David Crawshaw d139fa9c92 net/interfaces: use a uint32_t for ipv4 address
The code was using a C "int", which is a signed 32-bit integer.
That means some valid IP addresses were negative numbers.
(In particular, the default router address handed out by AT&T
fiber: 192.168.1.254. No I don't know why they do that.)
A negative number is < 255, and so was treated by the Go code
as an error.

This fixes the unit test failure:

	$ go test -v -run=TestLikelyHomeRouterIPSyscallExec ./net/interfaces
	=== RUN   TestLikelyHomeRouterIPSyscallExec
	    interfaces_darwin_cgo_test.go:15: syscall() = invalid IP, false, netstat = 192.168.1.254, true
	--- FAIL: TestLikelyHomeRouterIPSyscallExec (0.00s)

Signed-off-by: David Crawshaw <crawshaw@tailscale.com>
2021-02-02 13:32:58 -08:00
..