tailscale/wgengine/netstack/netstack_test.go

1015 lines
29 KiB
Go
Raw Normal View History

// Copyright (c) Tailscale Inc & AUTHORS
// SPDX-License-Identifier: BSD-3-Clause
package netstack
import (
wgengine/netstack: add a per-client limit for in-flight TCP forwards This is a fun one. Right now, when a client is connecting through a subnet router, here's roughly what happens: 1. The client initiates a connection to an IP address behind a subnet router, and sends a TCP SYN 2. The subnet router gets the SYN packet from netstack, and after running through acceptTCP, starts DialContext-ing the destination IP, without accepting the connection¹ 3. The client retransmits the SYN packet a few times while the dial is in progress, until either... 4. The subnet router successfully establishes a connection to the destination IP and sends the SYN-ACK back to the client, or... 5. The subnet router times out and sends a RST to the client. 6. If the connection was successful, the client ACKs the SYN-ACK it received, and traffic starts flowing As a result, the notification code in forwardTCP never notices when a new connection attempt is aborted, and it will wait until either the connection is established, or until the OS-level connection timeout is reached and it aborts. To mitigate this, add a per-client limit on how many in-flight TCP forwarding connections can be in-progress; after this, clients will see a similar behaviour to the global limit, where new connection attempts are aborted instead of waiting. This prevents a single misbehaving client from blocking all other clients of a subnet router by ensuring that it doesn't starve the global limiter. Also, bump the global limit again to a higher value. ¹ We can't accept the connection before establishing a connection to the remote server since otherwise we'd be opening the connection and then immediately closing it, which breaks a bunch of stuff; see #5503 for more details. Updates tailscale/corp#12184 Signed-off-by: Andrew Dunham <andrew@du.nham.ca> Change-Id: I76e7008ddd497303d75d473f534e32309c8a5144
2024-02-26 20:06:47 +00:00
"context"
"fmt"
wgengine/netstack: add a per-client limit for in-flight TCP forwards This is a fun one. Right now, when a client is connecting through a subnet router, here's roughly what happens: 1. The client initiates a connection to an IP address behind a subnet router, and sends a TCP SYN 2. The subnet router gets the SYN packet from netstack, and after running through acceptTCP, starts DialContext-ing the destination IP, without accepting the connection¹ 3. The client retransmits the SYN packet a few times while the dial is in progress, until either... 4. The subnet router successfully establishes a connection to the destination IP and sends the SYN-ACK back to the client, or... 5. The subnet router times out and sends a RST to the client. 6. If the connection was successful, the client ACKs the SYN-ACK it received, and traffic starts flowing As a result, the notification code in forwardTCP never notices when a new connection attempt is aborted, and it will wait until either the connection is established, or until the OS-level connection timeout is reached and it aborts. To mitigate this, add a per-client limit on how many in-flight TCP forwarding connections can be in-progress; after this, clients will see a similar behaviour to the global limit, where new connection attempts are aborted instead of waiting. This prevents a single misbehaving client from blocking all other clients of a subnet router by ensuring that it doesn't starve the global limiter. Also, bump the global limit again to a higher value. ¹ We can't accept the connection before establishing a connection to the remote server since otherwise we'd be opening the connection and then immediately closing it, which breaks a bunch of stuff; see #5503 for more details. Updates tailscale/corp#12184 Signed-off-by: Andrew Dunham <andrew@du.nham.ca> Change-Id: I76e7008ddd497303d75d473f534e32309c8a5144
2024-02-26 20:06:47 +00:00
"maps"
"net"
"net/netip"
"runtime"
"testing"
wgengine/netstack: add a per-client limit for in-flight TCP forwards This is a fun one. Right now, when a client is connecting through a subnet router, here's roughly what happens: 1. The client initiates a connection to an IP address behind a subnet router, and sends a TCP SYN 2. The subnet router gets the SYN packet from netstack, and after running through acceptTCP, starts DialContext-ing the destination IP, without accepting the connection¹ 3. The client retransmits the SYN packet a few times while the dial is in progress, until either... 4. The subnet router successfully establishes a connection to the destination IP and sends the SYN-ACK back to the client, or... 5. The subnet router times out and sends a RST to the client. 6. If the connection was successful, the client ACKs the SYN-ACK it received, and traffic starts flowing As a result, the notification code in forwardTCP never notices when a new connection attempt is aborted, and it will wait until either the connection is established, or until the OS-level connection timeout is reached and it aborts. To mitigate this, add a per-client limit on how many in-flight TCP forwarding connections can be in-progress; after this, clients will see a similar behaviour to the global limit, where new connection attempts are aborted instead of waiting. This prevents a single misbehaving client from blocking all other clients of a subnet router by ensuring that it doesn't starve the global limiter. Also, bump the global limit again to a higher value. ¹ We can't accept the connection before establishing a connection to the remote server since otherwise we'd be opening the connection and then immediately closing it, which breaks a bunch of stuff; see #5503 for more details. Updates tailscale/corp#12184 Signed-off-by: Andrew Dunham <andrew@du.nham.ca> Change-Id: I76e7008ddd497303d75d473f534e32309c8a5144
2024-02-26 20:06:47 +00:00
"time"
"gvisor.dev/gvisor/pkg/buffer"
wgengine/netstack: add a per-client limit for in-flight TCP forwards This is a fun one. Right now, when a client is connecting through a subnet router, here's roughly what happens: 1. The client initiates a connection to an IP address behind a subnet router, and sends a TCP SYN 2. The subnet router gets the SYN packet from netstack, and after running through acceptTCP, starts DialContext-ing the destination IP, without accepting the connection¹ 3. The client retransmits the SYN packet a few times while the dial is in progress, until either... 4. The subnet router successfully establishes a connection to the destination IP and sends the SYN-ACK back to the client, or... 5. The subnet router times out and sends a RST to the client. 6. If the connection was successful, the client ACKs the SYN-ACK it received, and traffic starts flowing As a result, the notification code in forwardTCP never notices when a new connection attempt is aborted, and it will wait until either the connection is established, or until the OS-level connection timeout is reached and it aborts. To mitigate this, add a per-client limit on how many in-flight TCP forwarding connections can be in-progress; after this, clients will see a similar behaviour to the global limit, where new connection attempts are aborted instead of waiting. This prevents a single misbehaving client from blocking all other clients of a subnet router by ensuring that it doesn't starve the global limiter. Also, bump the global limit again to a higher value. ¹ We can't accept the connection before establishing a connection to the remote server since otherwise we'd be opening the connection and then immediately closing it, which breaks a bunch of stuff; see #5503 for more details. Updates tailscale/corp#12184 Signed-off-by: Andrew Dunham <andrew@du.nham.ca> Change-Id: I76e7008ddd497303d75d473f534e32309c8a5144
