The plan has changed. Doing query parameters rather than path +
heades. NextDNS added support for query parameters.
Updates #2452
Change-Id: I4783c0a06d6af90756d9c80a7512644ba702388c
Signed-off-by: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@tailscale.com>
For debugging a macOS-specific magicsock issue. macOS runs in
bind-to-interface mode always. This lets me force Linux into the same
mode as macOS, even if the Linux kernel supports SO_MARK, as it
usually does.
Updates #2331 etc
Change-Id: Iac9e4a7429c1781337e716ffc914443b7aa2869d
Signed-off-by: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@tailscale.com>
Clarify & verify that some DoH URLs can be sent over tailcfg
in some limited cases.
Updates #2452
Change-Id: Ibb25db77788629c315dc26285a1059a763989e24
Signed-off-by: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@tailscale.com>
NextDNS is unique in that users create accounts and then get
user-specific DNS IPs & DoH URLs.
For DoH, the customer ID is in the URL path.
For IPv6, the IP address includes the customer ID in the lower bits.
For IPv4, there's a fragile "IP linking" mechanism to associate your
public IPv4 with an assigned NextDNS IPv4 and that tuple maps to your
customer ID.
We don't use the IP linking mechanism.
Instead, NextDNS is DoH-only. Which means using NextDNS necessarily
shunts all DNS traffic through 100.100.100.100 (programming the OS to
use 100.100.100.100 as the global resolver) because operating systems
can't usually do DoH themselves.
Once it's in Tailscale's DoH client, we then connect out to the known
NextDNS IPv4/IPv6 anycast addresses.
If the control plane sends the client a NextDNS IPv6 address, we then
map it to the corresponding NextDNS DoH with the same client ID, and
we dial that DoH server using the combination of v4/v6 anycast IPs.
Updates #2452
Change-Id: I3439d798d21d5fc9df5a2701839910f5bef85463
Signed-off-by: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@tailscale.com>
This is especially helpful as we launch newer DERPs over time, and older
clients have progressively out-of-date static DERP maps baked in. After
this, as long as the client has successfully connected once, it'll cache
the most recent DERP map it knows about.
Resolves an in-code comment from @bradfitz
Signed-off-by: Andrew Dunham <andrew@du.nham.ca>
If ExtraRecords (Hosts) are specified without a corresponding split
DNS route and global DNS is specified, then program the host OS DNS to
use 100.100.100.100 so it can blend in those ExtraRecords.
Updates #1543
Change-Id: If49014a5ecc8e38978ff26e54d1f74fe8dbbb9bc
Signed-off-by: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@tailscale.com>
Somehow I accidentally set the wrong registry value here.
It should be DisableDynamicUpdate=1 and not EnableDNSUpdate=0.
This is a regression from 545639e.
Signed-off-by: Maisem Ali <maisem@tailscale.com>
See https://mullvad.net/en/help/dns-over-https-and-dns-over-tls/
The Mullvad DoH servers appear to only speak HTTP/2 and
the use of a non-nil DialContext in the http.Transport
means that ForceAttemptHTTP2 must be set to true to be
able to use them.
Signed-off-by: Nahum Shalman <nahamu@gmail.com>
This works around the 2.3s delay in short name lookups when SNR is
enabled.
C:\Windows\System32\drivers\etc\hosts file. We only add known hosts that
match the search domains, and we populate the list in order of
Search Domains so that our matching algorithm mimics what Windows would
otherwise do itself if SNR was off.
Updates #1659
Signed-off-by: Maisem Ali <maisem@tailscale.com>
Convert ParseResponse and Response to use netip.AddrPort instead of
net.IP and separate port.
Fixes#5281
Signed-off-by: Kris Brandow <kris.brandow@gmail.com>
Like LLMNR, NetBIOS also adds resolution delays and we don't support it
anyway so just disable it on the interface.
Updates #1659
Signed-off-by: Maisem Ali <maisem@tailscale.com>
Currently we forward unmatched queries to the default resolver on
Windows. This results in duplicate queries being issued to the same
resolver which is just wasted.
