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path: root/src/resolve/resolved-dns-scope.c
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2015-12-10resolved: honour RFC6761's ban on the invalid TLDLennart Poettering
2015-12-10resolved: add more linked packets for overlong known answersDaniel Mack
For mDNS, if we're unable to stuff all known answers into the given packet, allocate a new one, push the RR into that one and link it to the current one.
2015-12-10resolved: handle linked packet in dns_scope_emit()Daniel Mack
In dns_scope_emit(), walk the list of additional packets and emit all of them. Set the TC bit in all but the last of them. This is specific to mDNS, so an assertion is triggered if used with other protocols.
2015-12-09resolved: don't send .local requests to DNS serversDaniel Mack
DNS names ending with .local are specific to mDNS, so don't use them on DNS scopes.
2015-12-08resolved: create dns scopes for mDNSDaniel Mack
Follow what LLMNR does, and create per-link DnsScope objects.
2015-12-08resolved: add code to join/leave mDNS multicast groupsDaniel Mack
Per link, join the mDNS multicast groups when the scope is created, and leave it again when the scope goes away.
2015-12-03resolved: add a concept of "authenticated" responsesLennart Poettering
This adds a new SD_RESOLVED_AUTHENTICATED flag for responses we return on the bus. When set, then the data has been authenticated. For now this mostly reflects the DNSSEC AD bit, if DNSSEC=trust is set. As soon as the client-side validation is complete it will be hooked up to this flag too. We also set this bit whenver we generated the data ourselves, for example, because it originates in our local LLMNR zone, or from the built-in trust anchor database. The "systemd-resolve-host" tool has been updated to show the flag state for the data it shows.
2015-12-03resolved: rework how we allow allow queries to be dispatched to scopesLennart Poettering
Previously, we'd never do any single-label or root domain lookups via DNS, thus leaving single-label lookups to LLMNR and the search path logic in order that single-label names don't leak too easily onto the internet. With this change we open things up a bit, and only prohibit A/AAAA lookups of single-label/root domains, but allow all other lookups. This should provide similar protection, but allow us to resolve DNSKEY+DS RRs for the top-level and root domains. (This also simplifies handling of the search domain detection, and gets rid of dns_scope_has_search_domains() in favour of dns_scope_get_search_domains()).
2015-12-03resolved: refuse resolving of a number of domains listed in RFC6303Lennart Poettering
We already blacklisted a few domains, add more.
2015-12-02resolved: add code to generate the wire format for a single RRLennart Poettering
This adds dns_resource_record_to_wire_format() that generates the raw wire-format of a single DnsResourceRecord object, and caches it in the object, optionally in DNSSEC canonical form. This call is used later to generate the RR serialization of RRs to verify. This adds four new fields to DnsResourceRecord objects: - wire_format points to the buffer with the wire-format version of the RR - wire_format_size stores the size of that buffer - wire_format_rdata_offset specifies the index into the buffer where the RDATA of the RR begins (i.e. the size of the key part of the RR). - wire_format_canonical is a boolean that stores whether the cached wire format is in DNSSEC canonical form or not. Note that this patch adds a mode where a DnsPacket is allocated on the stack (instead of on the heap), so that it is cheaper to reuse the DnsPacket object for generating this wire format. After all we reuse the DnsPacket object for this, since it comes with all the dynamic memory management, and serialization calls we need anyway.
2015-11-27resolved: announce support for large UDP packetsTom Gundersen
This is often needed for proper DNSSEC support, and even to handle AAAA records without falling back to TCP. If the path between the client and server is fully compliant, this should always work, however, that is not the case, and overlarge packets will get mysteriously lost in some cases. For that reason, we use a similar fallback mechanism as we do for palin EDNS0, EDNS0+DO, etc.: The large UDP size feature is different from the other supported feature, as we cannot simply verify that it works based on receiving a reply (as the server will usually send us much smaller packets than what we claim to support, so simply receiving a reply does not mean much). For that reason, we keep track of the largest UDP packet we ever received, as this is the smallest known good size (defaulting to the standard 512 bytes). If announcing the default large size of 4096 fails (in the same way as the other features), we fall back to the known good size. The same logic of retrying after a grace-period applies.
