Mostly so the Linux one can use Linux-specific stuff in package
syscall and not use os/exec for uname for portability.
But also it helps deps a tiny bit on iOS.
Signed-off-by: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@tailscale.com>
This logs some basic statistics for UPnP, so that tailscale can better understand what routers
are being used and how to connect to them.
Signed-off-by: julianknodt <julianknodt@gmail.com>
This adds a PCP test to the IGD test server, by hardcoding in a few observed packets from
Denton's box.
Signed-off-by: julianknodt <julianknodt@gmail.com>
And use dynamic port numbers in tests, as Linux on GitHub Actions and
Windows in general have things running on these ports.
Co-Author: Julian Knodt <julianknodt@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@tailscale.com>
Previously, we hashed the question and combined it with the original
txid which was useful when concurrent queries were multiplexed on a
single local source port. We encountered some situations where the DNS
server canonicalizes the question in the response (uppercase converted
to lowercase in this case), which resulted in responses that we couldn't
match to the original request due to hash mismatches. This includes a
new test to cover that situation.
Fixes#2597
Signed-off-by: Adrian Dewhurst <adrian@tailscale.com>
PCP handles external IPs by allowing the client to specify them in the packet, which is more
explicit than requiring 2 packets from PMP, so allow for future changes to add it in easily.
Signed-off-by: julianknodt <julianknodt@gmail.com>
Still very much a prototype (hard-coded IPs, etc) but should be
non-invasive enough to submit at this point and iterate from here.
Updates #2589
Co-Author: David Crawshaw <crawshaw@tailscale.com>
Signed-off-by: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@tailscale.com>
Prior to Tailscale 1.12 it detected UPnP on any port.
Starting with Tailscale 1.11.x, it stopped detecting UPnP on all ports.
Then start plumbing its discovered Location header port number to the
code that was assuming port 5000.
Fixes#2109
Signed-off-by: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@tailscale.com>
There's a call to Now once per packet.
Move to mono.Now.
Though the current implementation provides high precision,
we document it to be coarse, to preserve the ability
to switch to a coarse monotonic time later.
Signed-off-by: Josh Bleecher Snyder <josh@tailscale.com>
Go 1.17 switches to a register ABI on amd64 platforms.
Part of that switch is that go and defer calls use an argument-less
closure, which allocates. This means that we have an extra
alloc in some DNS work. That's unfortunate but not a showstopper,
and I don't see a clear path to fixing it.
The other performance benefits from the register ABI will all
but certainly outweigh this extra alloc.
Fixes#2545
Signed-off-by: Josh Bleecher Snyder <josh@tailscale.com>
I don't know how to get access to a real packet. Basing this commit
entirely off:
+------------+--------------+------------------------------+
| Field Name | Field Type | Description |
+------------+--------------+------------------------------+
| NAME | domain name | MUST be 0 (root domain) |
| TYPE | u_int16_t | OPT (41) |
| CLASS | u_int16_t | requestor's UDP payload size |
| TTL | u_int32_t | extended RCODE and flags |
| RDLEN | u_int16_t | length of all RDATA |
| RDATA | octet stream | {attribute,value} pairs |
+------------+--------------+------------------------------+
From https://datatracker.ietf.org/doc/html/rfc6891#section-6.1.2
Signed-off-by: David Crawshaw <crawshaw@tailscale.com>
The handoff between tstun.Wrap's Read and poll methods
is one of the per-packet hotspots. It shows up in pprof.
Making outbound buffered increases throughput.
It is hard to measure exactly how much, because the numbers
are highly variable, but I'd estimate it at about 1%,
using the best observed max throughput across three runs.
Signed-off-by: Josh Bleecher Snyder <josh@tailscale.com>
The handoff between tstun.Wrap's Read and poll methods
is one of the per-packet hotspots. It shows up in pprof.
Making outbound buffered increases throughput.
It is hard to measure exactly how much, because the numbers
are highly variable, but I'd estimate it at about 1%,
using the best observed max throughput across three runs.