Updates #1659
Signed-off-by: Maisem Ali <maisem@tailscale.com>
Otherwise we just keep looping over the same thing again and again.
```
dns udp query: upstream nameservers not set
dns udp query: upstream nameservers not set
dns udp query: upstream nameservers not set
```
Signed-off-by: Maisem Ali <maisem@tailscale.com>
The definition of winHTTPProxyInfo was using the wrong type (uint16 vs uint32)
for its first field. I fixed that type.
Furthermore, any UTF16 strings returned in that structure must be explicitly
freed. I added code to do this.
Finally, since this is the second time I've seen type safety errors in this code,
I switched the native API calls over to use wrappers generated by mkwinsyscall.
I know that would not have helped prevent the previous two problems, but every
bit helps IMHO.
Updates https://github.com/tailscale/tailscale/issues/4811
Signed-off-by: Aaron Klotz <aaron@tailscale.com>
As discussed in previous PRs, we can register for notifications when group
policies are updated and act accordingly.
This patch changes nrptRuleDatabase to receive notifications that group policy
has changed and automatically move our NRPT rules between the local and
group policy subkeys as needed.
Signed-off-by: Aaron Klotz <aaron@tailscale.com>
When dbus restarts it can cause the tailscaled to crash because the nil
signal was not handled in resolved.Fixing so the nil signal leads to a
connection reset and tailscaled stays connected to systemd when dbus restarted.
Fixes#4645
Co-authored-by: James Tucker <james@tailscale.com>
Signed-off-by: nyghtowl <warrick@tailscale.com>
Co-authored-by: James Tucker <james@tailscale.com>
This lets us distinguish "no IPv6 because the device's ISP doesn't
offer IPv6" from "IPv6 is unavailable/disabled in the OS".
Signed-off-by: David Anderson <danderson@tailscale.com>
Together with 06aa141632 this minimizes
the number of NEPacketTunnelNetworkSettings updates that we have to do,
and thus avoids Chrome interrupting outstanding requests due to
(perceived) network changes.
Updates #3102
Signed-off-by: Mihai Parparita <mihai@tailscale.com>
And remove the GCP special-casing from ipn/ipnlocal; do it only in the
forwarder for *.internal.
Fixes#4980Fixes#4981
Change-Id: I5c481e96d91f3d51d274a80fbd37c38f16dfa5cb
Signed-off-by: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@tailscale.com>
This does three things:
* If you're on GCP, it adds a *.internal DNS split route to the
metadata server, so we never break GCP DNS names. This lets people
have some Tailscale nodes on GCP and some not (e.g. laptops at home)
without having to add a Tailnet-wide *.internal DNS route.
If you already have such a route, though, it won't overwrite it.
* If the 100.100.100.100 DNS forwarder has nowhere to forward to,
it forwards it to the GCP metadata IP, which forwards to 8.8.8.8.
This means there are never errNoUpstreams ("upstream nameservers not set")
errors on GCP due to e.g. mangled /etc/resolv.conf (GCP default VMs
don't have systemd-resolved, so it's likely a DNS supremacy fight)
* makes the DNS fallback mechanism use the GCP metadata IP as a
fallback before our hosted HTTP-based fallbacks
I created a default GCP VM from their web wizard. It has no
systemd-resolved.
I then made its /etc/resolv.conf be empty and deleted its GCP
hostnames in /etc/hosts.
I then logged in to a tailnet with no global DNS settings.
With this, tailscaled writes /etc/resolv.conf (direct mode, as no
systemd-resolved) and sets it to 100.100.100.100, which then has
regular DNS via the metadata IP and *.internal DNS via the metadata IP
as well. If the tailnet configures explicit DNS servers, those are used
instead, except for *.internal.
This also adds a new util/cloudenv package based on version/distro
where the cloud type is only detected once. We'll likely expand it in
the future for other clouds, doing variants of this change for other
popular cloud environments.
