This is a prelude to adding more fields, which would otherwise
become more unnamed function params.
Signed-off-by: David Anderson <danderson@tailscale.com>
It's just a config wrapper that passes "use less memory at the
expense of compression" parameters by default, so that we don't
accidentally construct resource-hungry (de)compressors.
Also includes a benchmark that measures the memory cost of the
small variants vs. the stock variants. The savings are significant
on both compressors (~8x less memory) and decompressors (~1.4x less,
not including the savings from the significantly smaller
window on the compression side - with those savings included it's
more like ~140x smaller).
BenchmarkSmallEncoder-8 56174 19354 ns/op 31 B/op 0 allocs/op
BenchmarkSmallEncoderWithBuild-8 2900 382940 ns/op 1746547 B/op 36 allocs/op
BenchmarkStockEncoder-8 48921 25761 ns/op 286 B/op 0 allocs/op
BenchmarkStockEncoderWithBuild-8 426 2630241 ns/op 13843842 B/op 124 allocs/op
BenchmarkSmallDecoder-8 123814 9344 ns/op 0 B/op 0 allocs/op
BenchmarkSmallDecoderWithBuild-8 41547 27455 ns/op 27694 B/op 31 allocs/op
BenchmarkStockDecoder-8 129832 9417 ns/op 1 B/op 0 allocs/op
BenchmarkStockDecoderWithBuild-8 25561 51751 ns/op 39607 B/op 92 allocs/op
Signed-off-by: David Anderson <danderson@tailscale.com>
Update the mapping from ip:port to discokey, so when we retrieve a
packet from the network, we can find the same conn.Endpoint that we
gave to wireguard-go previously, without making it think we've
roamed. (We did, but we're not using its roaming.)
Updates #483
Ping messages now go out somewhat regularly, pong replies are sent,
and pong replies are now partially handled enough to upgrade off DERP
to LAN.
CallMeMaybe packets are sent & received over DERP, but aren't yet
handled. That's next (and regular maintenance timers), and then WAN
should work.
Updates #483
Starting at yesterday's e96f22e560 (convering some UDPAddrs to
IPPorts), Conn.ReceiveIPv4 could return a nil addr, which would make
its way through wireguard-go and blow up later. The DERP read path
wasn't initializing the addr result parameter any more, and wgRecvAddr
wasn't checking it either.
Fixes#515
And while plumbing, a bit of discovery work I'll need: the
endpointOfAddr map to map from validated paths to the discoEndpoint.
Not being populated yet.
Updates #483
This adds a new magicsock endpoint type only used when both sides
support discovery (that is, are advertising a discovery
key). Otherwise the old code is used.
So far the new code only communicates over DERP as proof that the new
code paths are wired up. None of the actually discovery messaging is
implemented yet.
Support for discovery (generating and advertising a key) are still
behind an environment variable for now.
Updates #483
The new deepprint package just walks a Go data structure and writes to
an io.Writer. It's not pretty like go-spew, etc.
We then use it to replace the use of UAPI (which we have a TODO to
remove) to generate signatures of data structures to detect whether
anything changed (without retaining the old copy).
This was necessary because the UAPI conversion ends up trying to do
DNS lookups which an upcoming change depends on not happening.
And track known peers.
Doesn't yet do anything with the messages. (nor does it send any yet)
Start of docs on the message format. More will come in subsequent changes.
Updates #483
The NetworkExtension brings up the interface itself and does not have
access to `ifconfig`, which the underlying BSD userspace router attempts
to use when Up is called.
Signed-off-by: David Crawshaw <crawshaw@tailscale.com>
If there's been 5 minutes of inactivity, stop doing STUN lookups. That
means NAT mappings will expire, but they can resume later when there's
activity again.
We'll do this for all platforms later.
Updates tailscale/corp#320
Signed-off-by: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@tailscale.com>
As part of disabling background STUN packets when idle, we want an
emergency override switch to turn it back on, in case it interacts
poorly in the wild. We'll send that via control, but we'll want to
plumb it down to magicsock via NetworkMap.
Updates tailscale/corp#320
Signed-off-by: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@tailscale.com>
For various reasons (mostly during rollouts or config changes on our
side), nodes may end up connecting to a fallback DERP node in a
region, rather than the primary one we tell them about in the DERP
map.
Connecting to the "wrong" node is fine, but it's in our best interest
for all nodes in a domain to connect to the same node, to reduce
intra-region packet forwarding.
This adds a privileged frame type used by the control system that can
kick off a client connection when they're connected to the wrong node
in a region. Then they hopefully reconnect immediately to the correct
location. (If not, we can leave them alone and stop closing them.)
Updates tailscale/corp#372