2015-11-27resolved: set the DNSSEC OK (DO) flagTom Gundersen
This indicates that we can handle DNSSEC records (per RFC3225), even if all we do is silently drop them. This feature requires EDNS0 support. As we do not yet support larger UDP packets, this feature increases the risk of getting truncated packets. Similarly to how we fall back to plain UDP if EDNS0 fails, we will fall back to plain EDNS0 if EDNS0+DO fails (with the same logic of remembering success and retrying after a grace period after failure).
2015-11-27resolved: implement minimal EDNS0 supportTom Gundersen
This is a minimal implementation of RFC6891. Only default values are used, so in reality this will be a noop. EDNS0 support is dependent on the current server's feature level, so appending the OPT pseudo RR is done when the packet is emitted, rather than when it is assembled. To handle different feature levels on retransmission, we strip off the OPT RR again after sending the packet. Similarly, to how we fall back to TCP if UDP fails, we fall back to plain UDP if EDNS0 fails (but if EDNS0 ever succeeded we never fall back again, and after a timeout we will retry EDNS0).
2015-11-27resolved: fallback to TCP if UDP failsTom Gundersen
This is inspired by the logic in BIND [0], follow-up patches will implement the reset of that scheme. If we get a server error back, or if after several attempts we don't get a reply at all, we switch from UDP to TCP for the given server for the current and all subsequent requests. However, if we ever successfully received a reply over UDP, we never fall back to TCP, and once a grace-period has passed, we try to upgrade again to using UDP. The grace-period starts off at five minutes after the current feature level was verified and then grows exponentially to six hours. This is to mitigate problems due to temporary lack of network connectivity, but at the same time avoid flooding the network with retries when the feature attempted feature level genuinely does not work. Note that UDP is likely much more commonly supported than TCP, but depending on the path between the client and the server, we may have more luck with TCP in case something is wrong. We really do prefer UDP though, as that is much more lightweight, that is why TCP is only the last resort. [0]: <https://kb.isc.org/article/AA-01219/0/Refinements-to-EDNS-fallback-behavior-can-cause-different-outcomes-in-Recursive-Servers.html>
2015-11-27resolved: handle properly if there are multiple transactions for the same ↵Lennart Poettering
key per scope When the zone probing code looks for a transaction to reuse it will refuse to look at transactions that have been answered from cache or the zone itself, but insist on the network. This has the effect that there might be multiple transactions around for the same key on the same scope. Previously we'd track all transactions in a hashmap, indexed by the key, which implied that there would be only one transaction per key, per scope. With this change the hashmap will only store the most recent transaction per key, and a linked list will be used to track all transactions per scope, allowing multiple per-key per-scope. Note that the linked list fields for this actually already existed in the DnsTransaction structure, but were previously unused.
2015-11-27resolved: for a transaction, keep track where the answer data came fromLennart Poettering
Let's track where the data came from: from the network, the cache or the local zone. This is not only useful for debugging purposes, but is also useful when the zone probing wants to ensure it's not reusing transactions that were answered from the cache or the zone itself.
2015-11-25dns-domain: simplify dns_name_is_root() and dns_name_is_single_label()Lennart Poettering
Let's change the return value to bool. If we encounter an error while parsing, return "false" instead of the actual parsing error, after all the specified hostname does not qualify for what the function is supposed to test. Dealing with the additional error codes was always cumbersome, and easily misused, like for example in the DHCP code. Let's also rename the functions from dns_name_root() to dns_name_is_root(), to indicate that this function checks something and returns a bool. Similar for dns_name_is_signal_label().