Fixes#4911
RELNOTES=Google Cloud DNS improvements
Change-Id: I19f3c2075983669b2b2c0f29a548da8de373c7cf
Signed-off-by: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@tailscale.com>
There appear to be devices out there which send only their
first descriptor in response to a discovery packet for
`ssdp:all`, for example the Sagemcom FAST3890V3 only sends
urn:schemas-wifialliance-org:device:WFADevice:1
Send both ssdp:all and a discovery frame for
InternetGatewayDevice specifically.
Updates https://github.com/tailscale/tailscale/issues/3557
Signed-off-by: Denton Gentry <dgentry@tailscale.com>
When there are group policy entries for the NRPT that do not belong to Tailscale,
we recognize that we need to add ourselves to group policy and use that registry
key instead of the local one. We also refresh the group policy settings as
necessary to ensure that our changes take effect immediately.
Fixes https://github.com/tailscale/tailscale/issues/4607
Signed-off-by: Aaron Klotz <aaron@tailscale.com>
Start up a backend service, put a SOCKS5 server in front
of it, and verify that we can get data from the backend via
SOCKS5.
Signed-off-by: Denton Gentry <dgentry@tailscale.com>
In the 1.27 unstable releases we set the min-version to iOS15,
which means we have 50 MBytes of RAM in the Network Extension.
https://tailscale.com/blog/go-linker/
Include the UPnP/NAT-PMP/PCP portmapper support now that there
is memory for it.
Fixes https://github.com/tailscale/tailscale/issues/2495
Signed-off-by: Denton Gentry <dgentry@tailscale.com>
We can't do Noise-over-HTTP in Wasm/JS (because we don't have bidirectional
communication), but we should be able to do it over WebSockets. Reuses
derp WebSocket support that allows us to turn a WebSocket connection
into a net.Conn.
Updates #3157
Signed-off-by: Mihai Parparita <mihai@tailscale.com>
Currently we only support "via-<site-id>.<IPv4>", however that does not
work with Google Chrome which parses `http://via-1.10.0.0.1` as a search
string and not as a URL. This commit introduces "<IPv4>.via-<site-id>"
(`http://10.0.0.1.via-1`) which is parsed correctly by Chrome.
Updates #3616
Signed-off-by: Maisem Ali <maisem@tailscale.com>
AFAICT this isn't documented on MSDN, but based on the issue referenced below,
NRPT rules are not working when a rule specifies > 50 domains.
This patch modifies our NRPT rule generator to split the list of domains
into chunks as necessary, and write a separate rule for each chunk.
For compatibility reasons, we continue to use the hard-coded rule ID, but
as additional rules are required, we generate new GUIDs. Those GUIDs are
stored under the Tailscale registry path so that we know which rules are ours.
I made some changes to winutils to add additional helper functions in support
of both the code and its test: I added additional registry accessors, and also
moved some token accessors from paths to util/winutil.
Fixes https://github.com/tailscale/coral/issues/63
Signed-off-by: Aaron Klotz <aaron@tailscale.com>
Fixes https://github.com/tailscale/corp/issues/5198
The upstream forwarder will block indefinitely on `udpconn.ReadFrom` if no
reply is recieved, due to the lack of deadline on the connection object.
There still isn't a deadline on the connection object, but the automatic closing
of the context on deadline expiry will close the connection via `closeOnCtxDone`,
unblocking the read and resulting in a normal teardown.
Signed-off-by: Tom DNetto <tom@tailscale.com>
We were marking them as gauges, but they are only ever incremented,
thus counter is more appropriate.
Signed-off-by: Mihai Parparita <mihai@tailscale.com>
* net/dns, wgengine: implement DNS over TCP
Signed-off-by: Tom DNetto <tom@tailscale.com>
* wgengine/netstack: intercept only relevant port/protocols to quad-100
Signed-off-by: Tom DNetto <tom@tailscale.com>
This were intended to be pushed to #4408, but in my excitement I
forgot to git push :/ better late than never.
Signed-off-by: Tom DNetto <tom@tailscale.com>
This change wires netstack with a hook for traffic coming from the host
into the tun, allowing interception and handling of traffic to quad-100.
