Age | Commit message (Collapse) | Author |
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It probably doesn't make sense to mix local and global configuration.
Applying global search lists to local DNS servers appears unnecessary
and creates problems because we'll traverse the search domains
non-simultaneously on multiple scopes.
Also see:
https://github.com/systemd/systemd/pull/2031
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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.
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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.
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DnsTransaction objects
Previously we'd only store the DnsPacket in the DnsTransaction, and the
DnsQuery would then take the DnsPacket's DnsAnswer and return it. With
this change we already pull the DnsAnswer out inside the transaction.
We still store the DnsPacket in the transaction, if we have it, since we
still need to determine from which peer a response originates, to
implement caching properly. However, the DnsQuery logic doesn't care
anymore for the packet, it now only looks at answers and rcodes from the
successfuly candidate.
This also has the benefit of unifying how we propagate incoming packets,
data from the local zone or the local cache.
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Let's use a more useful way to write the flags. Also, leave some space
in the middle for the mDNS flags. After all, these flags are exposed on
the bus, and we should really make sure to expose flags that are going
to be stable, hence allow some room here...
(Not that the room really mattered, except to be nice to one's OCD)
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resolved. Fully implement search domains for single-label names
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It may be unexpected to find a CNAME record when doing a reverse lookup, as we
expect to find a PTR record directly. However, it is explicitly supported
according to <https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc2181#section-10.2>, and there
seems to be no benefit to not supporting it.
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The assumption that no NSEC bitmap could be empty due to the presence of the bit representing
the record itself turns out to be flawed. See (the admittedly experimental) RFC4956 for a
counter example.
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The new dns_label_escape() call now operates on a buffer passed in,
similar to dns_label_unescape(). This should make decoding a bit faster,
and nicer.
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For similar reasons as dns_name_is_root() got changed in the previous
commit.
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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().
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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
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For now, let's just expose the LLMNR hostname currently in use; a
combined list of all dns servers with their interface indexes; a
combined list of all search domains with their interface indexes.
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Let's split this out from the resolv.conf parser, so that this becomes
generically useful.
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This copies concepts we introduced for the DnsSearchDomain stuff, and
reworks the operations on lists of dns servers to be reusable and
generic for use both with the Link and the Manager object.
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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.
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Previously, we'd keep adding new dns servers we discover to the end of
our linked list of servers. When we encountered a pre-existing server,
we'd just leave it where it was. In essence that meant that old servers
ended up at the front, and new servers at the end, but not in an order
that would reflect the configuration.
With this change we ensure that every pre-existing server we want to add
again we move to the back of the linked list, so that the order is
stable and in sync with the requested configuration.
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Closes #342.
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Previously, there was a chance of memory corruption, because when
switching to the next DNS server we didn't care whether they linked list
of DNS servers was still valid.
Clean up lifecycle of the dns server logic:
- When a DnsServer object is still in the linked list of DnsServers for
a link or the manager, indicate so with a "linked" boolean field, and
never follow the linked list if that boolean is not set.
- When picking a DnsServer to use for a link ot manager, always
explicitly take a reference.
This also rearranges some logic, to make the tracking of dns servers by
link and globally more alike.
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resolved-dns-server.c
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No functional changes.
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Let's use the same parser when parsing dns server information from
/etc/resolv.conf and our native configuration file.
Also, move all code that manages lists of dns servers to a single place.
resolved-dns-server.c
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Don't propagate any error in this case, it's really not an error.
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Wen DnsQuestion objects are used for DnsQuery objects all contained keys
have to share the same name, but otherwise they generally don't have to,
and this can actually happen in real-life because DnsPacket objects for
mDNS use DnsQuestion for the question section.
Hence, rename:
dns_question_is_valid() to dns_question_is_valid_for_query(), since the
name uniqueness check it does is only relevant when used for a query.
Similar, rename dns_question_name() to dns_question_first_name(),
to be more accurate, as this difference matters if we keys don#t have to
share the same name.
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Most servers apparently always implicitly convert DNAME to CNAME, but
some servers don't, hence implement this properly, as this is required
by edns0.
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This also adds client-side support for this to systemd-resolve-host.
Note that the ResolveService() API can deal both with DNS-SD service
(consisting of service name, type and domain), as well as classic SRV
services (consisting just of a type and a domain), all exposed in the
same call.
This patch also reworks CNAME handling in order to reuse it between
hostname, RR and service lookups.
In contrast to Avahi and Bonjour, this new API will actually reolve the
A/AAAA RRs the SRV RRs point to in one go (unless this is explicitly
disabled). This normally comes for free, as these RRs are sent along
the SRV responses anyway, hence let's make use of that. This makes the
API considerably easier to use, as a single ResolveService() invocation
will return all necessary data to pick a server and connect() to it.
Note that this only implements the DNS-SD resolving step, it does not
implement DNS-SD browsing, as that makes sense primarily on mDNS, due to
its continuous nature.
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We need to free the rtnl watch too.
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RFC 6763 is very clear that TXT RRs should allow arbitrary binary
content, hence let's actually accept that. This also means accepting NUL
bytes in the middle of strings.
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tree-wide: sort includes in *.h
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This is a continuation of the previous include sort patch, which
only sorted for .c files.
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Previously, we'd always generate a packet on the wire, even for names
that are within our local zone. Shortcut this, and always check the
local zone first. This should minimize generated traffic and improve
security.
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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.
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Sort the includes accoding to the new coding style.
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The macro is generically useful for putting together search paths, hence
let's make it truly generic, by dropping the implicit ".d" appending it
does, and leave that to the caller. Also rename it from
CONF_DIRS_NULSTR() to CONF_PATHS_NULSTR(), since it's not strictly about
dirs that way, but any kind of file system path.
Also, mark CONF_DIR_SPLIT_USR() as internal macro by renaming it to
_CONF_PATHS_SPLIT_USR() so that the leading underscore indicates that
it's internal.
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After all, this is not some compiler or C magic, but something very
specific to how systemd works, hence let's move it into def.h, and out
of macro.h
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capability-util.[ch]
The files are named too generically, so that they might conflict with
the upstream project headers. Hence, let's add a "-util" suffix, to
clarify that this are just our utility headers and not any official
upstream headers.
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