2024-02-26 20:06:47 +00:00
"gvisor.dev/gvisor/pkg/tcpip"
"gvisor.dev/gvisor/pkg/tcpip/header"
"gvisor.dev/gvisor/pkg/tcpip/stack"
wgengine/netstack: add a per-client limit for in-flight TCP forwards This is a fun one. Right now, when a client is connecting through a subnet router, here's roughly what happens: 1. The client initiates a connection to an IP address behind a subnet router, and sends a TCP SYN 2. The subnet router gets the SYN packet from netstack, and after running through acceptTCP, starts DialContext-ing the destination IP, without accepting the connection¹ 3. The client retransmits the SYN packet a few times while the dial is in progress, until either... 4. The subnet router successfully establishes a connection to the destination IP and sends the SYN-ACK back to the client, or... 5. The subnet router times out and sends a RST to the client. 6. If the connection was successful, the client ACKs the SYN-ACK it received, and traffic starts flowing As a result, the notification code in forwardTCP never notices when a new connection attempt is aborted, and it will wait until either the connection is established, or until the OS-level connection timeout is reached and it aborts. To mitigate this, add a per-client limit on how many in-flight TCP forwarding connections can be in-progress; after this, clients will see a similar behaviour to the global limit, where new connection attempts are aborted instead of waiting. This prevents a single misbehaving client from blocking all other clients of a subnet router by ensuring that it doesn't starve the global limiter. Also, bump the global limit again to a higher value. ¹ We can't accept the connection before establishing a connection to the remote server since otherwise we'd be opening the connection and then immediately closing it, which breaks a bunch of stuff; see #5503 for more details. Updates tailscale/corp#12184 Signed-off-by: Andrew Dunham <andrew@du.nham.ca> Change-Id: I76e7008ddd497303d75d473f534e32309c8a5144
2024-02-26 20:06:47 +00:00
"tailscale.com/envknob"
"tailscale.com/ipn"
"tailscale.com/ipn/ipnlocal"
"tailscale.com/ipn/store/mem"
wgengine/netstack: add a per-client limit for in-flight TCP forwards This is a fun one. Right now, when a client is connecting through a subnet router, here's roughly what happens: 1. The client initiates a connection to an IP address behind a subnet router, and sends a TCP SYN 2. The subnet router gets the SYN packet from netstack, and after running through acceptTCP, starts DialContext-ing the destination IP, without accepting the connection¹ 3. The client retransmits the SYN packet a few times while the dial is in progress, until either... 4. The subnet router successfully establishes a connection to the destination IP and sends the SYN-ACK back to the client, or... 5. The subnet router times out and sends a RST to the client. 6. If the connection was successful, the client ACKs the SYN-ACK it received, and traffic starts flowing As a result, the notification code in forwardTCP never notices when a new connection attempt is aborted, and it will wait until either the connection is established, or until the OS-level connection timeout is reached and it aborts. To mitigate this, add a per-client limit on how many in-flight TCP forwarding connections can be in-progress; after this, clients will see a similar behaviour to the global limit, where new connection attempts are aborted instead of waiting. This prevents a single misbehaving client from blocking all other clients of a subnet router by ensuring that it doesn't starve the global limiter. Also, bump the global limit again to a higher value. ¹ We can't accept the connection before establishing a connection to the remote server since otherwise we'd be opening the connection and then immediately closing it, which breaks a bunch of stuff; see #5503 for more details. Updates tailscale/corp#12184 Signed-off-by: Andrew Dunham <andrew@du.nham.ca> Change-Id: I76e7008ddd497303d75d473f534e32309c8a5144
2024-02-26 20:06:47 +00:00
"tailscale.com/metrics"
"tailscale.com/net/packet"
"tailscale.com/net/tsaddr"
"tailscale.com/net/tsdial"
"tailscale.com/net/tstun"
"tailscale.com/tsd"
"tailscale.com/tstest"
"tailscale.com/types/ipproto"
"tailscale.com/types/logid"
"tailscale.com/wgengine"
"tailscale.com/wgengine/filter"
)
// TestInjectInboundLeak tests that injectInbound doesn't leak memory.
// See https://github.com/tailscale/tailscale/issues/3762
func TestInjectInboundLeak(t *testing.T) {
tunDev := tstun.NewFake()
dialer := new(tsdial.Dialer)
logf := func(format string, args ...any) {
if !t.Failed() {
t.Logf(format, args...)
}
}
sys := new(tsd.System)
eng, err := wgengine.NewUserspaceEngine(logf, wgengine.Config{
ipn/ipnlocal, all: plumb health trackers in tests I saw some panics in CI, like: 2024-05-08T04:30:25.9553518Z ## WARNING: (non-fatal) nil health.Tracker (being strict in CI): 2024-05-08T04:30:25.9554043Z goroutine 801 [running]: 2024-05-08T04:30:25.9554489Z tailscale.com/health.(*Tracker).nil(0x0) 2024-05-08T04:30:25.9555086Z tailscale.com/health/health.go:185 +0x70 2024-05-08T04:30:25.9555688Z tailscale.com/health.(*Tracker).SetUDP4Unbound(0x0, 0x0) 2024-05-08T04:30:25.9556373Z tailscale.com/health/health.go:532 +0x2f 2024-05-08T04:30:25.9557296Z tailscale.com/wgengine/magicsock.(*Conn).bindSocket(0xc0003b4808, 0xc0003b4878, {0x1fbca53, 0x4}, 0x0) 2024-05-08T04:30:25.9558301Z tailscale.com/wgengine/magicsock/magicsock.go:2481 +0x12c5 2024-05-08T04:30:25.9559026Z tailscale.com/wgengine/magicsock.(*Conn).rebind(0xc0003b4808, 0x0) 2024-05-08T04:30:25.9559874Z tailscale.com/wgengine/magicsock/magicsock.go:2510 +0x16f 2024-05-08T04:30:25.9561038Z tailscale.com/wgengine/magicsock.NewConn({0xc000063c80, 0x0, 0xc000197930, 0xc000197950, 0xc000197960, {0x0, 0x0}, 0xc000197970, 0xc000198ee0, 0x0, ...}) 2024-05-08T04:30:25.9562402Z tailscale.com/wgengine/magicsock/magicsock.go:476 +0xd5f 2024-05-08T04:30:25.9563779Z tailscale.com/wgengine.NewUserspaceEngine(0xc000063c80, {{0x22c8750, 0xc0001976b0}, 0x0, {0x22c3210, 0xc000063c80}, {0x22c31d8, 0x2d3c900}, 0x0, 0x0, ...}) 2024-05-08T04:30:25.9564982Z tailscale.com/wgengine/userspace.go:389 +0x159d 2024-05-08T04:30:25.9565529Z tailscale.com/ipn/ipnlocal.newTestBackend(0xc000358b60) 2024-05-08T04:30:25.9566086Z tailscale.com/ipn/ipnlocal/serve_test.go:675 +0x2a5 2024-05-08T04:30:25.9566612Z ta Updates #11874 Change-Id: I3432ed52d670743e532be4642f38dbd6e3763b1b Signed-off-by: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@tailscale.com>