Signed-off-by: Josh Bleecher Snyder <josh@tailscale.com>
Tested manually with:
$ go test -v ./net/dnscache/ -dial-test=bogusplane.dev.tailscale.com:80
Where bogusplane has three A records, only one of which works.
Signed-off-by: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@tailscale.com>
Instead of blasting away at all upstream resolvers at the same time,
make a timing plan upon reconfiguration and have each upstream have an
associated start delay, depending on the overall forwarding config.
So now if you have two or four upstream Google or Cloudflare DNS
servers (e.g. two IPv4 and two IPv6), we now usually only send a
query, not four.
This is especially nice on iOS where we start fewer DoH queries and
thus fewer HTTP/1 requests (because we still disable HTTP/2 on iOS),
fewer sockets, fewer goroutines, and fewer associated HTTP buffers,
etc, saving overall memory burstiness.
Fixes#2436
Updates tailscale/corp#2250
Updates tailscale/corp#2238
Signed-off-by: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@tailscale.com>
Add a place to hang state in a future change for #2436.
For now this just simplifies the send signature without
any functional change.
Updates #2436
Signed-off-by: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@tailscale.com>
Previously, this was incorrectly returning the internal port, and using that with the external
exposed IP when it did not use WANIPConnection2. In the case when we must provide a port, we
return it instead.
Noticed this while implementing the integration test for upnp.
Signed-off-by: julianknodt <julianknodt@gmail.com>
It was a huge chunk of the overall log output and made debugging
difficult. Omit and summarize the spammy *.arpa parts instead.
Fixestailscale/corp#2066 (to which nobody had opinions, so)
Add in UPnP portmapping, using goupnp library in order to get the UPnP client and run the
portmapping functions. This rips out anywhere where UPnP used to be in portmapping, and has a
flow separate from PMP and PCP.
RELNOTE=portmapper now supports UPnP mappings
Fixes#682
Updates #2109
Signed-off-by: julianknodt <julianknodt@gmail.com>
Recognize Cloudflare, Google, Quad9 which are by far the
majority of upstream DNS servers that people use.
RELNOTE=MagicDNS now uses DNS-over-HTTPS when querying popular upstream resolvers,
so DNS queries aren't sent in the clear over the Internet.
Updates #915 (might fix it?)
Updates #988 (gets us closer, if it fixes Android)
Updates #74 (not yet configurable, but progress)
Updates #2056 (not yet configurable, dup of #74?)
Signed-off-by: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@tailscale.com>
Added the net/speedtest package that contains code for starting up a
speedtest server and a client. The speedtest command for starting a
client takes in a duration for the speedtest as well as the host and
port of the speedtest server to connect to. The speedtest command for
starting a server takes in a host:port pair to listen on.
Signed-off-by: Aaditya Chaudhary <32117362+AadityaChaudhary@users.noreply.github.com>
With netns handling localhost now, existing tests no longer
need special handling. The tests set up their connections to
localhost, and the connections work without fuss.
Remove the special handling for tests.
Also remove the hostinfo.TestCase support, since this was
the only use of it. It can be added back later if really
needed, but it would be better to try to make tests work
without special cases.
Signed-off-by: Denton Gentry <dgentry@tailscale.com>
netns_linux checked whether "ip rule" could run to determine
whether to use SO_MARK for network namespacing. However in
Linux environments which lack CAP_NET_ADMIN, such as various
container runtimes, the "ip rule" command succeeds but SO_MARK
fails due to lack of permission. SO_BINDTODEVICE would work in
these environments, but isn't tried.
In addition to running "ip rule" check directly whether SO_MARK
works or not. Among others, this allows Microsoft Azure App
Service and AWS App Runner to work.
Signed-off-by: Denton Gentry <dgentry@tailscale.com>
Connections to a control server or log server on localhost,
used in a number of tests, are working right now because the
calls to SO_MARK in netns fail for non-root but then we ignore
the failure when running in tests.
Unfortunately that failure in SO_MARK also affects container
environments without CAP_NET_ADMIN, breaking Tailscale
connectivity. We're about to fix netns to recognize when SO_MARK
doesn't work and use SO_BINDTODEVICE instead. Doing so makes
tests fail, as their sockets now BINDTODEVICE of the default
route and cannot connect to localhost.
