Instead, pass in only exactly the relevant configuration pieces
that the OS network stack cares about.
Signed-off-by: David Anderson <danderson@tailscale.com>
New logic installs precise filters for subnet routes,
plays nice with other users of netfilter, and lays the
groundwork for fixing routing loops via policy routing.
Signed-off-by: David Anderson <danderson@tailscale.com>
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>
Longer term, we should probably update the packet filter to be fully
stateful, for both TCP and ICMP. That is, only ICMP packets related to
a session *we* initiated should be allowed back in. But this is
reasonably secure for now, since wireguard is already trimming most
traffic. The current code would not protect against eg. Ping-of-Death style
attacks from VPN nodes.
Fixestailscale/tailscale#290.
Signed-off-by: Avery Pennarun <apenwarr@tailscale.com>
This was only done occasionally, but was extremely disruptive
when done and is no longer necessary.
It used to be that when switching links, we had to immediately
generate handshakes to everyone we were communicating with to
punch a hole in any NAT we were talking through. (This ended up
not really working, because in the process we got rid of our
session keys and ended up having a futile conversation for many
seconds.)
Now we have DERP, our link change propogates to the other side
as a new list of endpoints, so they start spraying packets.
We will definitely get one thanks to DERP, which will cause us
to spray, opening any NAT we are behind.
The result is that for good connections, we don't trash session
keys and cause an interruption.
Signed-off-by: David Crawshaw <crawshaw@tailscale.com>
It was one of the top garbage producers on my phone.
It's slated to be deleted and replaced anyway, but this helps in the
meantime.
The go.sum changes look scary, but the new dep only adds 240 bytes to
the binary. The go.sum noise is just cmd/go being aggressive in
including a lot of stuff (which is being fixed in Go 1.15, for what I
understand). And I ran a go mod tidy, which added some too. (I had to
write a custom wrapper around go mod tidy because this mod tidy
normally breaks on tailscale.io/control being missing but referenced
in tests)
Signed-off-by: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@tailscale.com>
The docs on magicsock.Conn stated that they implemented the
wireguard/device.Bind interface, yet this type does not exist. In
reality, the Conn type implements the wireguard/conn.Bind interface.
I also fixed a small typo in the same file.
Signed-off-by: Blake Gentry <blakesgentry@gmail.com>
* remove endpoint discovery noise when results unchanged
* consistently spell derp nodes as "derp-N"
* replace "127.3.3.40:" with "derp-" in CreateEndpoint log output
* stop early DERP setup before SetPrivateKey is called;
it just generates log nosie
* fix stringification of peer ShortStrings (it had an old %x on it,
rendering it garbage)
* describe why derp routes are changing, with one of:
shared home, their home, our home, alt
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>
More steps towards IPv6 transport.
We now send it to tailcontrol, which ignores it.
But it doesn't actually actually support IPv6 yet (outside of STUN).
Signed-off-by: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@tailscale.com>
Use this when making the ipn state transition from Starting to
Running. This way a network of quiet nodes with no active
handshaking will still transition to Active.
Signed-off-by: David Crawshaw <crawshaw@tailscale.com>
Typically the home DERP server is found and set on startup before
magicsock's SetPrivateKey can be called, so no DERP connection is
established. Make sure one is by kicking the home DERP tires in
SetPrivateKey.
Signed-off-by: David Crawshaw <crawshaw@tailscale.com>
The code as written intended to do this, but it repeated the
comparison of derpNum and c.myDerp after c.myDerp had been
updated, so it never executed.
Signed-off-by: David Crawshaw <crawshaw@tailscale.com>
Before, endpoint updates were constantly being interrupted and resumed
on Linux due to tons of LinkChange messages from over-zealous Linux
netlink messages (from router_linux.go)
Now that endpoint updates are fast and bounded in time anyway, just
let them run to completion, but note that another needs to be
scheduled after.
Now logs went from pages of noise to just:
root@taildoc:~# grep -i -E 'stun|endpoint update' log
2020/03/13 08:51:29 magicsock.Conn: starting endpoint update (initial)
2020/03/13 08:51:30 magicsock.Conn.ReSTUN: endpoint update active, need another later ("link-change-minor")
2020/03/13 08:51:31 magicsock.Conn: starting endpoint update (link-change-minor)
2020/03/13 08:51:31 magicsock.Conn.ReSTUN: endpoint update active, need another later ("link-change-minor")
2020/03/13 08:51:33 magicsock.Conn: starting endpoint update (link-change-minor)
2020/03/13 08:51:33 magicsock.Conn.ReSTUN: endpoint update active, need another later ("link-change-minor")
2020/03/13 08:51:35 magicsock.Conn: starting endpoint update (link-change-minor)
2020/03/13 08:51:35 magicsock.Conn.ReSTUN: endpoint update active, need another later ("link-change-minor")
Or, seen in another run:
2020/03/13 08:45:41 magicsock.Conn: starting endpoint update (periodic)
2020/03/13 08:46:09 magicsock.Conn: starting endpoint update (periodic)
2020/03/13 08:46:21 magicsock.Conn: starting endpoint update (link-change-major)
2020/03/13 08:46:37 magicsock.Conn: starting endpoint update (periodic)
2020/03/13 08:47:05 magicsock.Conn: starting endpoint update (periodic)
Signed-off-by: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@tailscale.com>
The TODO above derphttp.NewClient suggests it does network I/O,
but the derphttp client connects lazily and so creating one is
very cheap.