2024-05-08 04:37:33 +00:00
Tun: tunDev,
Dialer: dialer,
SetSubsystem: sys.Set,
HealthTracker: sys.HealthTracker(),
})
if err != nil {
t.Fatal(err)
}
defer eng.Close()
sys.Set(eng)
sys.Set(new(mem.Store))
tunWrap := sys.Tun.Get()
lb, err := ipnlocal.NewLocalBackend(logf, logid.PublicID{}, sys, 0)
if err != nil {
t.Fatal(err)
}
ns, err := Create(logf, tunWrap, eng, sys.MagicSock.Get(), dialer, sys.DNSManager.Get(), sys.ProxyMapper(), nil)
if err != nil {
t.Fatal(err)
}
defer ns.Close()
ns.ProcessLocalIPs = true
if err := ns.Start(lb); err != nil {
t.Fatalf("Start: %v", err)
}
ns.atomicIsLocalIPFunc.Store(func(netip.Addr) bool { return true })
pkt := &packet.Parsed{}
const N = 10_000
ms0 := getMemStats()
for range N {
outcome, _ := ns.injectInbound(pkt, tunWrap, nil)
if outcome != filter.DropSilently {
t.Fatalf("got outcome %v; want DropSilently", outcome)
}
}
ms1 := getMemStats()
if grew := int64(ms1.HeapObjects) - int64(ms0.HeapObjects); grew >= N {
t.Fatalf("grew by %v (which is too much and >= the %v packets we sent)", grew, N)
}
}
func getMemStats() (ms runtime.MemStats) {
runtime.GC()
runtime.ReadMemStats(&ms)
return
}
func makeNetstack(tb testing.TB, config func(*Impl)) *Impl {
tunDev := tstun.NewFake()
sys := &tsd.System{}
sys.Set(new(mem.Store))
dialer := new(tsdial.Dialer)
logf := tstest.WhileTestRunningLogger(tb)
eng, err := wgengine.NewUserspaceEngine(logf, wgengine.Config{
ipn/ipnlocal, all: plumb health trackers in tests I saw some panics in CI, like: 2024-05-08T04:30:25.9553518Z ## WARNING: (non-fatal) nil health.Tracker (being strict in CI): 2024-05-08T04:30:25.9554043Z goroutine 801 [running]: 2024-05-08T04:30:25.9554489Z tailscale.com/health.(*Tracker).nil(0x0) 2024-05-08T04:30:25.9555086Z tailscale.com/health/health.go:185 +0x70 2024-05-08T04:30:25.9555688Z tailscale.com/health.(*Tracker).SetUDP4Unbound(0x0, 0x0) 2024-05-08T04:30:25.9556373Z tailscale.com/health/health.go:532 +0x2f 2024-05-08T04:30:25.9557296Z tailscale.com/wgengine/magicsock.(*Conn).bindSocket(0xc0003b4808, 0xc0003b4878, {0x1fbca53, 0x4}, 0x0) 2024-05-08T04:30:25.9558301Z tailscale.com/wgengine/magicsock/magicsock.go:2481 +0x12c5 2024-05-08T04:30:25.9559026Z tailscale.com/wgengine/magicsock.(*Conn).rebind(0xc0003b4808, 0x0) 2024-05-08T04:30:25.9559874Z tailscale.com/wgengine/magicsock/magicsock.go:2510 +0x16f 2024-05-08T04:30:25.9561038Z tailscale.com/wgengine/magicsock.NewConn({0xc000063c80, 0x0, 0xc000197930, 0xc000197950, 0xc000197960, {0x0, 0x0}, 0xc000197970, 0xc000198ee0, 0x0, ...}) 2024-05-08T04:30:25.9562402Z tailscale.com/wgengine/magicsock/magicsock.go:476 +0xd5f 2024-05-08T04:30:25.9563779Z tailscale.com/wgengine.NewUserspaceEngine(0xc000063c80, {{0x22c8750, 0xc0001976b0}, 0x0, {0x22c3210, 0xc000063c80}, {0x22c31d8, 0x2d3c900}, 0x0, 0x0, ...}) 2024-05-08T04:30:25.9564982Z tailscale.com/wgengine/userspace.go:389 +0x159d 2024-05-08T04:30:25.9565529Z tailscale.com/ipn/ipnlocal.newTestBackend(0xc000358b60) 2024-05-08T04:30:25.9566086Z tailscale.com/ipn/ipnlocal/serve_test.go:675 +0x2a5 2024-05-08T04:30:25.9566612Z ta Updates #11874 Change-Id: I3432ed52d670743e532be4642f38dbd6e3763b1b Signed-off-by: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@tailscale.com>
2024-05-08 04:37:33 +00:00
Tun: tunDev,
Dialer: dialer,
SetSubsystem: sys.Set,
HealthTracker: sys.HealthTracker(),
})
if err != nil {
tb.Fatal(err)
}
tb.Cleanup(func() { eng.Close() })
sys.Set(eng)
ns, err := Create(logf, sys.Tun.Get(), eng, sys.MagicSock.Get(), dialer, sys.DNSManager.Get(), sys.ProxyMapper(), nil)
if err != nil {
tb.Fatal(err)
}
tb.Cleanup(func() { ns.Close() })
lb, err := ipnlocal.NewLocalBackend(logf, logid.PublicID{}, sys, 0)
if err != nil {
tb.Fatalf("NewLocalBackend: %v", err)
}
ns.atomicIsLocalIPFunc.Store(func(netip.Addr) bool { return true })
if config != nil {
config(ns)
}
if err := ns.Start(lb); err != nil {
tb.Fatalf("Start: %v", err)
}
return ns
}
func TestShouldHandlePing(t *testing.T) {
srcIP := netip.AddrFrom4([4]byte{1, 2, 3, 4})
t.Run("ICMP4", func(t *testing.T) {
dst := netip.MustParseAddr("5.6.7.8")
icmph := packet.ICMP4Header{
IP4Header: packet.IP4Header{
IPProto: ipproto.ICMPv4,
Src: srcIP,
Dst: dst,
},
Type: packet.ICMP4EchoRequest,
Code: packet.ICMP4NoCode,
}
_, payload := packet.ICMPEchoPayload(nil)
icmpPing := packet.Generate(icmph, payload)
pkt := &packet.Parsed{}
pkt.Decode(icmpPing)
impl := makeNetstack(t, func(impl *Impl) {
impl.ProcessSubnets = true
})
pingDst, ok := impl.shouldHandlePing(pkt)
if !ok {
t.Errorf("expected shouldHandlePing==true")
}
if pingDst != dst {
t.Errorf("got dst %s; want %s", pingDst, dst)
}
})
t.Run("ICMP6-no-via", func(t *testing.T) {
dst := netip.MustParseAddr("2a09:8280:1::4169")
icmph := packet.ICMP6Header{
IP6Header: packet.IP6Header{
IPProto: ipproto.ICMPv6,
Src: srcIP,
Dst: dst,
},
Type: packet.ICMP6EchoRequest,
Code: packet.ICMP6NoCode,
}
_, payload := packet.ICMPEchoPayload(nil)
icmpPing := packet.Generate(icmph, payload)
pkt := &packet.Parsed{}
pkt.Decode(icmpPing)
impl := makeNetstack(t, func(impl *Impl) {
impl.ProcessSubnets = true
})
pingDst, ok := impl.shouldHandlePing(pkt)
// Expect that we handle this since it's going out onto the
// network.
if !ok {
t.Errorf("expected shouldHandlePing==true")
}
if pingDst != dst {
t.Errorf("got dst %s; want %s", pingDst, dst)
}
})
t.Run("ICMP6-tailscale-addr", func(t *testing.T) {
dst := netip.MustParseAddr("fd7a:115c:a1e0:ab12::1")
icmph := packet.ICMP6Header{
IP6Header: packet.IP6Header{
IPProto: ipproto.ICMPv6,
Src: srcIP,
Dst: dst,
},
Type: packet.ICMP6EchoRequest,
Code: packet.ICMP6NoCode,
}
_, payload := packet.ICMPEchoPayload(nil)
icmpPing := packet.Generate(icmph, payload)
pkt := &packet.Parsed{}
pkt.Decode(icmpPing)
impl := makeNetstack(t, func(impl *Impl) {
impl.ProcessSubnets = true
})
_, ok := impl.shouldHandlePing(pkt)
// We don't handle this because it's a Tailscale IP and not 4via6
if ok {
t.Errorf("expected shouldHandlePing==false")
}
})
// Handle pings for 4via6 addresses regardless of ProcessSubnets
for _, subnets := range []bool{true, false} {
t.Run("ICMP6-4via6-ProcessSubnets-"+fmt.Sprint(subnets), func(t *testing.T) {
// The 4via6 route 10.1.1.0/24 siteid 7, and then the IP
// 10.1.1.9 within that route.
dst := netip.MustParseAddr("fd7a:115c:a1e0:b1a:0:7:a01:109")
expectedPingDst := netip.MustParseAddr("10.1.1.9")
icmph := packet.ICMP6Header{
IP6Header: packet.IP6Header{
IPProto: ipproto.ICMPv6,
Src: srcIP,
Dst: dst,
},
Type: packet.ICMP6EchoRequest,
Code: packet.ICMP6NoCode,
}
_, payload := packet.ICMPEchoPayload(nil)
icmpPing := packet.Generate(icmph, payload)
pkt := &packet.Parsed{}
pkt.Decode(icmpPing)
impl := makeNetstack(t, func(impl *Impl) {
impl.ProcessSubnets = subnets
})
pingDst, ok := impl.shouldHandlePing(pkt)
// Handled due to being 4via6
if !ok {
t.Errorf("expected shouldHandlePing==true")
} else if pingDst != expectedPingDst {
t.Errorf("got dst %s; want %s", pingDst, expectedPingDst)
}
})
}
}
// looksLikeATailscaleSelfAddress reports whether addr looks like
// a Tailscale self address, for tests.