With this hook wired, magicDNS queries over UDP are now handled within
netstack. The existing logic in wgengine to handle magicDNS remains for now,
but its hook operates after the netstack hook so the netstack implementation
takes precedence. This is done in case we need to support platforms with
netstack longer than expected.
Signed-off-by: Tom DNetto <tom@tailscale.com>
A subsequent commit implements handling of magicDNS traffic via netstack.
Implementing this requires a hook for traffic originating from the host and
hitting the tun, so we make another hook to support this.
Signed-off-by: Tom DNetto <tom@tailscale.com>
Moves magicDNS-specific handling out of Resolver & into dns.Manager. This
greatly simplifies the Resolver to solely issuing queries and returning
responses, without channels.
Enforcement of max number of in-flight magicDNS queries, assembly of
synthetic UDP datagrams, and integration with wgengine for
recieving/responding to magicDNS traffic is now entirely in Manager.
This path is being kept around, but ultimately aims to be deleted and
replaced with a netstack-based path.
This commit is part of a series to implement magicDNS using netstack.
Signed-off-by: Tom DNetto <tom@tailscale.com>
Well, goimports actually (which adds the normal import grouping order we do)
Change-Id: I0ce1b1c03185f3741aad67c14a7ec91a838de389
Signed-off-by: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@tailscale.com>
This updates the fix from #4562 to pick the proxy based on the request
scheme.
Updates #4395, #2605, #4562
Signed-off-by: James Tucker <james@tailscale.com>
Currently we try to use `https://` when we see `https_host`, however
that doesn't work and results in errors like `Received error: fetch
control key: Get "https://controlplane.tailscale.com/key?v=32":
proxyconnect tcp: tls: first record does not look like a TLS handshake`
This indiciates that we are trying to do a HTTPS request to a HTTP
server. Googling suggests that the standard is to use `http` regardless
of `https` or `http` proxy
Updates #4395, #2605
Signed-off-by: Maisem Ali <maisem@tailscale.com>
The connections returned from SystemDial are automatically closed when
there is a major link change.
Also plumb through the dialer to the noise client so that connections
are auto-reset when moving from cellular to WiFi etc.
Updates #3363
Signed-off-by: Maisem Ali <maisem@tailscale.com>
Updates #2067
This should help us determine if more robust control of edns parameters
+ implementing answer truncation is warranted, given its likely complexity.
Signed-off-by: Tom DNetto <tom@tailscale.com>
This populates DNS suffixes ("ts.net", etc) in /etc/resolver/* files
to point to 100.100.100.100 so MagicDNS works.
It also sets search domains.
Updates #4276
Signed-off-by: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@tailscale.com>
$ tailscale debug via 0xb 10.2.0.0/16
fd7a:115c:a1e0:b1a:0🅱️a02:0/112
$ tailscale debug via fd7a:115c:a1e0:b1a:0🅱️a02:0/112
site 11 (0xb), 10.2.0.0/16
Previously: 3ae701f0eb
This adds a little debug tool to do CIDR math to make converting between
those ranges easier for now.
Updates #3616
Change-Id: I98302e95d17765bfaced3ecbb71cbd43e84bff46
Signed-off-by: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@tailscale.com>
In cases where tailscale is operating behind a MITM proxy, we need to consider
that a lot more of the internals of our HTTP requests are visible and may be
used as part of authorization checks. As such, we need to 'behave' as closely
as possible to ideal.
- Some proxies do authorization or consistency checks based the on Host header
or HTTP URI, instead of just the IP/hostname/SNI. As such, we need to
construct a `*http.Request` with a valid URI everytime HTTP is going to be
used on the wire, even if its over TLS.
Aside from the singular instance in net/netcheck, I couldn't find anywhere
else a http.Request was constructed incorrectly.
- Some proxies may deny requests, typically by returning a 403 status code. We
should not consider these requests as a valid latency check, so netcheck
semantics have been updated to consider >299 status codes as a failed probe.
Signed-off-by: Tom DNetto <tom@tailscale.com>
Two changes in one:
* make DoH upgrades an explicitly scheduled send earlier, when we come
up with the resolvers-and-delay send plan. Previously we were
getting e.g. four Google DNS IPs and then spreading them out in
time (for back when we only did UDP) but then later we added DoH
upgrading at the UDP packet layer, which resulted in sometimes
multiple DoH queries to the same provider running (each doing happy
eyeballs dialing to 4x IPs themselves) for each of the 4 source IPs.