2015-11-25resolved: fully support DNS search domainsLennart Poettering
This adds support for searching single-label hostnames in a set of configured search domains. A new object DnsQueryCandidate is added that links queries to scopes. It keeps track of the search domain last used for a query on a specific link. Whenever a host name was unsuccessfuly resolved on a scope all its transactions are flushed out and replaced by a new set, with the next search domain appended. This also adds a new flag SD_RESOLVED_NO_SEARCH to disable search domain behaviour. The "systemd-resolve-host" tool is updated to make this configurable via --search=. Fixes #1697
2015-11-25resolved: add a generic DnsSearchDomain conceptLennart Poettering
With this change, we add a new object to resolved, "DnsSearchDomain=" which wraps a search domain. This is then used to introduce a global search domain list, in addition to the existing per-link search domain list which is reword to make use of this new object too. This is preparation for implement proper unicast DNS search domain support.
2015-11-25resolved: indent less, by exiting earlierLennart Poettering
2015-11-18resolved: simplify dns zone logic: take a single key when looking up entriesLennart Poettering
Instead of taking a DnsQuestion object (i.e. an array of keys) only take a single key. This simplifies things a bit, and as DNS/LLMNR require a single question per query message was unnecessary anyway. This mimics a similar change that was done a while ago for the dns cache logic.
2015-10-27util-lib: split out allocation calls into alloc-util.[ch]Lennart Poettering
2015-10-25util-lib: split out fd-related operations into fd-util.[ch]Lennart Poettering
There are more than enough to deserve their own .c file, hence move them over.
2015-08-26resolved: dump cache and zone contents to syslog on SIGUSR1Lennart Poettering
2015-08-25resolve: fix regression in dns-scopeDaniel Mack
Bring back a return statement 106784eb errornously removed. Thanks to @phomes for reporting.
2015-08-25resolved: use switch-case statements for protocol detailsDaniel Mack
With more protocols to come, switch repetitive if-else blocks with a switch-case statements.
2015-08-24resolved: replace transaction list by hashmapLennart Poettering
Right now we keep track of ongoing transactions in a linked listed for each scope. Replace this by a hashmap that is indexed by the RR key. Given that all ongoing transactions will be placed in pretty much the same scopes usually this should optimize behaviour. We used to require a list here, since we wanted to do "superset" query checks, but this became obsolete since transactions are now single-key instead of multi-key.
2015-08-21resolved: only maintain one question RR key per transactionLennart Poettering
Let's simplify things and only maintain a single RR key per transaction object, instead of a full DnsQuestion. Unicast DNS and LLMNR don't support multiple questions per packet anway, and Multicast DNS suggests coalescing questions beyond a single dns query, across the whole system.
2015-08-21resolved: rework synthesizing logicLennart Poettering
With this change we'll now also generate synthesized RRs for the local LLMNR hostname (first label of system hostname), the local mDNS hostname (first label of system hostname suffixed with .local), the "gateway" hostname and all the reverse PTRs. This hence takes over part of what nss-myhostname already implemented. Local hostnames resolve to the set of local IP addresses. Since the addresses are possibly on different interfaces it is necessary to change the internal DnsAnswer object to track per-RR interface indexes, and to change the bus API to always return the interface per-address rather than per-reply. This change also patches the existing clients for resolved accordingly (nss-resolve + systemd-resolve-host). This also changes the routing logic for queries slightly: we now ensure that the local hostname is never resolved via LLMNR, thus making it trustable on the local system.
2015-08-14resolved: never allow routing of "localhost" queries to DNS or LLMNRLennart Poettering
We should never allow leaking of "localhost" queries onto the network, even if there's an explicit domain rotue set for this.