func looksLikeATailscaleSelfAddress(addr netip.Addr) bool {
return addr.Is4() && tsaddr.IsTailscaleIP(addr) ||
addr.Is6() && tsaddr.Tailscale4To6Range().Contains(addr)
}
func TestShouldProcessInbound(t *testing.T) {
testCases := []struct {
name string
pkt *packet.Parsed
afterStart func(*Impl) // optional; after Impl.Start is called
beforeStart func(*Impl) // optional; before Impl.Start is called
want bool
runOnGOOS string
}{
{
name: "ipv6-via",
pkt: &packet.Parsed{
IPVersion: 6,
IPProto: ipproto.TCP,
Src: netip.MustParseAddrPort("100.101.102.103:1234"),
// $ tailscale debug via 7 10.1.1.9/24
// fd7a:115c:a1e0:b1a:0:7:a01:109/120
Dst: netip.MustParseAddrPort("[fd7a:115c:a1e0:b1a:0:7:a01:109]:5678"),
TCPFlags: packet.TCPSyn,
},
afterStart: func(i *Impl) {
prefs := ipn.NewPrefs()
prefs.AdvertiseRoutes = []netip.Prefix{
// $ tailscale debug via 7 10.1.1.0/24
// fd7a:115c:a1e0:b1a:0:7:a01:100/120
netip.MustParsePrefix("fd7a:115c:a1e0:b1a:0:7:a01:100/120"),
}
i.lb.Start(ipn.Options{
UpdatePrefs: prefs,
})
i.atomicIsLocalIPFunc.Store(looksLikeATailscaleSelfAddress)
},
beforeStart: func(i *Impl) {
// This should be handled even if we're
// otherwise not processing local IPs or
// subnets.
i.ProcessLocalIPs = false
i.ProcessSubnets = false
},
want: true,
},
{
name: "ipv6-via-not-advertised",
pkt: &packet.Parsed{
IPVersion: 6,
IPProto: ipproto.TCP,
Src: netip.MustParseAddrPort("100.101.102.103:1234"),
// $ tailscale debug via 7 10.1.1.9/24
// fd7a:115c:a1e0:b1a:0:7:a01:109/120
Dst: netip.MustParseAddrPort("[fd7a:115c:a1e0:b1a:0:7:a01:109]:5678"),
TCPFlags: packet.TCPSyn,
},
afterStart: func(i *Impl) {
prefs := ipn.NewPrefs()
prefs.AdvertiseRoutes = []netip.Prefix{
// tailscale debug via 7 10.1.2.0/24
// fd7a:115c:a1e0:b1a:0:7:a01:200/120
netip.MustParsePrefix("fd7a:115c:a1e0:b1a:0:7:a01:200/120"),
}
i.lb.Start(ipn.Options{
UpdatePrefs: prefs,
})
},
want: false,
},
{
name: "tailscale-ssh-enabled",
pkt: &packet.Parsed{
IPVersion: 4,
IPProto: ipproto.TCP,
Src: netip.MustParseAddrPort("100.101.102.103:1234"),
Dst: netip.MustParseAddrPort("100.101.102.104:22"),
TCPFlags: packet.TCPSyn,
},
afterStart: func(i *Impl) {
prefs := ipn.NewPrefs()
prefs.RunSSH = true
i.lb.Start(ipn.Options{
UpdatePrefs: prefs,
})
i.atomicIsLocalIPFunc.Store(func(addr netip.Addr) bool {
return addr.String() == "100.101.102.104" // Dst, above
})
},
want: true,
runOnGOOS: "linux",
},
{
name: "tailscale-ssh-disabled",
pkt: &packet.Parsed{
IPVersion: 4,
IPProto: ipproto.TCP,
Src: netip.MustParseAddrPort("100.101.102.103:1234"),
Dst: netip.MustParseAddrPort("100.101.102.104:22"),
TCPFlags: packet.TCPSyn,
},
afterStart: func(i *Impl) {
prefs := ipn.NewPrefs()
prefs.RunSSH = false // default, but to be explicit
i.lb.Start(ipn.Options{
UpdatePrefs: prefs,
})
i.atomicIsLocalIPFunc.Store(func(addr netip.Addr) bool {
return addr.String() == "100.101.102.104" // Dst, above
})
},
want: false,
},
{
name: "process-local-ips",
pkt: &packet.Parsed{
IPVersion: 4,
IPProto: ipproto.TCP,
Src: netip.MustParseAddrPort("100.101.102.103:1234"),
Dst: netip.MustParseAddrPort("100.101.102.104:4567"),
TCPFlags: packet.TCPSyn,
},
afterStart: func(i *Impl) {
i.ProcessLocalIPs = true
i.atomicIsLocalIPFunc.Store(func(addr netip.Addr) bool {
return addr.String() == "100.101.102.104" // Dst, above
})
},
want: true,
},
{
name: "process-subnets",
pkt: &packet.Parsed{
IPVersion: 4,
IPProto: ipproto.TCP,
Src: netip.MustParseAddrPort("100.101.102.103:1234"),
Dst: netip.MustParseAddrPort("10.1.2.3:4567"),
TCPFlags: packet.TCPSyn,
},
beforeStart: func(i *Impl) {
i.ProcessSubnets = true
},
afterStart: func(i *Impl) {
// For testing purposes, assume all Tailscale
// IPs are local; the Dst above is something
// not in that range.
i.atomicIsLocalIPFunc.Store(looksLikeATailscaleSelfAddress)
},
want: true,
},
{
name: "peerapi-port-subnet-router", // see #6235
pkt: &packet.Parsed{
IPVersion: 4,
IPProto: ipproto.TCP,
Src: netip.MustParseAddrPort("100.101.102.103:1234"),
Dst: netip.MustParseAddrPort("10.0.0.23:5555"),
TCPFlags: packet.TCPSyn,
},
beforeStart: func(i *Impl) {
// As if we were running on Linux where netstack isn't used.
i.ProcessSubnets = false
i.atomicIsLocalIPFunc.Store(func(netip.Addr) bool { return false })
},
afterStart: func(i *Impl) {
prefs := ipn.NewPrefs()
prefs.AdvertiseRoutes = []netip.Prefix{
netip.MustParsePrefix("10.0.0.1/24"),
}
i.lb.Start(ipn.Options{
UpdatePrefs: prefs,
})
// Set the PeerAPI port to the Dst port above.
