6d224861 came from a --no-checkout worktree whose empty index made the
commit drop every file except two. This restores 05b50d2b's full tree and
correctly adds stacks/stem95su/gdrive-sync.tf + the service-catalog stem95su
entry. Forward-only (parent=6d224861, no force-push); [ci skip] since the
live infra was never applied from the broken commit.
Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.8 <noreply@anthropic.com>
CronJob stem95su-gdrive-sync (*/10) mounts the content PVC RW and
rclone-syncs the read-only Drive folder "claude" (stem claude/files) onto
it (rclone/rclone:1.74.3, scope=drive.readonly, empty-source guard +
--max-delete 25). ESO ExternalSecret stem95su-rclone <- Vault
secret/stem95su. Requires the GCP OAuth app published to Production or the
refresh token expires ~weekly.
Lands the gdrive-sync stack on master (it had landed on a feature branch
by accident on the shared devvm checkout).
Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.8 <noreply@anthropic.com>
Every `tg plan/apply/destroy/refresh` now runs
`scripts/check-ingress-auth-comments.py` against the current stack
before invoking terragrunt. The check fails closed if any
`auth = "app"` or `auth = "none"` line in the stack's .tf files lacks
an immediately-preceding `# auth = "<tier>": ...` comment documenting
what gates the app (for "app") or why the endpoint is intentionally
public (for "none").
Why tg-level (not git pre-commit): tg is the universal entry point
for all infra changes. CI runs it, headless agents run it, humans
run it. A pre-commit hook only catches the human path. Wiring the
check into tg means the anti-exposure guard fires regardless of who
or what is invoking terragrunt.
Stack-scoped: each stack documents itself the next time it's edited.
The 30+ existing `auth = "none"` stacks that predate this guard are
not blocked from operating today; they'll need the comment added the
next time someone runs `tg plan` on them — at which point the gate
forces a conscious "yes, this is intentional" moment before any
state change can land.
Skipped on: init, fmt, validate, output, etc. — anything that doesn't
read or write infra state.