Grant d8aa9c22b9 Multi-currency Phases 3, 5, 6 — buy page, invoice rate recording, discount currency
Phase 5 (invoice records the rate):
- repo::create_invoice_with_currency takes the listed currency,
  listed value, exchange_rate_centibps, and exchange_rate_source as
  optional params; create_invoice (the legacy form) becomes a thin
  wrapper that passes None for all four. SAT-priced flows are
  unchanged.
- purchase::start now branches on product.price_currency: SAT keeps
  the existing path; USD/EUR calls rates::convert_to_sats and pins
  the listed price + rate to the local invoice row for audit. The
  buyer is still billed in BTC (BTCPay invoice is sat-denominated)
  but the audit trail records what they SAW vs what they were
  charged.
- Test paid_purchase_in_usd_records_listed_currency_and_rate seeds
  a manual rate pin ($50k/BTC), creates a USD-priced product
  ($49.00), runs through purchase, asserts the invoice row carries
  listed_currency='USD', listed_value=4900, rate_centibps=
  500_000_000, source='manual_pin', amount_sats=98_000.

Phase 3 (buy page renders fiat):
- Server-rendered initial price respects product.price_currency:
  USD products show "49.00 USD" (cents converted to display dollars)
  instead of sats. Tier-picker JS still formats per-tier prices in
  sats — that's a v0.3 polish when we plumb the rate into the JS
  render path. Most operators ship single-policy products at first,
  so the static initial render is the high-leverage piece.

Phase 6 (currency-aware discount codes):
- POST /v1/admin/discount-codes accepts optional `discount_currency`
  field ('SAT' default, 'USD', 'EUR'). Whitelisted in the handler.
- repo::create_discount_code is now a thin wrapper around
  create_discount_code_with_currency; the new helper persists
  discount_currency to the column added in 0010. Existing SAT-only
  codes keep working unchanged.

Test count: 37 (was 36; +1 paid_purchase_in_usd test).

Multi-currency design phases 1-6 all shipped (1: schema in :48; 2:
admin UI write in :48-:49; 3: buy page; 4: rate fetcher; 5: invoice
audit; 6: discount currency). Phase 7 (recurring subscriptions
re-quote) is v0.3 territory — needs the recurring-billing scaffolding
from Zaprite first.
2026-05-08 12:21:26 -05:00
2026-04-22 17:46:43 -05:00
2026-04-22 17:46:43 -05:00
2026-04-22 17:46:43 -05:00
2026-04-22 17:46:43 -05:00

Keysat

Keysat

Self-hosted, Bitcoin-paid software-licensing service for Start9.

About this README. Keysat is a from-scratch service authored for StartOS — there is no upstream project to differ from. The canonical implementation is this package and the Rust daemon it wraps (licensing-service/). Where this README would normally explain "differences from upstream," it instead documents the architecture directly. Anything that isn't documented here matches the source.

Table of Contents

What Keysat is

Keysat lets a software seller issue, validate, and revoke license keys for their own product, with payment in Bitcoin via BTCPay Server. The seller runs Keysat on their own Start9, declares one or more products, and shares a public purchase URL with their customers. Buyers pay in Bitcoin and receive a signed license key whose authenticity their software can verify offline against the seller's embedded public key. Keys can be capped to specific machines, time-limited, suspended, revoked, or marked as trial.

Discount and referral codes (paid and free-license) are first-class primitives. Free-license codes bypass BTCPay entirely and issue a key directly via a public redemption endpoint — useful for press passes, comp keys, beta access, or "first N users free" launch promos.

Image and Container Runtime

Built from the local Dockerfile via images.main.source.dockerBuild, with build context set to the parent directory so the Dockerfile can COPY from the sibling licensing-service/ source tree. The Rust binary is statically linked against musl (target *-unknown-linux-musl) so the runtime image is a scratch-based final stage with no shared-library dependencies. Architectures: x86_64 and aarch64.

start-cli s9pk pack ingests the resulting OCI image, converts it to a squashfs filesystem image, and embeds that in the .s9pk. At runtime StartOS extracts the squashfs and runs the service in its own container runtime.

Volume and Data Layout

Keysat declares a single persistent volume:

Volume Mount Contents
main /data SQLite database (keysat.db); contains the Ed25519 signing keypair, products, policies, licenses, machines, invoices, redemptions, audit log, and BTCPay credentials.

Loss of this volume invalidates every issued license, since the signing keypair is regenerated on first boot. Treat StartOS-managed backups as mandatory.

Installation and First-Run Flow

  1. Install Keysat via the marketplace (or sideload the .s9pk).
  2. Resolve the auto-created critical task "Connect BTCPay" by running the Connect BTCPay action. This opens a one-click authorize page on your local BTCPay; after approval, Keysat auto-detects your store and registers an inbound webhook. No API keys to copy.
  3. Run Check BTCPay connection to confirm — the install task clears automatically.
  4. Set your operator name (shown on the public homepage and in buyer-facing receipts).
  5. Create one or more products — each represents something you sell.
  6. Create at least one policy per product. The policy slugged default is consumed by the standard public purchase flow; other slugs are used for manual issuance. Policies define duration, grace period, seat cap, entitlements, trial flag, and price overrides.
  7. Optionally create discount / referral / free-license codes (see Create discount code action).
  8. Share the public service URL with buyers.

Configuration Management

All configuration is performed through StartOS actions; there is no on-disk config file the operator should edit. Environment variables passed to the daemon at startup (main.ts) are derived from the package-local store (operator name, admin API key) and from the declared BTCPay dependency hostname.

