
disabling trusted derivation, override validation, the scope check, or the
get_profile passthrough each fails these tests (9/8/4/5 failures).
No security assertion was weakened, removed, skipped, or rewritten.
Focused: 26 passed. Issue #714 total: 46 passed. Prior failing modules: 240
passed. Config/profile/remote modules: 130 passed. Full suite: 2739 passed,
6 skipped, 1 pre-existing warning, 161 subtests in 25.80s.
Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.8 (1M context) <[email protected]>
Introduce a dedicated reconciler role with gitea_reconcile_already_landed_pr,
which closes open PRs only after live fetch and ancestor proof against a fresh
target branch. Document the gitea-reconciler namespace and extend task routing.
PR closure had no first-class capability: agents could close PRs through
gitea_edit_pr(state=closed) with no close-specific capability proof, and
gitea_resolve_task_capability(close_pr) failed as unknown, leaving the
broad edit path as an untracked close fallback.
Add close_pr to the resolver TASK_MAP (gitea.pr.close, author-side) and
gate gitea_edit_pr(state=closed) on the same operation: without it the
close fails closed before any auth or API call, with reasons and a
structured permission_report; with it the close proceeds and is audited
as a distinct close_pr action carrying the required capability. Reject
invalid state values outright so case variants cannot bypass the gate.
Generalize the profile gate helper (_profile_operation_gate) and document
the PR comment / PR edit / PR close capability split.
Co-Authored-By: Claude Fable 5 <[email protected]>
Record the #139 accepted decision as a deployment doc: two static
per-role MCP namespaces (gitea-author, gitea-reviewer), one credential
per process, with dynamic profile switching and dispatcher routing
explicitly rejected for now. Covers rationale (audit clarity, credential
concentration, two-party review boundary, fail-closed behavior),
reference-only client setup via GITEA_MCP_CONFIG/GITEA_MCP_PROFILE,
the 'Auth unsupported' client-badge caveat, and reconnect/reload
requirements after profile/config/code changes. Cross-linked from the
execution-profiles model doc and the workflow runbooks; guarded by
docs-content tests.
Closes#143
Co-Authored-By: Claude Fable 5 <[email protected]>
- Add aliases 'issue.comment' and 'issue_comment' to GITEA_OPERATION_ALIASES so short names normalize to gitea.issue.comment
- Grant 'issue.comment' (and short) in v2 example profiles for example-author and example-reviewer
- Grant in gitea-mcp.example.json mdcps-reviewer
- Update docs example profiles
- Add test coverage for new aliases and normalization
This enables gitea_create_issue_comment and list for profiles that include it, while preserving fail-closed for others and separation of duties (issue.comment does not imply pr.review etc).
Closes#137
Add gitea_list_issue_comments and gitea_create_issue_comment so
discussion/design workflows can read and post issue comments through
the MCP layer instead of direct API scripts.
- List requires gitea.read; create requires gitea.issue.comment —
gated separately from the gitea.pr.* review/merge family, fail closed.
- Issue comments never touch PR review endpoints.
- LLM-safe output: comment id/author/timestamps/body only; web links
appear solely under the GITEA_MCP_REVEAL_ENDPOINTS admin opt-in.
- Create operations are audit-logged (create_issue_comment) and errors
are redacted before being raised.
- Tests cover list/create success, permission blocks (including PR
review permissions not granting issue comments), forbidden-overrides,
empty body, missing issue with redacted error, endpoint separation,
and reveal opt-in.
- Document issue comments versus PR reviews in
docs/gitea-execution-profiles.md.
Closes#126
Co-Authored-By: Claude Fable 5 <[email protected]>
Promote the #103 minimal alias map to the documented public table
GITEA_OPERATION_ALIASES and add the #106 enforcement layer:
- normalize_operation(op, service): canonical namespaced names; legacy
spellings accepted only via the explicit table; unknown, ambiguous,
and cross-service names fail closed.
- check_operation(op, allowed, forbidden, service): normalizes BOTH the
requested operation and the profile lists before any membership
check; forbidden always overrides allowed; unnormalizable allowed
entries grant nothing and unnormalizable forbidden entries deny the
request, so normalization can never silently widen permissions;
empty/missing allowed list denies everything.
- gitea_check_pr_eligibility now routes its capability check through
check_operation, fixing the mismatch where canonical namespaced
profile ops (gitea.pr.merge) never matched the raw action (merge)
and namespaced forbidden entries were never enforced.
- Document the normalization table and enforcement rules in
docs/gitea-execution-profiles.md, replacing the stale 'enforcement
out of scope' caveat.
- tests/test_op_normalization.py: full #106 matrix (27 tests) —
qualified/legacy allowed and forbidden, unknown, ambiguous, service
mismatch, forbidden-overrides-allowed, empty/missing allowed,
duplicates after normalization, no permission widening, and
eligibility integration proving normalization happens before
enforcement. Existing v1/env unqualified behaviour stays compatible.
Closes#106
Co-Authored-By: Claude Fable 5 <[email protected]>