2015-08-03resolved: transaction - exponentially increase retry timeoutsTom Gundersen
Rather than fixing this to 5s for unicast DNS and 1s for LLMNR, start at a tenth of those values and increase exponentially until the old values are reached. For LLMNR the recommended timeout for IEEE802 networks (which basically means all of the ones we care about) is 100ms, so that should be uncontroversial. For unicast DNS I have found no recommended value. However, it seems vastly more likely that hitting a 500ms timeout is casued by a packet loss, rather than the RTT genuinely being greater than 500ms, so taking this as a startnig value seems reasonable to me. In the common case this greatly reduces the latency due to normal packet loss. Moreover, once we get support for probing for features, this means that we can send more packets before degrading the feature level whilst still allowing us to settle on the correct feature level in a reasonable timeframe. The timeouts are tracked per server (or per scope for the multicast protocols), and once a server (or scope) receives a successfull package the timeout is reset. We also track the largest RTT for the given server/scope, and always start our timouts at twice the largest observed RTT.
2015-07-29resolved: never attempt to resolve loopback addresses via DNS/LLMNR/mDNSLennart Poettering
We already refuse to resolve "localhost", hence we should also refuse resolving "127.0.0.1" and friends.
2015-07-27resolved: scope - write() unicast DNS packetsTom Gundersen
As we have connect()ed to the desired DNS server, we no longer need to pass control messages manually when sending packets. Simplify the logic accordingly.
2015-07-27resolved: transaction - introduce dns_transaction_emit()Tom Gundersen
This function emits the UDP packet via the scope, but first it will determine the current server (and connect to it) and store the server in the transaction. This should not change the behavior, but simplifies the code.
2015-07-27resolved: transaction - move DNS UDP socket creation to the scopeTom Gundersen
With access to the server when creating the socket, we can connect() to the server and hence simplify message sending and receiving in follow-up patches.
2015-07-27resloved: transaction - unify IPv4 and IPv6 socketsTom Gundersen
A transaction can only have one socket at a time, so no need to distinguish these.
2015-07-23resolve: drop dns_scope_good_dns_server()Lennart Poettering
It's not used anymore since 29815b6c608b836cada5e349d06a96b63eaa65f3, hence let's remove it from the sources.
2015-07-14resolved: use one UDP socket per transactionTom Gundersen
We used to have one global socket, use one per transaction instead. This has the side-effect of giving us a random UDP port per transaction, and hence increasing the entropy and making cache poisoining significantly harder to achieve. We still reuse the same port number for packets belonging to the same transaction (resent packets).
2015-07-14resolved: pin the server used in a transactionTom Gundersen
We want to discover information about the server and use that in when crafting packets to be resent.
2015-07-14resolved: packet - ensure there is space for IP+UDP headersTom Gundersen
Currently we only make sure our links can handle the size of the payload witohut taking the headers into account.
2015-07-13resolved: separate LLMNR specific header bitsDaniel Mack
The C and T bits in the DNS packet header definitions are specific to LLMNR. In regular DNS, they are called AA and RD instead. Reflect that by calling the macros accordingly, and alias LLMNR specific macros. While at it, define RA, AD and CD getters as well.
2015-07-13resolved: use a #define for LLMNR portDaniel Mack
De-duplicate some magic numbers.
2015-07-13resolved: move LLMNR related functions into separate fileDaniel Mack
2015-06-10resolve: move dns routines into sharedNick Owens
2015-05-18util: split all hostname related calls into hostname-util.cLennart Poettering
2015-04-11shared: add random-util.[ch]Ronny Chevalier
2015-03-13Use space after a silencing (void)Zbigniew Jędrzejewski-Szmek
We were using a space more often than not, and this way is codified in CODING_STYLE.
2015-03-13tree-wide: there is no ENOTSUP on linuxDavid Herrmann
Replace ENOTSUP by EOPNOTSUPP as this is what linux actually uses.
2014-12-11networkd/resolved: correct spacing near eol in code commentsTorstein Husebø
2014-12-03resolved: don't resolve the hostname "gateway" with LLMNR, leave that to ↵Lennart Poettering
nss-myhostname