On the single self-hosted runner CI jobs run sequentially, so booting OpenZaak once
beats once-per-job. Replace the integration + notifications + compose-smoke jobs with
one verify-stack job that brings the full stack up once and runs, as clearly-named
steps: health (make verify-up, the DoD smoke) → ACL ↔ OpenZaak (verify-acl) →
OpenZaak → NRC delivery (verify-nrc) → teardown (always) + log dump on failure.
The check logic moves into stack-agnostic runners (run-acl-integration.sh,
run-notification-check.sh) that operate on whatever stack is already up, reaching
services by container IP. The local single-concern wrappers (make integration oz-only,
make verify-notifications oz+nrc) keep working by delegating to the same runners, so
nothing is duplicated. make ci now runs the consolidated 'verify' stage.
Verified locally: make verify boots the full stack once, ACL integration passes and
the NRC notification is delivered, then tears down.
Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.8 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
make verify-notifications brings the stack up, seeds a published BIG zaaktype, and
asserts a zaak-create notification is delivered to a webhook-sink abonnement. The
sink + driver run as containers inside the compose network and reach OpenZaak/NRC by
container IP (the runner can't reach published ports, and a single-label host isn't
URL-valid). The sink enforces a bearer token because NRC refuses an unauthenticated
callback. New 'notifications' Gitea Actions job runs it (Docker-only).
Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.8 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>