Signed-off-by: David Crawshaw <crawshaw@tailscale.com>
It used to make assumptions based on having Anycast IPs that are super
near. Now we're intentionally going to a bunch of different distant
IPs to measure latency.
Also, optimize how the hairpin detection works. No need to STUN on
that socket. Just use that separate socket for sending, once we know
the other UDP4 socket's endpoint. The trick is: make our test probe
also a STUN packet, so it fits through magicsock's existing STUN
routing.
This drops netcheck from ~5 seconds to ~250-500ms.
Signed-off-by: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@tailscale.com>
Failure to do this leads to fd exhaustion at -count=10000,
and increasingly poor execution north of -count=100.
Signed-off-by: David Anderson <danderson@tailscale.com>
Failure to do so triggers either a data race or a panic
in the testing package, due to racey use of t.Logf.
Signed-off-by: David Anderson <danderson@tailscale.com>
Basically, don't trust the OS-level link monitor to only tell you
interesting things. Sanity check it.
Also, move the interfaces package into the net directory now that we
have it.
This was (presumably) missing from wgengine because the
interactions between magicsock and wireguard-go meant that the
shutdown never worked. Now those are fixed, actually shut down.
Fixes occasional flake in expanded ipn/e2e_test.
Signed-off-by: David Crawshaw <crawshaw@tailscale.com>
The device name "tailscale0" will be used for all platforms except for
OpenBSD where "tun" is enforced by the kernel. `CreateTUN()` in
`wireguard-go` will select the next available "tunX" device name on the
OpenBSD system.
Signed-off-by: Martin Baillie <martin@baillie.email>
The UDP reader goroutine was clobbering `n` and `err` from the
main goroutine, whose accesses are not synchronized the way `b` is.
Signed-off-by: David Anderson <danderson@tailscale.com>
wireguard-go closes magicsock, and expects this to unblock reads
so that its internal goroutines can wind down. We were incorrectly
blocking the read indefinitey and breaking this contract.
Signed-off-by: David Anderson <danderson@tailscale.com>
It's extremely flaky in several dimensions, as well as very slow.
It's making the CI completely red all the time without telling us
useful information.
Set RUN_CURSED_TESTS=1 to run locally.
This change just alters the semantics of the one flaky test, without
trying to speed up timeouts on the others. Empirically, speeding up
the timeouts causes _more_ flakes right now :(
The remaining flake occurs due to a mysterious packet loss. This
doesn't affect normal tailscaled operations, so until I track down
where the loss occurs and fix it, the flaky test is going to be
lenient about packet loss (but not about whether the spray logic
worked).
Signed-off-by: David Anderson <danderson@tailscale.com>
It previously passed incorrectly due to bugs. With those fixed,
it becomes flaky for 2 reasons. One of them is the wireguard handshake
race, which can eat the 1st sprayed packet and prevent roamAddr
discovery. This change fixes that failure, by spreading the test
traffic out enough that additional spraying occurs.
Signed-Off-By: David Anderson <danderson@tailscale.com>
The previous code would skip the DERP short-circuit if roamAddr
was set, which is not what we wanted. More generally, hitting
any of the fast path conditions is a direct return, so we can
just have 3 standalone branches rather than 'else if' stuff.
Signed-Off-By: David Anderson <danderson@tailscale.com>
The effect is subtle: when we're not spraying packets, and have not yet
figured out a curAddr, and we're not spraying, we end up sending to
whatever the first IP is in the iteration order. In English, that
means "when we have no idea where to send packets, and we've given
up on sending to everyone, just send to the first addr we see in
the list."
This is, in general, what we want, because the addrs are in sorted
preference order, low to high, and DERP is the least preferred
destination. So, when we have no idea where to send, send to DERP,
right?
... Except for very historical reasons, appendDests iterated through
addresses in _reverse_ order, most preferred to least preferred.
crawshaw@ believes this was part of the earliest handshaking
algorithm magicsock had, where it slowly iterated through possible
destinations and poked handshakes to them one at a time.