i.peerapiPort4Atomic.Store(5555)
i.peerapiPort6Atomic.Store(5555)
},
want: false,
},
// TODO(andrew): test PeerAPI
// TODO(andrew): test TCP packets without the SYN flag set
}
for _, tc := range testCases {
t.Run(tc.name, func(t *testing.T) {
if tc.runOnGOOS != "" && runtime.GOOS != tc.runOnGOOS {
t.Skipf("skipping on GOOS=%v", runtime.GOOS)
}
impl := makeNetstack(t, tc.beforeStart)
if tc.afterStart != nil {
tc.afterStart(impl)
}
got := impl.shouldProcessInbound(tc.pkt, nil)
if got != tc.want {
t.Errorf("got shouldProcessInbound()=%v; want %v", got, tc.want)
} else {
t.Logf("OK: shouldProcessInbound() = %v", got)
}
})
}
}
wgengine/netstack: add a per-client limit for in-flight TCP forwards This is a fun one. Right now, when a client is connecting through a subnet router, here's roughly what happens: 1. The client initiates a connection to an IP address behind a subnet router, and sends a TCP SYN 2. The subnet router gets the SYN packet from netstack, and after running through acceptTCP, starts DialContext-ing the destination IP, without accepting the connection¹ 3. The client retransmits the SYN packet a few times while the dial is in progress, until either... 4. The subnet router successfully establishes a connection to the destination IP and sends the SYN-ACK back to the client, or... 5. The subnet router times out and sends a RST to the client. 6. If the connection was successful, the client ACKs the SYN-ACK it received, and traffic starts flowing As a result, the notification code in forwardTCP never notices when a new connection attempt is aborted, and it will wait until either the connection is established, or until the OS-level connection timeout is reached and it aborts. To mitigate this, add a per-client limit on how many in-flight TCP forwarding connections can be in-progress; after this, clients will see a similar behaviour to the global limit, where new connection attempts are aborted instead of waiting. This prevents a single misbehaving client from blocking all other clients of a subnet router by ensuring that it doesn't starve the global limiter. Also, bump the global limit again to a higher value. ¹ We can't accept the connection before establishing a connection to the remote server since otherwise we'd be opening the connection and then immediately closing it, which breaks a bunch of stuff; see #5503 for more details. Updates tailscale/corp#12184 Signed-off-by: Andrew Dunham <andrew@du.nham.ca> Change-Id: I76e7008ddd497303d75d473f534e32309c8a5144
2024-02-26 20:06:47 +00:00
func tcp4syn(tb testing.TB, src, dst netip.Addr, sport, dport uint16) []byte {
ip := header.IPv4(make([]byte, header.IPv4MinimumSize+header.TCPMinimumSize))
ip.Encode(&header.IPv4Fields{
Protocol: uint8(header.TCPProtocolNumber),
TotalLength: header.IPv4MinimumSize + header.TCPMinimumSize,
TTL: 64,
SrcAddr: tcpip.AddrFrom4Slice(src.AsSlice()),
DstAddr: tcpip.AddrFrom4Slice(dst.AsSlice()),
})
ip.SetChecksum(^ip.CalculateChecksum())
if !ip.IsChecksumValid() {
tb.Fatal("test broken; packet has incorrect IP checksum")
}
tcp := header.TCP(ip[header.IPv4MinimumSize:])
tcp.Encode(&header.TCPFields{
SrcPort: sport,
DstPort: dport,
SeqNum: 0,
DataOffset: header.TCPMinimumSize,
Flags: header.TCPFlagSyn,
WindowSize: 65535,
Checksum: 0,
})
xsum := header.PseudoHeaderChecksum(
header.TCPProtocolNumber,
tcpip.AddrFrom4Slice(src.AsSlice()),
tcpip.AddrFrom4Slice(dst.AsSlice()),
uint16(header.TCPMinimumSize),
)
tcp.SetChecksum(^tcp.CalculateChecksum(xsum))
if !tcp.IsChecksumValid(tcpip.AddrFrom4Slice(src.AsSlice()), tcpip.AddrFrom4Slice(dst.AsSlice()), 0, 0) {
tb.Fatal("test broken; packet has incorrect TCP checksum")
}
return ip
}
// makeHangDialer returns a dialer that notifies the returned channel when a
// connection is dialed and then hangs until the test finishes.
func makeHangDialer(tb testing.TB) (func(context.Context, string, string) (net.Conn, error), chan struct{}) {
done := make(chan struct{})
tb.Cleanup(func() {
close(done)
})
gotConn := make(chan struct{}, 1)
fn := func(ctx context.Context, network, address string) (net.Conn, error) {
// Signal that we have a new connection
tb.Logf("hangDialer: called with network=%q address=%q", network, address)
select {
case gotConn <- struct{}{}:
default:
}
// Hang until the test is done.
select {
case <-ctx.Done():
tb.Logf("context done")
case <-done:
tb.Logf("function completed")
}
return nil, fmt.Errorf("canceled")
}
return fn, gotConn
}
// TestTCPForwardLimits verifies that the limits on the TCP forwarder work in a
// success case (i.e. when we don't hit the limit).
func TestTCPForwardLimits(t *testing.T) {
envknob.Setenv("TS_DEBUG_NETSTACK", "true")
impl := makeNetstack(t, func(impl *Impl) {
impl.ProcessSubnets = true
})
dialFn, gotConn := makeHangDialer(t)
impl.forwardDialFunc = dialFn
prefs := ipn.NewPrefs()
prefs.AdvertiseRoutes = []netip.Prefix{
// This is the TEST-NET-1 IP block for use in documentation,
// and should never actually be routable.
netip.MustParsePrefix("192.0.2.0/24"),
}
impl.lb.Start(ipn.Options{
UpdatePrefs: prefs,
wgengine/netstack: add a per-client limit for in-flight TCP forwards This is a fun one. Right now, when a client is connecting through a subnet router, here's roughly what happens: 1. The client initiates a connection to an IP address behind a subnet router, and sends a TCP SYN 2. The subnet router gets the SYN packet from netstack, and after running through acceptTCP, starts DialContext-ing the destination IP, without accepting the connection¹ 3. The client retransmits the SYN packet a few times while the dial is in progress, until either... 4. The subnet router successfully establishes a connection to the destination IP and sends the SYN-ACK back to the client, or... 5. The subnet router times out and sends a RST to the client. 6. If the connection was successful, the client ACKs the SYN-ACK it received, and traffic starts flowing As a result, the notification code in forwardTCP never notices when a new connection attempt is aborted, and it will wait until either the connection is established, or until the OS-level connection timeout is reached and it aborts. To mitigate this, add a per-client limit on how many in-flight TCP forwarding connections can be in-progress; after this, clients will see a similar behaviour to the global limit, where new connection attempts are aborted instead of waiting. This prevents a single misbehaving client from blocking all other clients of a subnet router by ensuring that it doesn't starve the global limiter. Also, bump the global limit again to a higher value. ¹ We can't accept the connection before establishing a connection to the remote server since otherwise we'd be opening the connection and then immediately closing it, which breaks a bunch of stuff; see #5503 for more details. Updates tailscale/corp#12184 Signed-off-by: Andrew Dunham <andrew@du.nham.ca> Change-Id: I76e7008ddd497303d75d473f534e32309c8a5144
2024-02-26 20:06:47 +00:00
})
impl.atomicIsLocalIPFunc.Store(looksLikeATailscaleSelfAddress)
// Inject an "outbound" packet that's going to an IP address that times
// out. We need to re-parse from a byte slice so that the internal
// buffer in the packet.Parsed type is filled out.
client := netip.MustParseAddr("100.101.102.103")
destAddr := netip.MustParseAddr("192.0.2.1")
pkt := tcp4syn(t, client, destAddr, 1234, 4567)
var parsed packet.Parsed
parsed.Decode(pkt)
// When injecting this packet, we want the outcome to be "drop
// silently", which indicates that netstack is processing the
// packet and not delivering it to the host system.
if resp, _ := impl.injectInbound(&parsed, impl.tundev, nil); resp != filter.DropSilently {
wgengine/netstack: add a per-client limit for in-flight TCP forwards This is a fun one. Right now, when a client is connecting through a subnet router, here's roughly what happens: 1. The client initiates a connection to an IP address behind a subnet router, and sends a TCP SYN 2. The subnet router gets the SYN packet from netstack, and after running through acceptTCP, starts DialContext-ing the destination IP, without accepting the connection¹ 3. The client retransmits the SYN packet a few times while the dial is in progress, until either... 4. The subnet router successfully establishes a connection to the destination IP and sends the SYN-ACK back to the client, or... 5. The subnet router times out and sends a RST to the client. 6. If the connection was successful, the client ACKs the SYN-ACK it received, and traffic starts flowing As a result, the notification code in forwardTCP never notices when a new connection attempt is aborted, and it will wait until either the connection is established, or until the OS-level connection timeout is reached and it aborts. To mitigate this, add a per-client limit on how many in-flight TCP forwarding connections can be in-progress; after this, clients will see a similar behaviour to the global limit, where new connection attempts are aborted instead of waiting. This prevents a single misbehaving client from blocking all other clients of a subnet router by ensuring that it doesn't starve the global limiter. Also, bump the global limit again to a higher value. ¹ We can't accept the connection before establishing a connection to the remote server since otherwise we'd be opening the connection and then immediately closing it, which breaks a bunch of stuff; see #5503 for more details. Updates tailscale/corp#12184 Signed-off-by: Andrew Dunham <andrew@du.nham.ca> Change-Id: I76e7008ddd497303d75d473f534e32309c8a5144
2024-02-26 20:06:47 +00:00
t.Errorf("got filter outcome %v, want filter.DropSilently", resp)
}
ctx, cancel := context.WithTimeout(context.Background(), 10*time.Second)
defer cancel()
// Wait until we have an in-flight outgoing connection.