Instead, take those 4 Google/Cloudflare IPs and schedule 5 things:
first the DoH query (which can use all 4 IPs), and then each of the
4 IPs as UDP later.
* clean up the dnstype.Resolver.Addr confusion; half the code was
using it as an IP string (as documented) as half was using it as
an IP:port (from some prior type we used), primarily for tests.
Instead, document it was being primarily an IP string but also
accepting an IP:port for tests, then add an accessor method on it
to get the IPPort and use that consistently everywhere.
Change-Id: Ifdd72b9e45433a5b9c029194d50db2b9f9217b53
Signed-off-by: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@tailscale.com>
If all N queries failed, we waited until context timeout (in 5
seconds) to return.
This makes (*forwarder).forward fail fast when the network's
unavailable.
Change-Id: Ibbb3efea7ed34acd3f3b29b5fee00ba8c7492569
Signed-off-by: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@tailscale.com>
Simplify the ability to reason about the DoH dialing code by reusing the
dnscache's dialer we already have.
Also, reduce the scope of the "ip" variable we don't want to close over.
This necessarily adds a new field to dnscache.Resolver:
SingleHostStaticResult, for when the caller already knows the IPs to be
returned.
Change-Id: I9f2aef7926f649137a5a3e63eebad6a3fffa48c0
Signed-off-by: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@tailscale.com>
This extracts DOH mapping of known public DNS providers in
forwarder.go into its own package, to be consumed by other repos
Signed-off-by: Jenny Zhang <jz@tailscale.com>
This defines a new magic IPv6 prefix, fd7a:115c:a1e0:b1a::/64, a
subset of our existing /48, where the final 32 bits are an IPv4
address, and the middle 32 bits are a user-chosen "site ID". (which
must currently be 0000:00xx; the top 3 bytes must be zero for now)
e.g., I can say my home LAN's "site ID" is "0000:00bb" and then
advertise its 10.2.0.0/16 IPv4 range via IPv6, like:
tailscale up --advertise-routes=fd7a:115c:a1e0:b1a::bb:10.2.0.0/112
(112 being /128 minuse the /96 v6 prefix length)
Then people in my tailnet can:
$ curl '[fd7a:115c:a1e0:b1a::bb:10.2.0.230]'
<!DOCTYPE html PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD XHTML 1.0 Transitional//EN" ....
Updates #3616, etc
RELNOTE=initial support for TS IPv6 addresses to route v4 "via" specific nodes
Change-Id: I9b49b6ad10410a24b5866b9fbc69d3cae1f600ef
Signed-off-by: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@tailscale.com>
* net/dns, net/dns/resolver, wgengine: refactor DNS request path
Previously, method calls into the DNS manager/resolver types handled DNS
requests rather than DNS packets. This is fine for UDP as one packet
corresponds to one request or response, however will not suit an
implementation that supports DNS over TCP.
To support PRs implementing this in the future, wgengine delegates
all handling/construction of packets to the magic DNS endpoint, to
the DNS types themselves. Handling IP packets at this level enables
future support for both UDP and TCP.
Signed-off-by: Tom DNetto <tom@tailscale.com>
Combine the code between `LocalBackend.CheckIPForwarding` and
`controlclient.ipForwardingBroken`.
Fixes#4300
Signed-off-by: Maisem Ali <maisem@tailscale.com>
Currently if the passed in host is an IP, Lookup still attempts to
resolve it with a dns server. This makes it just return the IP directly.
Updates tailscale/corp#4475
Signed-off-by: Maisem Ali <maisem@tailscale.com>
When the context is canceled, dc.dialOne returns an error from line 345.
This causes the defer on line 312 to try to resolve the host again, which
triggers a dns lookup of "127.0.0.1" from derp.
