This patch removes the crappy, half-backed COM initialization used by `go-ole`
and replaces that with the `StartRuntime` function from `wingoes`, a library I
have started which, among other things, initializes COM properly.
In particular, we should always be initializing COM to use the multithreaded
apartment. Every single OS thread in the process becomes implicitly initialized
as part of the MTA, so we do not need to concern ourselves as to whether or not
any particular OS thread has initialized COM. Furthermore, we no longer need to
lock the OS thread when calling methods on COM interfaces.
Single-threaded apartments are designed solely for working with Win32 threads
that have a message pump; any other use of the STA is invalid.
Fixes https://github.com/tailscale/tailscale/issues/3137
Signed-off-by: Aaron Klotz <aaron@tailscale.com>
The health package was turning into a rando dumping ground. Make a new
Warnable type instead that callers can request an instance of, and
then Set it locally in their code without the health package being
aware of all the things that are warnable. (For plenty of things the
health package will want to know details of how Tailscale works so it
can better prioritize/suppress errors, but lots of the warnings are
pretty leaf-y and unrelated)
This just moves two of the health warnings. Can probably move more
later.
Change-Id: I51e50e46eb633f4e96ced503d3b18a1891de1452
Signed-off-by: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@tailscale.com>
Always set the MTU to the Tailscale default MTU. In practice we are
missing applying an MTU for IPv6 on Windows prior to this patch.
This is the simplest patch to fix the problem, the code in here needs
some more refactoring.
Fixes#5914
Signed-off-by: James Tucker <james@tailscale.com>
Link-local addresses on the Tailscale interface are not routable.
Ideally they would be removed, however, a concern exists that the
operating system will attempt to re-add them which would lead to
thrashing.
Setting SkipAsSource attempts to avoid production of packets using the
address as a source in any default behaviors.
Before, in powershell: `ping (hostname)` would ping the link-local
address of the Tailscale interface, and fail.
After: `ping (hostname)` now pings the link-local address on the next
highest priority metric local interface.
Fixes#4647
Signed-off-by: James Tucker <james@tailscale.com>
Fixes#4647
It seems that Windows creates a link-local address for the TUN driver, seemingly
based on the (fixed) adapter GUID. This results in a fixed MAC address, which
for some reason doesn't handle loopback correctly. Given the derived link-local
address is preferred for lookups (thanks LLMNR), traffic which addresses the
current node by hostname uses this broken address and never works.
To address this, we remove the broken link-local address from the wintun adapter.
Signed-off-by: Tom DNetto <tom@tailscale.com>
github.com/go-multierror/multierror served us well.
But we need a few feature from it (implement Is),
and it's not worth maintaining a fork of such a small module.
Instead, I did a clean room implementation inspired by its API.
Signed-off-by: Josh Bleecher Snyder <josh@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 is necessary because either protocol can be disabled globally by a
Windows registry policy, at which point trying to touch that address
family results in "Element not found" errors. This change skips programming
address families that Windows tell us are unavailable.
Fixes#1396.
Signed-off-by: David Anderson <danderson@tailscale.com>
On Windows, configureInterface starts a goroutine reconfiguring the
Windows firewall.
But if configureInterface fails later, that goroutine kept running and
likely failing forever, spamming logs. Make it stop quietly if its
launching goroutine filed.
Use golang.zx2c4.com/wireguard/windows/tunnel/winipcfg
instead of github.com/tailscale/winipcfg-go package.
Updates #760
Signed-off-by: Alex Brainman <alex.brainman@gmail.com>
Part of unforking our winipcfg-go and using upstream (#760), move our
additions into our repo. (We might upstream them later if upstream has
interest)
Originally these were:
@apenwarr: "Add ifc.SyncAddresses() and SyncRoutes()."
609dcf2df5
@bradfitz: "winipcfg: make Interface.AddRoutes do as much as possible, return combined error"
e9f93d53f3
@bradfitz: "prevent unnecessary Interface.SyncAddresses work; normalize IPNets in deltaNets"
decb9ee8e1
Might fix it. I've spent too much time failing to reproduce the issue. This doesn't
seem to make it worse, though (it still runs for me), so I'll include this and
see if it helps others while I still work on a reliable way to reproduce it.
Updates tailscale/corp#474
Otherwise when PAC server is down, we log, and each log entry is a new
HTTP request (from logtail) and a new GetProxyForURL call, which again
logs, non-stop. This is also nicer to the WinHTTP service.
Then also hook up link change notifications to the cache to reset it
if there's a chance the network might work sooner.
Also remove rebinding logic from the windows router. Magicsock will
instead rebind based on link change signals.
Signed-off-by: David Anderson <danderson@tailscale.com>
Instead, pass in only exactly the relevant configuration pieces
that the OS network stack cares about.
Signed-off-by: David Anderson <danderson@tailscale.com>