This depends on improved support from the control server, to send the
new subnet width (Bits) fields. If these are missing, we fall back to
assuming their value is /32.
Conversely, if the server sends Bits fields to an older client, it will
interpret them as /32 addresses. Since the only rules we allow are
"accept" rules, this will be narrower or equal to the intended rule, so
older clients will simply reject hosts on the wider subnet (fail
closed).
With this change, the internal filter.Matches format has diverged
from the wire format used by controlclient, so move the wire format
into tailcfg and convert it to filter.Matches in controlclient.
Signed-off-by: Avery Pennarun <apenwarr@tailscale.com>
This strictly sequences things such that c1 is fully registered in
the control server before c2 creates its poll. Failure to do this
can cause an inversion where c2's poll finishes establishing
before c1's poll starts, which results in c2 getting disconnected
rather than c1, and the test times out waiting for c1 to get kicked.
Fixes#98.
Signed-off-by: David Anderson <danderson@tailscale.com>
The test is straightforward, but it's a little perplexing if you're
not overly familiar with controlclient.
Signed-off-by: David Anderson <danderson@tailscale.com>
I removed the HTTPC field in b6fa5a69be but it was apparently still
used in [oss-skipped] tests.
Restore it, but name it so it's more obvious that it's only for
tests. (It currently is, and I'd like to keep it like that for now.)
The tests cheat at filling out web forms by directly POSTing to
the target. The target for authURLs has changed slightly, the base
authURL now redirects the user to the login page.
Additionally, the authURL cycle now checks the cookie is set
correctly, so we add cookie jars where necessary to pass the
cookie through.
Add opt-in method to request IPv6 endpoints from the control plane.
For now they should just be skipped. A previous version of this CL was
unconditional and reportedly had problems that I can't reproduce. So
make it a knob until the mystery is solved.
Signed-off-by: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@tailscale.com>
Breaks something deep in wireguard or magicsock's brainstem, no packets at all
can flow. All received packets fail decryption with "invalid mac1".
This reverts commit 94024355ed.
Signed-off-by: David Anderson <dave@natulte.net>
This removes the need for go-cmp, which is extremely bloaty so we had
to leave it out of iOS. As a result, we had also left it out of macOS,
and so we didn't print netmap diffs at all on darwin-based platforms.
Oops.
As a bonus, the output format of the new function is way better.
Minor oddity: because I used the dumbest possible diff algorithm, the
sort order is a bit dumb. We print all "removed" lines and then print
all "added" lines, rather than doing the usual diff-like thing of
interspersing them. This probably doesn't matter (maybe it's an
improvement).
The .Concise() view had grown hard to read over time. Originally, we
assumed a peer almost always had just one endpoint and one-or-more
allowedips. With magicsock, we now almost always have multiple
endpoints per peer. And empirically, almost every peer has only one
allowedip.
Change their order so we can line up allowedips vertically. Also do
some tweaking to make multiple endpoints easier to read.
While we're here, add a column to show the home DERP server of each
peer, if any.
We log it once upon receiving the first copy of the map, then
subsequently when a new one appears, but only if we haven't logged one
less than 5 minutes ago.
This avoids overly cluttering the log (as we did before, logging the
netmap every time one appeared, which could be hundreds of lines every
few seconds), but still gives the log enough context to help in
diagnosing problems retroactively.
We still include them directly in the controlclient network map
just where we have been. Client plumbing we can do later.
Signed-off-by: David Crawshaw <crawshaw@tailscale.com>