Updates tailscale/corp#4475
Signed-off-by: Maisem Ali <maisem@tailscale.com>
Plumb the outbound injection path to allow passing netstack
PacketBuffers down to the tun Read, where they are decref'd to enable
buffer re-use. This removes one packet alloc & copy, and reduces GC
pressure by pooling outbound injected packets.
Fixes#2741
Signed-off-by: James Tucker <james@tailscale.com>
The best flag to use on Win7 and Win8.0 is deprecated in Win8.1, so we resolve
the flag depending on OS version info.
Fixes https://github.com/tailscale/tailscale/issues/4201
Signed-off-by: Aaron Klotz <aaron@tailscale.com>
Incidentally, simplify the go generate CI workflow, by
marking the dnsfallback update non-hermetic (so CI will
skip it) rather than manually filter it out of `go list`.
Updates #4194
Signed-off-by: David Anderson <danderson@tailscale.com>
As of Go 1.18, the register ABI list includes arm64, amd64,
ppc64, and ppc64le. This is a large enough percentage of the
architectures that it's not worth explaining.
Signed-off-by: Josh Bleecher Snyder <josh@tailscale.com>
Customer reported an issue where the connections were not closing, and
would instead just stay open. This commit makes it so that we close out
the connection regardless of what error we see. I've verified locally
that it fixes the issue, we should add a test for this.
Signed-off-by: Maisem Ali <maisem@tailscale.com>
If it's in a non-standard table, as it is on Unifi UDM Pro, apparently.
Updates #4038 (probably fixes, but don't have hardware to verify)
Change-Id: I2cb9a098d8bb07d1a97a6045b686aca31763a937
Signed-off-by: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@tailscale.com>
I introduced a bug in 8fe503057d when unifying oneConnListener
implementations.
The NewOneConnListenerFrom API was easy to misuse (its Close method
closes the underlying Listener), and we did (via http.Serve, which
closes the listener after use, which meant we were close the peerapi's
listener, even though we only wanted its Addr)
Instead, combine those two constructors into one and pass in the Addr
explicitly, without delegating through to any Listener.
Change-Id: I061d7e5f842e0cada416e7b2dd62100d4f987125
Signed-off-by: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@tailscale.com>
If we've already connected to a certain name's IP in the past, don't
assume the problem was DNS related. That just puts unnecessarily load
on our bootstrap DNS servers during regular restarts of Tailscale
infrastructure components.
Also, if we do do a bootstrap DNS lookup and it gives the same IP(s)
that we already tried, don't try them again.
Change-Id: I743e8991a7f957381b8e4c1508b8e9d0df1782fe
Signed-off-by: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@tailscale.com>
No behavior changes (intended, at least).
This is in prep for future changes to this package, which would get
too complicated in the current style.
Change-Id: Ic260f8e34ae2f64f34819d4a56e38bee8d8ac5ce
Signed-off-by: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@tailscale.com>
This TODO was both added and fixed in 506c727e3.
As I recall, I wasn't originally going to do it because it seemed
annoying, so I wrote the TODO, but then I felt bad about it and just
did it, but forgot to remove the TODO.
Change-Id: I8f3514809ad69b447c62bfeb0a703678c1aec9a3
Signed-off-by: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@tailscale.com>
I was about to add a third copy, so unify them now instead.
Change-Id: I3b93896aa1249b1250a6b1df4829d57717f2311a
Signed-off-by: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@tailscale.com>
Avoid some work when D-Bus isn't running.
Change-Id: I6f89bb75fdb24c13f61be9b400610772756db1ef
Signed-off-by: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@tailscale.com>
If systemd-resolved is enabled but not running (or not yet running,
such as early boot) and resolv.conf is old/dangling, we weren't
detecting systemd-resolved.
This moves its ping earlier, which will trigger it to start up and
write its file.
Updates #3362 (likely fixes)
Updates #3531 (likely fixes)
Change-Id: I6392944ac59f600571c43b8f7a677df224f2beed
Signed-off-by: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@tailscale.com>
tailscaled was using 100% CPU on a machine with ~1M lines, 100MB+
of /proc/net/route data.