Add support to skip namespacing for localhost connections,
which Darwin and Windows already do. This is not conditional
on running within a test, if you tell tailscaled to connect
to localhost it will automatically use a non-namespaced
socket to do so.
Signed-off-by: Denton Gentry <dgentry@tailscale.com>
To remove some multi-case selects, we intentionally allowed
sends on closed channels (cc23049cd2).
However, we also introduced concurrent sends and closes,
which is a data race.
This commit fixes the data race. The mutexes here are uncontended,
and thus very cheap.
Signed-off-by: Josh Bleecher Snyder <josh@tailscale.com>
Calculate whether the packet is injected directly,
rather than via an else branch.
Unify the exit paths. It is easier here than duplicating them.
Signed-off-by: Josh Bleecher Snyder <josh@tailscale.com>
Every TUN Read went through several multi-case selects.
We know from past experience with wireguard-go that these are slow
and cause scheduler churn.
The selects served two purposes: they separated errors from data and
gracefully handled shutdown. The first is fairly easy to replace by sending
errors and data over a single channel. The second, less so.
We considered a few approaches: Intricate webs of channels,
global condition variables. They all get ugly fast.
Instead, let's embrace the ugly and handle shutdown ungracefully.
It's horrible, but the horror is simple and localized.
Signed-off-by: Josh Bleecher Snyder <josh@tailscale.com>
We also have to make a one-off change to /etc/wsl.conf to stop every
invocation of wsl.exe clobbering the /etc/resolv.conf. This appears to
be a safe change to make permanently, as even though the resolv.conf is
constantly clobbered, it is always the same stable internal IP that is
set as a nameserver. (I believe the resolv.conf clobbering predates the
MS stub resolver.)
Tested on WSL2, should work for WSL1 too.
Fixes#775
Signed-off-by: David Crawshaw <crawshaw@tailscale.com>
This is preliminary work for using the directManager as
part of a wslManager on windows, where in addition to configuring
windows we'll use wsl.exe to edit the linux file system and modify the
system resolv.conf.
The pinholeFS is a little funky, but it's designed to work through
simple unix tools via wsl.exe without invoking bash. I would not have
thought it would stand on its own like this, but it turns out it's
useful for writing a test for the directManager.
Signed-off-by: David Crawshaw <crawshaw@tailscale.com>
This has been bothering me for a while, but everytime I run format from the root directory
it also formats this file. I didn't want to add it to my other PRs but it's annoying to have to
revert it every time.
Signed-off-by: julianknodt <julianknodt@gmail.com>
Move derpmap.Prod to a static JSON file (go:generate'd) instead,
to make its role explicit. And add a TODO about making dnsfallback
use an update-over-time DERP map file instead of a baked-in one.
Updates #1264
Signed-off-by: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@tailscale.com>
This change (subject to some limitations) looks for the EDNS OPT record
in queries and responses, clamping the size field to fit within our DNS
receive buffer. If the size field is smaller than the DNS receive buffer
then it is left unchanged.
I think we will eventually need to transition to fully processing the
DNS queries to handle all situations, but this should cover the most
common case.
Mostly fixes#2066
Signed-off-by: Adrian Dewhurst <adrian@tailscale.com>
Windows 8.1 incorrectly handles search paths on an interface with no
associated resolver, so we have to provide a full primary DNS config
rather than use Windows 8.1's nascent-but-present NRPT functionality.
Fixes#2237.
Signed-off-by: David Anderson <danderson@tailscale.com>
The only connectivity an AWS Lambda container has is an IPv4 link-local
169.254.x.x address using NAT:
12: vtarget_1@if11: <BROADCAST,MULTICAST,UP,LOWER_UP> mtu 1500
qdisc noqueue state UP group default qlen 1000
link/ether 7e:1c:3f:00:00:00 brd ff:ff:ff:ff:ff:ff link-netnsid 1
inet 169.254.79.1/32 scope global vtarget_1
valid_lft forever preferred_lft forever
If there are no other IPv4/v6 addresses available, and we are running
in AWS Lambda, allow IPv4 169.254.x.x addresses to be used.