select {
case <-ctx.Done():
t.Fatalf("timed out waiting for connection")
case <-gotConn:
t.Logf("got connection in progress")
}
// Inject another packet, which will be deduplicated and thus not
// increment our counter.
parsed.Decode(pkt)
if resp, _ := impl.injectInbound(&parsed, impl.tundev, nil); resp != filter.DropSilently {
t.Errorf("got filter outcome %v, want filter.DropSilently", resp)
}
wgengine/netstack: add a per-client limit for in-flight TCP forwards This is a fun one. Right now, when a client is connecting through a subnet router, here's roughly what happens: 1. The client initiates a connection to an IP address behind a subnet router, and sends a TCP SYN 2. The subnet router gets the SYN packet from netstack, and after running through acceptTCP, starts DialContext-ing the destination IP, without accepting the connection¹ 3. The client retransmits the SYN packet a few times while the dial is in progress, until either... 4. The subnet router successfully establishes a connection to the destination IP and sends the SYN-ACK back to the client, or... 5. The subnet router times out and sends a RST to the client. 6. If the connection was successful, the client ACKs the SYN-ACK it received, and traffic starts flowing As a result, the notification code in forwardTCP never notices when a new connection attempt is aborted, and it will wait until either the connection is established, or until the OS-level connection timeout is reached and it aborts. To mitigate this, add a per-client limit on how many in-flight TCP forwarding connections can be in-progress; after this, clients will see a similar behaviour to the global limit, where new connection attempts are aborted instead of waiting. This prevents a single misbehaving client from blocking all other clients of a subnet router by ensuring that it doesn't starve the global limiter. Also, bump the global limit again to a higher value. ¹ We can't accept the connection before establishing a connection to the remote server since otherwise we'd be opening the connection and then immediately closing it, which breaks a bunch of stuff; see #5503 for more details. Updates tailscale/corp#12184 Signed-off-by: Andrew Dunham <andrew@du.nham.ca> Change-Id: I76e7008ddd497303d75d473f534e32309c8a5144
2024-02-26 20:06:47 +00:00
// Verify that we now have a single in-flight address in our map.
impl.mu.Lock()
inFlight := maps.Clone(impl.connsInFlightByClient)
impl.mu.Unlock()
if got, ok := inFlight[client]; !ok || got != 1 {
t.Errorf("expected 1 in-flight connection for %v, got: %v", client, inFlight)
}
// Get the expvar statistics and verify that we're exporting the
// correct metric.
metrics := impl.ExpVar().(*metrics.Set)
const metricName = "gauge_tcp_forward_in_flight"
if v := metrics.Get(metricName).String(); v != "1" {
t.Errorf("got metric %q=%s, want 1", metricName, v)
}
}
// TestTCPForwardLimits_PerClient verifies that the per-client limit for TCP
// forwarding works.
func TestTCPForwardLimits_PerClient(t *testing.T) {
envknob.Setenv("TS_DEBUG_NETSTACK", "true")
// Set our test override limits during this test.
tstest.Replace(t, &maxInFlightConnectionAttemptsForTest, 2)
tstest.Replace(t, &maxInFlightConnectionAttemptsPerClientForTest, 1)
impl := makeNetstack(t, func(impl *Impl) {
impl.ProcessSubnets = true
})
dialFn, gotConn := makeHangDialer(t)
impl.forwardDialFunc = dialFn
prefs := ipn.NewPrefs()
prefs.AdvertiseRoutes = []netip.Prefix{
// This is the TEST-NET-1 IP block for use in documentation,
// and should never actually be routable.
netip.MustParsePrefix("192.0.2.0/24"),
}
impl.lb.Start(ipn.Options{
UpdatePrefs: prefs,
wgengine/netstack: add a per-client limit for in-flight TCP forwards This is a fun one. Right now, when a client is connecting through a subnet router, here's roughly what happens: 1. The client initiates a connection to an IP address behind a subnet router, and sends a TCP SYN 2. The subnet router gets the SYN packet from netstack, and after running through acceptTCP, starts DialContext-ing the destination IP, without accepting the connection¹ 3. The client retransmits the SYN packet a few times while the dial is in progress, until either... 4. The subnet router successfully establishes a connection to the destination IP and sends the SYN-ACK back to the client, or... 5. The subnet router times out and sends a RST to the client. 6. If the connection was successful, the client ACKs the SYN-ACK it received, and traffic starts flowing As a result, the notification code in forwardTCP never notices when a new connection attempt is aborted, and it will wait until either the connection is established, or until the OS-level connection timeout is reached and it aborts. To mitigate this, add a per-client limit on how many in-flight TCP forwarding connections can be in-progress; after this, clients will see a similar behaviour to the global limit, where new connection attempts are aborted instead of waiting. This prevents a single misbehaving client from blocking all other clients of a subnet router by ensuring that it doesn't starve the global limiter. Also, bump the global limit again to a higher value. ¹ We can't accept the connection before establishing a connection to the remote server since otherwise we'd be opening the connection and then immediately closing it, which breaks a bunch of stuff; see #5503 for more details. Updates tailscale/corp#12184 Signed-off-by: Andrew Dunham <andrew@du.nham.ca> Change-Id: I76e7008ddd497303d75d473f534e32309c8a5144
2024-02-26 20:06:47 +00:00
})
impl.atomicIsLocalIPFunc.Store(looksLikeATailscaleSelfAddress)
// Inject an "outbound" packet that's going to an IP address that times
// out. We need to re-parse from a byte slice so that the internal
// buffer in the packet.Parsed type is filled out.
client := netip.MustParseAddr("100.101.102.103")
destAddr := netip.MustParseAddr("192.0.2.1")
// Helpers
var port uint16 = 1234
wgengine/netstack: add a per-client limit for in-flight TCP forwards This is a fun one. Right now, when a client is connecting through a subnet router, here's roughly what happens: 1. The client initiates a connection to an IP address behind a subnet router, and sends a TCP SYN 2. The subnet router gets the SYN packet from netstack, and after running through acceptTCP, starts DialContext-ing the destination IP, without accepting the connection¹ 3. The client retransmits the SYN packet a few times while the dial is in progress, until either... 4. The subnet router successfully establishes a connection to the destination IP and sends the SYN-ACK back to the client, or... 5. The subnet router times out and sends a RST to the client. 6. If the connection was successful, the client ACKs the SYN-ACK it received, and traffic starts flowing As a result, the notification code in forwardTCP never notices when a new connection attempt is aborted, and it will wait until either the connection is established, or until the OS-level connection timeout is reached and it aborts. To mitigate this, add a per-client limit on how many in-flight TCP forwarding connections can be in-progress; after this, clients will see a similar behaviour to the global limit, where new connection attempts are aborted instead of waiting. This prevents a single misbehaving client from blocking all other clients of a subnet router by ensuring that it doesn't starve the global limiter. Also, bump the global limit again to a higher value. ¹ We can't accept the connection before establishing a connection to the remote server since otherwise we'd be opening the connection and then immediately closing it, which breaks a bunch of stuff; see #5503 for more details. Updates tailscale/corp#12184 Signed-off-by: Andrew Dunham <andrew@du.nham.ca> Change-Id: I76e7008ddd497303d75d473f534e32309c8a5144
2024-02-26 20:06:47 +00:00
mustInjectPacket := func() {
pkt := tcp4syn(t, client, destAddr, port, 4567)
port++ // to avoid deduplication based on endpoint
wgengine/netstack: add a per-client limit for in-flight TCP forwards This is a fun one. Right now, when a client is connecting through a subnet router, here's roughly what happens: 1. The client initiates a connection to an IP address behind a subnet router, and sends a TCP SYN 2. The subnet router gets the SYN packet from netstack, and after running through acceptTCP, starts DialContext-ing the destination IP, without accepting the connection¹ 3. The client retransmits the SYN packet a few times while the dial is in progress, until either... 4. The subnet router successfully establishes a connection to the destination IP and sends the SYN-ACK back to the client, or... 5. The subnet router times out and sends a RST to the client. 6. If the connection was successful, the client ACKs the SYN-ACK it received, and traffic starts flowing As a result, the notification code in forwardTCP never notices when a new connection attempt is aborted, and it will wait until either the connection is established, or until the OS-level connection timeout is reached and it aborts. To mitigate this, add a per-client limit on how many in-flight TCP forwarding connections can be in-progress; after this, clients will see a similar behaviour to the global limit, where new connection attempts are aborted instead of waiting. This prevents a single misbehaving client from blocking all other clients of a subnet router by ensuring that it doesn't starve the global limiter. Also, bump the global limit again to a higher value. ¹ We can't accept the connection before establishing a connection to the remote server since otherwise we'd be opening the connection and then immediately closing it, which breaks a bunch of stuff; see #5503 for more details. Updates tailscale/corp#12184 Signed-off-by: Andrew Dunham <andrew@du.nham.ca> Change-Id: I76e7008ddd497303d75d473f534e32309c8a5144
2024-02-26 20:06:47 +00:00
var parsed packet.Parsed
parsed.Decode(pkt)
// When injecting this packet, we want the outcome to be "drop
// silently", which indicates that netstack is processing the
// packet and not delivering it to the host system.