Two problems: in likelyHomeRouterIPLinux, we didn't stop reading the
file once we found the default route (which is on the first non-header
line when present). Which meant it was finding the answer and then
parsing 100MB over 1M lines unnecessarily. Second was that if the
default route isn't present, it'd read to the end of the file looking
for it. If it's not in the first 1,000 lines, it ain't coming, or at
least isn't worth having. (it's only used for discovering a potential
UPnP/PMP/PCP server, which is very unlikely to be present in the
environment of a machine with a ton of routes)
Change-Id: I2c4a291ab7f26aedc13885d79237b8f05c2fd8e4
Signed-off-by: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@tailscale.com>
Now that Go 1.17 has module graph pruning
(https://go.dev/doc/go1.17#go-command), we should be able to use
upstream netstack without breaking our private repo's build
that then depends on the tailscale.com Go module.
This is that experiment.
Updates #1518 (the original bug to break out netstack to own module)
Updates #2642 (this updates netstack, but doesn't remove workaround)
Change-Id: I27a252c74a517053462e5250db09f379de8ac8ff
Signed-off-by: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@tailscale.com>
A new package can also later record/report which knobs are checked and
set. It also makes the code cleaner & easier to grep for env knobs.
Change-Id: Id8a123ab7539f1fadbd27e0cbeac79c2e4f09751
Signed-off-by: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@tailscale.com>
Currently only search domains are stored. This was an oversight
(under?) on my part.
As things are now, when MagicDNS is on and "Override local DNS" is
off, the dns forwarder has to timeout before names resolve. This
introduces a pretty annoying lang that makes everything feel
extremely slow. You will also see an error: "upstream nameservers
not set".
I tested with "Override local DNS" on and off. In both situations
things seem to function as expected (and quickly).
Signed-off-by: Aaron Bieber <aaron@bolddaemon.com>
Go 1.17 added a HandshakeContext func to take care of timeouts during
TLS handshaking, so switch from our homegrown goroutine implementation
to the standard way.
Signed-off-by: David Anderson <danderson@tailscale.com>
Cancelling the context makes the timeout goroutine race with the write that
reports a successful TLS handshake, so you can end up with a successful TLS
handshake that mysteriously reports that it timed out after ~0s in flight.
The context is always canceled and cleaned up as the function exits, which
happens mere microseconds later, so just let function exit clean up and
thereby avoid races.
Signed-off-by: David Anderson <danderson@tailscale.com>
On Synology, the /etc/resolv.conf has tabs in it, which this
resolv.conf parser (we have two, sigh) didn't handle.
Updates #3710
Change-Id: I86f8e09ad1867ee32fa211e85c382a27191418ea
Signed-off-by: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@tailscale.com>
Tailscale seems to be breaking WSL configurations lately. Until we
understand what changed, turn off Tailscale's involvement by default
and make it opt-in.
Updates #2815
Change-Id: I9977801f8debec7d489d97761f74000a4a33f71b
Signed-off-by: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@tailscale.com>
OpenBSD 6.9 and up has a daemon which handles nameserver configuration. This PR
teaches the OpenBSD dns manager to check if resolvd is being used. If it is, it
will use the route(8) command to tell resolvd to add the Tailscale dns entries
to resolv.conf
Signed-off-by: Aaron Bieber <aaron@bolddaemon.com>
Fixes#3660
RELNOTE=MagicDNS now works over IPv6 when CGNAT IPv4 is disabled.
Change-Id: I001e983df5feeb65289abe5012dedd177b841b45
Signed-off-by: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@tailscale.com>
And delete the unused code in net/dns/resolver/neterr_*.go.
Change-Id: Ibe62c486bacce2733eb9968c96a98cbbdb2758bd
Signed-off-by: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@tailscale.com>
Treat UDP send EPERM errors as a lost UDP packet, not something super
fatal. That's just the Linux firewall preventing it from going out.
And add a leaf package net/neterror for that (and future) policy that
all three packages can share, with tests.
Updates #3619
Change-Id: Ibdb838c43ee9efe70f4f25f7fc7fdf4607ba9c1d
Signed-off-by: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@tailscale.com>