Final cut of the multi-merchant-profile work. Adds the Merchant Profiles
admin UI section (list/create/edit/delete profiles + per-profile Connect
BTCPay / Connect Zaprite), bumps the version, and writes the comprehensive
release notes flagging the one-way migration and the master-operator
post-migration manual step (update the Zaprite webhook URL to the new
path-keyed form, or click Disconnect + Reconnect in the new UI to have
Keysat re-register at the right URL automatically).
web/index.html
New sidebar nav entry + ROUTE_META + routes['merchant-profiles']:
- Lists every profile with: default badge, support email, brand
color preview, post-purchase redirect URL summary, attached
payment-providers table (kind / label / served rails / disconnect),
and Connect BTCPay / Connect Zaprite buttons for whichever kinds
aren't already attached.
- Set-default button on non-default profiles.
- Delete button on non-default profiles (the backend refuses if any
product or active subscription is still attached).
- Create modal: name, support URL, support email, post-purchase
redirect URL (with {invoice_id} substitution), brand color picker.
- Edit modal: same fields, populated from the profile row.
- Connect BTCPay opens the OAuth authorize URL in a new tab with the
merchant_profile_id baked into the CSRF state token (so the callback
knows which profile to attach the new provider row to).
- Connect Zaprite shows a small modal for the API key (+ optional
base_url for sandbox orgs); on success surfaces the new
provider-keyed webhook URL the operator pastes into Zaprite's
dashboard.
What this UI does NOT cover (deferred follow-ups, called out in the
release notes):
- Buy-page rail picker (defaults to first available rail today).
- Product-edit-page merchant-profile picker (new products always
attach to the default profile until the picker ships).
- Per-profile SMTP override form (the schema fields are in place,
consumed by the keysat-smtp-emails plan when it lands).
- Rail-preference editing UI (only matters when 2 providers on the
same profile both serve the same rail — settable today via
`PUT /v1/admin/merchant-profiles/:id/rail-preferences/:rail`).
startos/versions/v0.2.0.ts
Bumps to 0.2.0:52 with a comprehensive release note describing the
one-way migration, the post-migration manual Zaprite-webhook-URL step
for the master operator (you), the new tier-cap (unlimited_merchant_
profiles entitlement), and the four UI follow-ups deferred to later
releases.
Build: cargo check passes. Two warnings remaining — both expected:
- recover.rs unused-import (pre-existing, unrelated)
- SETTING_ACTIVE_PROVIDER inside the deprecated shim's own pre-
migration fallback branch
The shipped feature set:
- Migrations 0020 + 0021 + 0022 (one-way data port + invoice→provider
link + BTCPay-authorize-state profile column).
- Merchant profile + payment provider data model + repo helpers.
- Rail enum + served_rails() trait method + build_provider factory.
- AppState resolution layer (per-product, per-rail provider lookup
with explicit-preference → unique-candidate → deterministic-earliest-
connected fallback).
- Every backend call site (purchase, subscriptions, reconcile,
upgrade, tipping, capture, auto-charge, boot loader) ported.
- BTCPay + Zaprite connect/disconnect/status rewritten for the new
model (per-profile attachment + path-keyed webhook URLs).
- Webhook router with path-keyed deliveries + legacy back-compat.
- Thank-you page provider-kind copy reads the invoice's recorded
provider.
- Merchant profile CRUD + rail preference CRUD admin endpoints.
- Tier-cap wiring (enforce_merchant_profile_cap).
- Admin UI Merchant Profiles section (this commit).
- Comprehensive :52 release notes.
Master Keysat self-license note: the new `unlimited_merchant_profiles`
entitlement needs to be added to the Pro and Patron policies on the
master keysat.xyz admin UI for Pro/Patron customers to be able to
create multiple profiles. Pure data action, no code change.
Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.7 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
Keysat
Keysat is a Bitcoin-native, self-hosted licensing service for software creators, designed to run as a Start9 0.4.0.x service alongside BTCPay Server (or Zaprite for Bitcoin + cards). One instance can sell, issue, validate, and revoke licenses for any number of software products you own.
The repository directory is still called
licensing-service/on disk for continuity with earlier revisions. The crate, the binary, the StartOS package id, and all user-visible strings use Keysat.
Every developer who uses this runs their own instance on their own hardware. There is no central authority, no shared database, and no dependency on anyone else's servers. Your keys, your products, your customers, your rules.
What it does
- Exposes a REST API for selling and managing software licenses paid for in Bitcoin via BTCPay Server.
- Issues Ed25519-signed license keys that can be verified offline by any client with your server's public key — so downstream software doesn't break if your licensing server is briefly unreachable.
- Supports multiple products per instance, each with independent pricing and license pools.
- Supports closed-source, open-source-for-convenience, and open-core distribution models. The service doesn't care how you distribute source; it only validates keys against products.
- Optional per-license machine fingerprint binding with trust-on-first-use.
- Admin-gated endpoints for product management, manual license issuance (comps/press/testing), and revocation.
Architecture in two minutes
┌──────────────┐ ┌──────────────────────┐ ┌──────────────┐
│ Buyer's │──────▶│ licensing-service │──────▶│ BTCPay Server│
│ browser │ │ (this program) │ │ (Start9) │
└──────────────┘ └──────────────────────┘ └──────────────┘
▲ │ ▲ │
│ license key │ │ webhook │
│ ▼ │ │
│ ┌──────────────┐ │
└─────────────────│ SQLite │◀──────────────────┘
poll/status │ licensing.db
└──────────────┘
Downstream software (e.g. another Start9 package you sell):
on startup → POST /v1/validate { key, product_slug, fingerprint }
→ caches result, re-checks on reasonable cadence
- Buyer
POST /v1/purchase { product: "my-app" }→ we create a BTCPay invoice, return its checkout URL. - Buyer pays via BTCPay. BTCPay fires a signed webhook at
POST /v1/btcpay/webhook→ we mark the invoice settled and issue a license row. - Buyer polls
GET /v1/purchase/:invoice_id→ once settled, response contains the signedlicense_keystring. - Buyer installs the software. On startup the software calls
POST /v1/validateto check revocation and bind itself to the installation.