if resp, _ := impl.injectInbound(&parsed, impl.tundev, nil); resp != filter.DropSilently {
wgengine/netstack: add a per-client limit for in-flight TCP forwards This is a fun one. Right now, when a client is connecting through a subnet router, here's roughly what happens: 1. The client initiates a connection to an IP address behind a subnet router, and sends a TCP SYN 2. The subnet router gets the SYN packet from netstack, and after running through acceptTCP, starts DialContext-ing the destination IP, without accepting the connection¹ 3. The client retransmits the SYN packet a few times while the dial is in progress, until either... 4. The subnet router successfully establishes a connection to the destination IP and sends the SYN-ACK back to the client, or... 5. The subnet router times out and sends a RST to the client. 6. If the connection was successful, the client ACKs the SYN-ACK it received, and traffic starts flowing As a result, the notification code in forwardTCP never notices when a new connection attempt is aborted, and it will wait until either the connection is established, or until the OS-level connection timeout is reached and it aborts. To mitigate this, add a per-client limit on how many in-flight TCP forwarding connections can be in-progress; after this, clients will see a similar behaviour to the global limit, where new connection attempts are aborted instead of waiting. This prevents a single misbehaving client from blocking all other clients of a subnet router by ensuring that it doesn't starve the global limiter. Also, bump the global limit again to a higher value. ¹ We can't accept the connection before establishing a connection to the remote server since otherwise we'd be opening the connection and then immediately closing it, which breaks a bunch of stuff; see #5503 for more details. Updates tailscale/corp#12184 Signed-off-by: Andrew Dunham <andrew@du.nham.ca> Change-Id: I76e7008ddd497303d75d473f534e32309c8a5144
2024-02-26 20:06:47 +00:00
t.Fatalf("got filter outcome %v, want filter.DropSilently", resp)
}
}
ctx, cancel := context.WithTimeout(context.Background(), 10*time.Second)
defer cancel()
waitPacket := func() {
select {
case <-ctx.Done():
t.Fatalf("timed out waiting for connection")
case <-gotConn:
t.Logf("got connection in progress")
}
}
// Inject the packet to start the TCP forward and wait until we have an
// in-flight outgoing connection.
mustInjectPacket()
waitPacket()
// Verify that we now have a single in-flight address in our map.
impl.mu.Lock()
inFlight := maps.Clone(impl.connsInFlightByClient)
impl.mu.Unlock()
if got, ok := inFlight[client]; !ok || got != 1 {
t.Errorf("expected 1 in-flight connection for %v, got: %v", client, inFlight)
}
metrics := impl.ExpVar().(*metrics.Set)
// One client should have reached the limit at this point.
if v := metrics.Get("gauge_tcp_forward_in_flight_per_client_limit_reached").String(); v != "1" {
t.Errorf("got limit reached expvar metric=%s, want 1", v)
}
// Inject another packet, and verify that we've incremented our
// "dropped" metrics since this will have been dropped.
mustInjectPacket()
// expvar metric
const metricName = "counter_tcp_forward_max_in_flight_per_client_drop"
if v := metrics.Get(metricName).String(); v != "1" {
t.Errorf("got expvar metric %q=%s, want 1", metricName, v)
}
// client metric
if v := metricPerClientForwardLimit.Value(); v != 1 {
t.Errorf("got clientmetric limit metric=%d, want 1", v)
}
}
// TestHandleLocalPackets tests the handleLocalPackets function, ensuring that
// we are properly deciding to handle packets that are destined for "local"
// IPsaddresses that are either for this node, or that it is responsible for.
//
// See, e.g. #11304
func TestHandleLocalPackets(t *testing.T) {
var (
selfIP4 = netip.MustParseAddr("100.64.1.2")
selfIP6 = netip.MustParseAddr("fd7a:115c:a1e0::123")
)
impl := makeNetstack(t, func(impl *Impl) {
impl.ProcessSubnets = false
impl.ProcessLocalIPs = false
impl.atomicIsLocalIPFunc.Store(func(addr netip.Addr) bool {
return addr == selfIP4 || addr == selfIP6
})
})
prefs := ipn.NewPrefs()
prefs.AdvertiseRoutes = []netip.Prefix{
// $ tailscale debug via 7 10.1.1.0/24
// fd7a:115c:a1e0:b1a:0:7:a01:100/120
netip.MustParsePrefix("fd7a:115c:a1e0:b1a:0:7:a01:100/120"),
}
_, err := impl.lb.EditPrefs(&ipn.MaskedPrefs{
Prefs: *prefs,
AdvertiseRoutesSet: true,
})
if err != nil {
t.Fatalf("EditPrefs: %v", err)
}
t.Run("ShouldHandleServiceIP", func(t *testing.T) {
pkt := &packet.Parsed{
IPVersion: 4,
IPProto: ipproto.TCP,
Src: netip.MustParseAddrPort("127.0.0.1:9999"),
Dst: netip.MustParseAddrPort("100.100.100.100:53"),
TCPFlags: packet.TCPSyn,
}
resp, _ := impl.handleLocalPackets(pkt, impl.tundev, nil)
if resp != filter.DropSilently {
t.Errorf("got filter outcome %v, want filter.DropSilently", resp)
}
})
t.Run("ShouldHandle4via6", func(t *testing.T) {
pkt := &packet.Parsed{
IPVersion: 6,
IPProto: ipproto.TCP,
Src: netip.MustParseAddrPort("[::1]:1234"),
// This is an IP in the above 4via6 subnet that this node handles.
// $ tailscale debug via 7 10.1.1.9/24
// fd7a:115c:a1e0:b1a:0:7:a01:109/120
Dst: netip.MustParseAddrPort("[fd7a:115c:a1e0:b1a:0:7:a01:109]:5678"),
TCPFlags: packet.TCPSyn,
}
resp, _ := impl.handleLocalPackets(pkt, impl.tundev, nil)
// DropSilently is the outcome we expected, since we actually
// handled this packet by injecting it into netstack, which
// will handle creating the TCP forwarder. We drop it so we
// don't process the packet outside of netstack.
if resp != filter.DropSilently {
t.Errorf("got filter outcome %v, want filter.DropSilently", resp)
}
})
t.Run("OtherNonHandled", func(t *testing.T) {
pkt := &packet.Parsed{
IPVersion: 6,
IPProto: ipproto.TCP,
Src: netip.MustParseAddrPort("[::1]:1234"),
// This IP is *not* in the above 4via6 route
// $ tailscale debug via 99 10.1.1.9/24
// fd7a:115c:a1e0:b1a:0:63:a01:109/120
Dst: netip.MustParseAddrPort("[fd7a:115c:a1e0:b1a:0:63:a01:109]:5678"),
TCPFlags: packet.TCPSyn,
}
resp, _ := impl.handleLocalPackets(pkt, impl.tundev, nil)
// Accept means that handleLocalPackets does not handle this
// packet, we "accept" it to continue further processing,
// instead of dropping because it was already handled.