----
Similarly, a Google Cloud Run container's only connectivity is
a Unique Local Address fddf:3978:feb1:d745::c001/128.
If there are no other addresses available then allow IPv6
Unique Local Addresses to be used.
We actually did this in an earlier release, but now refactor it to
work the same way as the IPv4 link-local support is being done.
Signed-off-by: Denton Gentry <dgentry@tailscale.com>
Split out of Denton's #2164, to make that diff smaller to review.
This change has no behavior changes.
Signed-off-by: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@tailscale.com>
It's possible to install a configuration that passes our current checks
for systemd-resolved, without actually pointing to systemd-resolved. In
that case, we end up programming DNS in resolved, but that config never
applies to any name resolution requests on the system.
This is quite a far-out edge case, but there's a simple additional check
we can do: if the header comment names systemd-resolved, there should be
a single nameserver in resolv.conf pointing to 127.0.0.53. If not, the
configuration should be treated as an unmanaged resolv.conf.
Fixes#2136.
Signed-off-by: David Anderson <danderson@tailscale.com>
This raises the maximum DNS response message size from 512 to 4095. This
should be large enough for almost all situations that do not need TCP.
We still do not recognize EDNS, so we will still forward requests that
claim support for a larger response size than 4095 (that will be solved
later). For now, when a response comes back that is too large to fit in
our receive buffer, we now set the truncation flag in the DNS header,
which is an improvement from before but will prompt attempts to use TCP
which isn't supported yet.
On Windows, WSARecvFrom into a buffer that's too small returns an error
in addition to the data. On other OSes, the extra data is silently
discarded. In this case, we prefer the latter so need to catch the error
on Windows.
Partially addresses #1123
Signed-off-by: Adrian Dewhurst <adrian@tailscale.com>
We used to use "redo" for that, but it was pretty vague.
Also, fix the build tags broken in interfaces_default_route_test.go from
a9745a0b68, moving those Linux-specific
tests to interfaces_linux_test.go.
Signed-off-by: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@tailscale.com>
netaddr allocated at the time this was written. No longer.
name old time/op new time/op delta
TailscaleServiceAddr-4 5.46ns ± 4% 1.83ns ± 3% -66.52% (p=0.008 n=5+5)
A bunch of the others can probably be simplified too, but this
was the only one with just an IP and not an IPPrefix.
Signed-off-by: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@tailscale.com>
Pull in the latest version of wireguard-windows.
Switch to upstream wireguard-go.
This requires reverting all of our import paths.
Unfortunately, this has to happen at the same time.
The wireguard-go change is very low risk,
as that commit matches our fork almost exactly.
(The only changes are import paths, CI files, and a go.mod entry.)
So if there are issues as a result of this commit,
the first place to look is wireguard-windows changes.
Signed-off-by: Josh Bleecher Snyder <josh@tailscale.com>
This leads to a cleaner separation of intent vs. implementation
(Routes is now the only place specifying who handles DNS requests),
and allows for cleaner expression of a configuration that creates
MagicDNS records without serving them to the OS.
Signed-off-by: David Anderson <danderson@tailscale.com>
interfaces.Tailscale only returns an interface if it has at least one Tailscale
IP assigned to it. In the resolved DNS manager, when we're called upon to tear
down DNS config, the interface no longer has IPs.
Instead, look up the interface index on construction and reuse it throughout
the daemon lifecycle.
Fixes#1892.
Signed-off-by: David Anderson <dave@natulte.net>
This reverts commit 7d16c8228b.
I have no idea how I ended up here. The bug I was fixing with this change
fails to reproduce on Ubuntu 18.04 now, and this change definitely does
break 20.04, 20.10, and Debian Buster. So, until we can reliably reproduce
the problem this was meant to fix, reverting.
Part of #1875
Signed-off-by: David Anderson <dave@natulte.net>
Whenever we dropped a packet due to ACLs, wireguard-go was logging:
Failed to write packet to TUN device: packet dropped by filter
Instead, just lie to wireguard-go and pretend everything is okay.
Fixes#1229
Signed-off-by: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@tailscale.com>