Why Ed25519-signed keys
Each license key is a compact, cryptographically signed envelope:
LIC1-<74-byte payload, base32>-<64-byte signature, base32>
The payload contains the product id, license id, issue time, an optional fingerprint hash, and a version byte. The server's private key signs it; anyone with the public key can verify it.
The practical benefit: downstream software can verify a key's signature offline, using a public key bundled at compile time. It only needs to reach your licensing server to check revocation, and it can cache that check. If your licensing server has an outage, existing installations keep working. If someone tries to forge a key, the signature fails instantly without a database lookup.
See src/crypto/mod.rs for the exact byte layout.
Project layout
licensing-service/
├── Cargo.toml
├── LICENSE # source-available; no redistribution
├── README.md
├── .env.example # required env vars
├── migrations/
│ └── 0001_initial.sql # SQLite schema
├── src/
│ ├── main.rs # entry point: wires everything
│ ├── config.rs # env-driven config
│ ├── error.rs # unified error → HTTP mapping
│ ├── models.rs # shared domain types
│ ├── crypto/
│ │ ├── mod.rs # license key format + sign/verify
│ │ └── keys.rs # server keypair lifecycle
│ ├── db/
│ │ ├── mod.rs # pool + migrations
│ │ └── repo.rs # all SQL queries
│ ├── btcpay/
│ │ ├── client.rs # Greenfield API client
│ │ └── webhook.rs # HMAC verification + event parsing
│ └── api/
│ ├── mod.rs # router + AppState
│ ├── products.rs # public product endpoints
│ ├── purchase.rs # buy + poll
│ ├── validate.rs # the hot path for downstream software
│ ├── webhook.rs # BTCPay landing
│ └── admin.rs # operator-only actions
└── docs/
├── API.md # full endpoint reference
├── INTEGRATION.md # for developers embedding a client
└── ARCHITECTURE.md # deeper design notes
Running locally
Prerequisites: Rust 1.75+, a BTCPay Server instance you can point at (local or hosted).
cp .env.example .env
# edit .env — generate admin key with: openssl rand -hex 32
# fill in BTCPay URL, API key, store id, webhook secret
cargo run --release
On first boot the server generates a fresh Ed25519 keypair and stores it in the SQLite database. Get the public key anytime from GET /v1/pubkey (or from the logs on first boot).
Creating your first product
curl -X POST http://localhost:8080/v1/admin/products \
-H "Authorization: Bearer $LICENSING_ADMIN_API_KEY" \
-H "Content-Type: application/json" \
-d '{
"slug": "my-app",
"name": "My App",
"description": "A cool Start9 service.",
"price_sats": 50000
}'
Walking through a purchase
# 1. Buyer starts a purchase
curl -X POST http://localhost:8080/v1/purchase \
-H "Content-Type: application/json" \
-d '{"product": "my-app"}'
# → { "invoice_id": "...", "checkout_url": "https://btcpay.../i/...", ... }
# 2. Buyer opens checkout_url, pays
# 3. Buyer polls
curl http://localhost:8080/v1/purchase/<invoice_id>
# → { "status": "settled", "license_key": "LIC1-...", ... }
# 4. Downstream software validates the key
curl -X POST http://localhost:8080/v1/validate \
-H "Content-Type: application/json" \
-d '{"key": "LIC1-...", "product_slug": "my-app", "fingerprint": "host-abc123"}'
# → { "ok": true, "license_id": "...", "product_id": "..." }
Deploying on Start9
This repository ships the service only. To package as an .s9pk for the 0.4.0.x platform you'll need a separate wrapper repository following docs.start9.com/packaging/0.4.0.x. The service is designed to slot in cleanly:
- Declares a dependency on BTCPay Server in the manifest. StartOS will make BTCPay reachable at a
.startoshostname and supply the env vars from the wrapper's action handlers. - Persists to
/data, so everything (SQLite DB including the signing key) is covered by one-click encrypted backups. - Binds to
0.0.0.0:8080and expects StartOS to handle Tor/LAN/clearnet exposure. - Graceful shutdown on SIGTERM, as StartOS expects.
- Environment-driven config, no config files needed at runtime.
When you're ready to write the manifest, the env vars you need to wire are listed in .env.example. The main gotcha is the BTCPay webhook secret: you configure it on the BTCPay side and it must match BTCPAY_WEBHOOK_SECRET exactly — we verify HMAC-SHA256 in constant time and reject any mismatch.
Developer integration
If you're a developer shipping software that should validate against a licensing-service instance, see docs/INTEGRATION.md. It covers:
- Bundling the server's public key in your client.
- Offline signature verification + online revocation check.
- Graceful handling of server outages (don't brick your users).
- Recommended caching and rate-limiting patterns.
Source-available licensing
This project is source-available, not open source. You may read, audit, self-host, and modify for your own use, but may not redistribute, resell, or publicly host for others. See LICENSE for the full terms.
Commercial redistribution / resale rights: contact licensing@keysat.xyz.
Status
v0.1 — minimal working implementation. Feature direction after this is expected to cover: SDK crates for Rust and TypeScript, s9pk wrapper repository, richer admin UI, invoice reconciliation job for dropped webhooks, per-product webhook endpoints for the operator.