if resp != filter.Accept {
t.Errorf("got filter outcome %v, want filter.Accept", resp)
}
})
}
func TestShouldSendToHost(t *testing.T) {
var (
selfIP4 = netip.MustParseAddr("100.64.1.2")
selfIP6 = netip.MustParseAddr("fd7a:115c:a1e0::123")
)
makeTestNetstack := func(tb testing.TB) *Impl {
impl := makeNetstack(tb, func(impl *Impl) {
impl.ProcessSubnets = false
impl.ProcessLocalIPs = false
impl.atomicIsLocalIPFunc.Store(func(addr netip.Addr) bool {
return addr == selfIP4 || addr == selfIP6
})
})
prefs := ipn.NewPrefs()
prefs.AdvertiseRoutes = []netip.Prefix{
// $ tailscale debug via 7 10.1.1.0/24
// fd7a:115c:a1e0:b1a:0:7:a01:100/120
netip.MustParsePrefix("fd7a:115c:a1e0:b1a:0:7:a01:100/120"),
}
_, err := impl.lb.EditPrefs(&ipn.MaskedPrefs{
Prefs: *prefs,
AdvertiseRoutesSet: true,
})
if err != nil {
tb.Fatalf("EditPrefs: %v", err)
}
return impl
}
testCases := []struct {
name string
src, dst netip.AddrPort
want bool
}{
// Reply from service IP to localhost should be sent to host,
// not over WireGuard.
{
name: "from_service_ip_to_localhost",
src: netip.AddrPortFrom(serviceIP, 53),
dst: netip.MustParseAddrPort("127.0.0.1:9999"),
want: true,
},
{
name: "from_service_ip_to_localhost_v6",
src: netip.AddrPortFrom(serviceIPv6, 53),
dst: netip.MustParseAddrPort("[::1]:9999"),
want: true,
},
// A reply from the local IP to a remote host isn't sent to the
// host, but rather over WireGuard.
{
name: "local_ip_to_remote",
src: netip.AddrPortFrom(selfIP4, 12345),
dst: netip.MustParseAddrPort("100.64.99.88:7777"),
want: false,
},
{
name: "local_ip_to_remote_v6",
src: netip.AddrPortFrom(selfIP6, 12345),
dst: netip.MustParseAddrPort("[fd7a:115:a1e0::99]:7777"),
want: false,
},
// A reply from a 4via6 address to a remote host isn't sent to
// the local host, but rather over WireGuard. See:
// https://github.com/tailscale/tailscale/issues/12448
{
name: "4via6_to_remote",
// $ tailscale debug via 7 10.1.1.99/24
// fd7a:115c:a1e0:b1a:0:7:a01:163/120
src: netip.MustParseAddrPort("[fd7a:115c:a1e0:b1a:0:7:a01:163]:12345"),
dst: netip.MustParseAddrPort("[fd7a:115:a1e0::99]:7777"),
want: false,
},
// However, a reply from a 4via6 address to the local Tailscale
// IP for this host *is* sent to the local host. See:
// https://github.com/tailscale/tailscale/issues/11304
{
name: "4via6_to_local",
// $ tailscale debug via 7 10.1.1.99/24
// fd7a:115c:a1e0:b1a:0:7:a01:163/120
src: netip.MustParseAddrPort("[fd7a:115c:a1e0:b1a:0:7:a01:163]:12345"),
dst: netip.AddrPortFrom(selfIP6, 7777),
want: true,
},
// Traffic from a 4via6 address that we're not handling to
// either the local Tailscale IP or a remote host is sent
// outbound.
//
// In most cases, we won't see this type of traffic in the
// shouldSendToHost function, but let's confirm.
{
name: "other_4via6_to_local",
// $ tailscale debug via 4444 10.1.1.88/24
// fd7a:115c:a1e0:b1a:0:7:a01:163/120
src: netip.MustParseAddrPort("[fd7a:115c:a1e0:b1a:0:115c:a01:158]:12345"),
dst: netip.AddrPortFrom(selfIP6, 7777),
want: false,
},
{
name: "other_4via6_to_remote",
// $ tailscale debug via 4444 10.1.1.88/24
// fd7a:115c:a1e0:b1a:0:7:a01:163/120
src: netip.MustParseAddrPort("[fd7a:115c:a1e0:b1a:0:115c:a01:158]:12345"),
dst: netip.MustParseAddrPort("[fd7a:115:a1e0::99]:7777"),
want: false,
},
}
for _, tt := range testCases {
t.Run(tt.name, func(t *testing.T) {
var pkt *stack.PacketBuffer
if tt.src.Addr().Is4() {
pkt = makeUDP4PacketBuffer(tt.src, tt.dst)
} else {
pkt = makeUDP6PacketBuffer(tt.src, tt.dst)
}
ns := makeTestNetstack(t)
if got := ns.shouldSendToHost(pkt); got != tt.want {
t.Errorf("shouldSendToHost returned %v, want %v", got, tt.want)
}
})
}
}
func makeUDP4PacketBuffer(src, dst netip.AddrPort) *stack.PacketBuffer {
if !src.Addr().Is4() || !dst.Addr().Is4() {
panic("src and dst must be IPv4")
}
data := []byte("hello world\n")
packetLen := header.IPv4MinimumSize + header.UDPMinimumSize
pkt := stack.NewPacketBuffer(stack.PacketBufferOptions{
ReserveHeaderBytes: packetLen,
Payload: buffer.MakeWithData(data),
})
// Initialize the UDP header.
udp := header.UDP(pkt.TransportHeader().Push(header.UDPMinimumSize))
pkt.TransportProtocolNumber = header.UDPProtocolNumber
length := uint16(pkt.Size())
udp.Encode(&header.UDPFields{
SrcPort: src.Port(),
DstPort: dst.Port(),
Length: length,
})
// Add IP header
ipHdr := header.IPv4(pkt.NetworkHeader().Push(header.IPv4MinimumSize))
pkt.NetworkProtocolNumber = header.IPv4ProtocolNumber
ipHdr.Encode(&header.IPv4Fields{
TotalLength: uint16(packetLen),
Protocol: uint8(header.UDPProtocolNumber),
SrcAddr: tcpip.AddrFrom4(src.Addr().As4()),
DstAddr: tcpip.AddrFrom4(dst.Addr().As4()),
Checksum: 0,
})
return pkt
}
func makeUDP6PacketBuffer(src, dst netip.AddrPort) *stack.PacketBuffer {
if !src.Addr().Is6() || !dst.Addr().Is6() {
panic("src and dst must be IPv6")
}
data := []byte("hello world\n")
packetLen := header.IPv6MinimumSize + header.UDPMinimumSize
pkt := stack.NewPacketBuffer(stack.PacketBufferOptions{
ReserveHeaderBytes: packetLen,
Payload: buffer.MakeWithData(data),
})
srcAddr := tcpip.AddrFrom16(src.Addr().As16())
dstAddr := tcpip.AddrFrom16(dst.Addr().As16())
// Add IP header
ipHdr := header.IPv6(pkt.NetworkHeader().Push(header.IPv6MinimumSize))
pkt.NetworkProtocolNumber = header.IPv6ProtocolNumber
ipHdr.Encode(&header.IPv6Fields{
SrcAddr: srcAddr,
DstAddr: dstAddr,
PayloadLength: uint16(header.UDPMinimumSize + len(data)),
TransportProtocol: header.UDPProtocolNumber,
HopLimit: 64,
})
// Initialize the UDP header.
udp := header.UDP(pkt.TransportHeader().Push(header.UDPMinimumSize))
pkt.TransportProtocolNumber = header.UDPProtocolNumber
length := uint16(pkt.Size())
udp.Encode(&header.UDPFields{
SrcPort: src.Port(),
DstPort: dst.Port(),
Length: length,
})
// Calculate the UDP pseudo-header checksum.
xsum := header.PseudoHeaderChecksum(header.UDPProtocolNumber, srcAddr, dstAddr, uint16(len(udp)))
udp.SetChecksum(^udp.CalculateChecksum(xsum))
return pkt
}