Anyway, because of this historical reverse iteration, in the case
described above of "we have no idea where to send", the code would
end up sending to the _most_ preferred candidate address, rather
than the _least_ preferred. So when in doubt, we'd end up firing
packets into the blackhole of some LAN address that doesn't work,
and connectivity would not work.
This case only comes up if all your non-DERP connectivity options
have failed, so we more or less failed to detect it because we
didn't have a pathological test box deployed. Worse, codependent
bug 2839854994 made DERP accidentally
work sometimes anyway by incorrectly exploiting roamAddr behavior,
albeit at the cost of making DERP traffic symmetric. In fixing
DERP to once again be asymmetric, we effectively removed the
bandaid that was concealing this bug.
Signed-Off-By: David Anderson <danderson@tailscale.com>
DERP traffic is asymmetric by design, with nodes always sending
to their peer's home DERP server. However, if roamAddr is set,
magicsock will always push data there, rather than let DERP
server selection do its thing, so we end up accidentally
creating a symmetric flow.
Signed-Off-By: David Anderson <danderson@tailscale.com>
I started to write a full DNS caching resolver and I realized it was
overkill and wouldn't work on Windows even in Go 1.14 yet, so I'm
doing this tiny one instead for now, just for all our netcheck STUN
derp lookups, and connections to DERP servers. (This will be caching a
exactly 8 DNS entries, all ours.)
Fixes#145 (can be better later, of course)
The value predates the introduction of AddrSet which replaces
the index by tracking curAddr directly.
Signed-off-by: David Crawshaw <crawshaw@tailscale.com>
This avoids a non-obvious data race, where the JSON decoder ends
up creating do-nothing writes into global variables.
==================
WARNING: DATA RACE
Write at 0x0000011e1860 by goroutine 201:
tailscale.com/wgengine/packet.(*IP).UnmarshalJSON()
/home/crawshaw/repo/corp/oss/wgengine/packet/packet.go:83 +0x2d9
encoding/json.(*decodeState).literalStore()
/home/crawshaw/go/go/src/encoding/json/decode.go:877 +0x445e
...
encoding/json.Unmarshal()
/home/crawshaw/go/go/src/encoding/json/decode.go:107 +0x1de
tailscale.com/control/controlclient.(*Direct).decodeMsg()
/home/crawshaw/repo/corp/oss/control/controlclient/direct.go:615 +0x1ab
tailscale.com/control/controlclient.(*Direct).PollNetMap()
/home/crawshaw/repo/corp/oss/control/controlclient/direct.go:525 +0x1053
tailscale.com/control/controlclient.(*Client).mapRoutine()
/home/crawshaw/repo/corp/oss/control/controlclient/auto.go:428 +0x3a6
Previous read at 0x0000011e1860 by goroutine 86:
tailscale.com/wgengine/filter.matchIPWithoutPorts()
/home/crawshaw/repo/corp/oss/wgengine/filter/match.go:108 +0x91
tailscale.com/wgengine/filter.(*Filter).runIn()
/home/crawshaw/repo/corp/oss/wgengine/filter/filter.go:147 +0x3c6
tailscale.com/wgengine/filter.(*Filter).RunIn()
/home/crawshaw/repo/corp/oss/wgengine/filter/filter.go:127 +0xb0
tailscale.com/wgengine.(*userspaceEngine).SetFilter.func1()
/home/crawshaw/repo/corp/oss/wgengine/userspace.go:390 +0xfc
github.com/tailscale/wireguard-go/device.(*Device).RoutineDecryption()
/home/crawshaw/repo/corp/wireguard-go/device/receive.go:295 +0xa1f
For #112
Signed-off-by: David Crawshaw <crawshaw@tailscale.com>
Because wgLock is held while some wireguard-go methods run,
trying to hold wgLock during HandshakeDone potentially creates
lock cycles between wgengine and internals of wireguard-go.
Arguably wireguard-go should call HandshakeDone in a new goroutine,
but until its API promises that, don't make any assumptions here.
Maybe for #110.
Signed-off-by: David Crawshaw <crawshaw@tailscale.com>
For 3 seconds after a successful handshake, wgengine will send a
ping packet every 300ms to its peer. This ensures the spray logic
in magicsock has something to spray.
Signed-off-by: David Crawshaw <crawshaw@tailscale.com>
In particular, this is designed to catch the case where a
HandshakeInitiation packet is sent out but the intermediate NATs
have not been primed, so the packet passes over DERP.
In that case, the HandshakeResponse also comes back over DERP,
and the connection proceeds via DERP without ever trying to punch
through the NAT.
With this change, the HandshakeResponse (which was sprayed out
and so primed one NAT) triggers an UpdateDst, which triggers
the extra spray logic.
(For this to work, there has to be an initial supply of packets
to send on to a peer for the three seconds following a handshake.
The source of these packets is left as a future exercise.)
Signed-off-by: David Crawshaw <crawshaw@tailscale.com>