For advanced operators, the /v1/admin/* HTTP API exposes everything the actions do plus bulk-list operations not yet surfaced in the UI. Retrieve the admin API key via the Show admin credentials action.

Network Access and Interfaces

Keysat exposes one logical port (8080 HTTP) split across two service interfaces for clarity:

Interface Type Path prefix Purpose
api api / Public REST API for buyers (purchase, redeem) and licensed apps (validate, machine activation). Bake the URL into your software builds as the licensing endpoint.
webhook api /btcpay BTCPay webhook landing endpoint. Registered automatically during Connect BTCPay; not for human use.

StartOS terminates TLS at the platform edge. Inside the container every request arrives as plain HTTP. For browser-facing URLs (e.g., the public purchase page) hardcode https://.

Actions (StartOS UI)

Grouped as displayed in the dashboard.

General

  • Set operator name — your public-facing brand.

BTCPay

  • Connect BTCPay — one-click authorize against your BTCPay; auto-detects store and registers webhook.
  • Check BTCPay connection — confirm BTCPay state; clears the install task on success.

Credentials

  • Show admin credentials — admin API key for direct /v1/admin/* access.

Products + Policies

  • Create product — declare something to sell.
  • Create policy — license template for a product (duration, grace, seat cap, entitlements, trial flag, price override).

Discount codes

  • Create discount code — percent-off / fixed-sats-off / free-license.
  • List discount codes — usage stats.
  • Disable / enable discount code.

Licenses

  • Issue license manually — comp / press / grandfathered keys.
  • Search licenses — by email, Nostr npub, or BTCPay invoice id.
  • Suspend license — reversible lockout.
  • Unsuspend license.
  • Revoke license — terminal kill.

Machines

  • List machines — installs bound to a license.
  • Deactivate machine — free a seat.

Webhooks (outbound)

  • Register webhook endpoint — POST signed events to your URL.
  • List webhook endpoints.

Diagnostics

  • View audit log — admin mutation history, filterable.

Backups and Restore

Keysat opts into StartOS's default volume backup via setupBackups / Backups.ofVolumes('main'). The single main volume contains all state — signing key included — so a backup is sufficient to fully recover the service. On restore, the install-time Connect BTCPay task re-surfaces in case the BTCPay credentials in the restored DB are stale.

Treat backups as mandatory: losing the signing keypair invalidates every key Keysat ever issued, with no recovery path.

Health Checks

A single port-listening check on port 8080 (sdk.healthCheck.checkPortListening). StartOS reports the service as healthy once the daemon is binding the port. The daemon exposes GET /healthz for richer external monitoring.

Dependencies

Dependency Version range Required Purpose
btcpayserver >=1.11.0 Yes Required to receive Bitcoin payments and confirm settlement.

The dependency is kind: 'running', so Keysat will not start until BTCPay is running. The btcpayserver.startos hostname is provided to the container automatically.

Limitations and Differences

Known v0.1 limitations:

  • No buyer self-service portal. Buyers cannot log in to view their licenses, transfer to a new machine, or recover a lost key without contacting the operator. Use Search licenses to recover.
  • No recurring subscriptions. Time-limited licenses expire and require a manual repurchase. BTCPay supports recurring billing but Keysat does not yet model auto-renewal.
  • No license tier upgrade in place. A buyer who got Standard cannot be upgraded to Pro on the existing key — they need a new key.
  • No bulk / volume licensing. "Buy 10 keys at once with discount" is not built in.
  • No in-dashboard list views. Operators query large datasets via the admin API key rather than a paginated UI.
  • Webhook delivery retries are bounded. A subscriber down past the retry window will miss events. BTCPay invoice reconciliation runs as a background poll so dropped payment webhooks are recovered.
  • Hardware fingerprinting is client-supplied. Keysat does not derive fingerprints itself; the buyer-side SDK passes whatever the integrator chose.

What Is Unchanged from Upstream

Not applicable — Keysat is authored fresh for Start9 and has no upstream. The canonical implementation IS this package + the Rust daemon at licensing-service/.

Contributing

For commercial redistribution or resale rights, or to discuss white-label deployment, contact licensing@keysat.xyz. Source-available license terms are in the package's LICENSE file: you may run, audit, modify for self-hosting; you may not redistribute, resell, or publicly host for others.

YAML Quick Reference

Structured summary for AI consumers and automated package introspection.

service:
  id: keysat
  title: Keysat
  category: bitcoin
  license: source-available (LicenseRef-Proprietary)
  marketingUrl: https://keysat.xyz
image:
  source: dockerBuild
  baseImage: scratch (musl-static Rust binary)
  arches: [x86_64, aarch64]
volumes:
  - id: main
    mountpoint: /data
    contents: SQLite DB + Ed25519 signing keypair
network:
  interfaces:
    - id: api
      type: api
      port: 8080
      protocol: http
      pathPrefix: /
      audience: public
    - id: webhook
      type: api
      port: 8080
      protocol: http
      pathPrefix: /btcpay
      audience: btcpay
dependencies:
  btcpayserver:
    required: true
    versionRange: ">=1.11.0"
    kind: running
healthChecks:
  - id: api
    method: portListening
    port: 8080
backups:
  mode: full-volume
  volumes: [main]
firstRun:
  tasks:
    - id: btcpay-initial-setup
      severity: critical
      runs: configureBtcpay
features:
  paymentRail: btcpay-server
  signing: ed25519
  offlineVerification: true
  multiSeat: true
  trialFlag: true
  expiry: true
  gracePeriod: true
  entitlements: true
  discountCodes: [percent, fixed_sats, free_license]
  outboundWebhooks: true
  auditLog: true
  selfLicensingTier: stub-v0.1
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