In 1.0, subnet relays were not specially handled when WPAD+PAC was
present on the network.
In 1.2, on Windows, subnet relays were disabled if WPAD+PAC was
present. That was what some users wanted, but not others.
This makes it configurable per domain, reverting back to the 1.0
default state of them not being special. Users who want that behavior
can then enable it.
Signed-off-by: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@tailscale.com>
In tests, we force binding to localhost to avoid OS firewall warning
dialogs.
But for IPv6, we were trying (and failing) to bind to 127.0.0.1.
You'd think we'd just say "localhost", but that's apparently ill
defined. See
https://tools.ietf.org/html/draft-ietf-dnsop-let-localhost-be-localhost
and golang/go#22826. (It's bitten me in the past, but I can't
remember specific bugs.)
So use "::1" explicitly for "udp6", which makes the test quieter.
This change is to make JSONHandler error handling intuitive, as before there would be two sources of HTTP status code when HTTPErrors were generated: one as the first return value of the handler function, and one nested inside the HTTPError. Previously, it took the first return value as the status code, and ignored the code inside the HTTPError. Now, it should expect the first return value to be 0 if there is an error, and it takes the status code of the HTTPError to set as the response code.
Signed-off-by: Daniel Chung <daniel@tailscale.com>
The goal is to move some of the shenanigans we have elsewhere into the filter
package, so that all the weird things to do with poking at the filter is in
a single place, behind clean APIs.
Signed-off-by: David Anderson <danderson@tailscale.com>
We still use the packet.* alloc-free types in the data path, but
the compilation from netaddr to packet happens within the filter
package.
Signed-off-by: David Anderson <danderson@tailscale.com>
The output of `wc -l` on darwin starts with a tab:
git rev-list 266f6548611ad0de93e7470eb13731db819f184b..HEAD | wc -l
0
Signed-off-by: David Crawshaw <crawshaw@tailscale.com>
git worktrees have a .git file rather than a .git directory, so building
in a worktree caused version.sh to generate an error.
Signed-off-by: Adrian Dewhurst <adrian@tailscale.com>
Seeing "frontend-provided legacy machine key" was weird (and not quite
accurate) on Linux machines where it comes from the _daemon key's
persist prefs, not the "frontend".
Make the log message distinguish between the cases.
Signed-off-by: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@tailscale.com>
Otherwise log upload HTTP requests generate proxy errrors which
generate logs which generate HTTP requests which generate proxy
errors which generate more logs, etc.
Fixes#879
When the service was running without a client (e.g. after a reboot)
and then the owner logs in and the GUI attaches, the computed state
key changed to "" (driven by frontend prefs), and then it was falling
out of server mode, despite the GUI-provided prefs still saying it
wanted server mode.
Also add some logging. And remove a scary "Access denied" from a
user-visible error, making the two possible already-in-use error
messages consistent with each other.
On Windows, we were previously treating a server used by different
users as a fatal error, which meant the second user (upon starting
Tailscale, explicitly or via Start Up programs) got an invasive error
message dialog.
Instead, give it its own IPN state and change the Notify.ErrMessage to
be details in that state. Then the Windows GUI can be less aggresive
about that happening.
Also,
* wait to close the IPN connection until the server ownership state
changes so the GUI doesn't need to repeatedly reconnect to discover
changes.
* fix a bug discovered during testing: on system reboot, the
ipnserver's serverModeUser was getting cleared while the state
transitioned from Unknown to Running. Instead, track 'inServerMode'
explicitly and remove the old accessor method which was error prone.
* fix a rare bug where the client could start up and set the server
mode prefs in its Start call and we wouldn't persist that to the
StateStore storage's prefs start key. (Previously it was only via a
prefs toggle at runtime)
This makes it easier to integrate this version math into a submodule-ful
world. We'll continue to have regular git tags that parallel the information
in VERSION, so that builds out of this repository behave the same.
Signed-off-by: David Anderson <danderson@tailscale.com>
os.IsNotExist doesn't unwrap errors. errors.Is does.
The ioutil.ReadFile ones happened to be fine but I changed them so
we're consistent with the rule: if the error comes from os, you can
use os.IsNotExist, but from any other package, use errors.Is.
(errors.Is always would also work, but not worth updating all the code)
The motivation here was that we were logging about failure to migrate
legacy relay node prefs file on startup, even though the code tried
to avoid that.
See golang/go#41122
This lets servers using tsweb register expvars
that will track the number of requests ending
in 200s/300s/400s/500s.
Signed-off-by: Josh Bleecher Snyder <josh@tailscale.com>
Amazingly, there doesn't seem to be a documented way of updating network
configuration programmatically in a way that Windows takes notice of.
The naturopathic remedy for this is to invoke ipconfig /registerdns, which
does a variety of harmless things and also invokes the private API that
tells windows to notice new adapter settings. This makes our DNS config
changes stick within a few seconds of us setting them.
If we're invoking a shell command anyway, why futz with the registry at
all? Because netsh has no command for changing the DNS suffix list, and
its commands for setting resolvers requires parsing its output and
keeping track of which server is in what index. Amazingly, twiddling
the registry directly is the less painful option.
Fixes#853.
Signed-off-by: David Anderson <danderson@tailscale.com>
It was especially bad on our GUI platforms with a frontend that polls it.
No need to log it every few seconds if it's unchanged. Make it slightly
less allocate-y while I'm here.