Age | Commit message (Collapse) | Author |
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This is a continuation of the previous include sort patch, which
only sorted for .c files.
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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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There are more than enough to deserve their own .c file, hence move them
over.
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string-util.[ch]
There are more than enough calls doing string manipulations to deserve
its own files, hence do something about it.
This patch also sorts the #include blocks of all files that needed to be
updated, according to the sorting suggestions from CODING_STYLE. Since
pretty much every file needs our string manipulation functions this
effectively means that most files have sorted #include blocks now.
Also touches a few unrelated include files.
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All our hash functions are based on siphash24(), factor out
siphash_init() and siphash24_finalize() and pass the siphash
state to the hash functions rather than the hash key.
This simplifies the hash functions, and in particular makes
composition simpler as calling siphash24_compress() repeatedly
on separate chunks of input has the same effect as first
concatenating the input and then calling siphash23_compress()
on the result.
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- Rely everywhere that we use abs() on the error code passed in anyway,
thus don't need to explicitly negate what we pass in
- Never attach synthetic error number information to log messages. Only
log about errors we *receive* with the error number we got there,
don't log any synthetic error, that don#t even propagate, but just eat
up.
- Be more careful with attaching exactly the error we get, instead of
errno or unrelated errors randomly.
- Fix one occasion where the error number and line number got swapped.
- Make sure we never tape over OOM issues, or inability to resolve
specifiers
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When a NXDATA or a NODATA response is received for an alias it may
include CNAME records from the redirect chain. We should cache the
response for each of these names to avoid needless roundtrips in
the future.
It is not sufficient to do the negative caching only for the
canonical name, as the included redirection chain is not guaranteed
to be complete. In fact, only the final CNAME record from the chain
is guaranteed to be included.
We take care not to cache entries that redirects outside the current
zone, as the SOA will then not be valid.
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CNAME records are special in the way they are treated by DNS servers,
and our cache should mimic that behavior: In case a domain name has an
alias, its CNAME record is returned in place of any other.
Our cache was not doing this despite caching the CNAME records, this
entailed needless lookups to re-resolve the CNAME.
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Only one key is allowed per transaction now, so let's simplify things and only allow putting
one question key into the cache at a time.
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Takes a key and CNAME RR and returns the canonical RR of the right
type. Make use of this in dns_question_redirect().
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Creates a new CNAME RR key with the same class and name as an existing key.
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And set_free() too.
Another Coccinelle patch.
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Another Coccinelle patch.
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Patch via coccinelle.
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Turns this:
r = -errno;
log_error_errno(errno, "foo");
into this:
r = log_error_errno(errno, "foo");
and this:
r = log_error_errno(errno, "foo");
return r;
into this:
return log_error_errno(errno, "foo");
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Otherwise the epoll removal will fail and result in a warning.
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Bring back a return statement 106784eb errornously removed.
Thanks to @phomes for reporting.
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Some flags are defined differently on unicast DNS and LLMNR, let's
document this in the DNS_PACKET_MAKE_FLAGS() macro.
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This partially reverts 106784ebb7b303ae471851100a773ad2aebf5b80, ad
readds separate DNS_PACKET_MAKE_FLAGS() invocations for the LLMNR and
DNS case. This is important since SOme flags have different names and
meanings on LLMNR and on DNS and we should clarify that via the comments
and how we put things together.
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This hopefully makes this a bit more expressive and clarifies that the
fd is not used for the DNS TCP socket. This also mimics how the LLMNR
UDP fd is named in the manager object.
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Currently, dns_cache_put() does a number of things:
1) It unconditionally removes all keys contained in the passed
question before adding keys from the newly arrived answers.
2) It puts positive entries into the cache for all RRs contained
in the answer.
3) It creates negative entries in the cache for all keys in the
question that are not answered.
Allow passing q = NULL in the parameters and skip 1) and 3), so
we can use that function for mDNS responses. In this case, the
question is irrelevant, we are interested in all answers we got.
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Make a scope with invalid protocol state fail as soon as possible.
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With more protocols to come, switch repetitive if-else blocks with a
switch-case statements.
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If we try to resoolve an LLMNR PTR RR we shall connect via TCP directly
to the specified IP address. We already refuse to do this if the address
to resolve is of a different address family as the transaction's scope.
The error returned was EAFNOSUPPORT. Let's change this to ESRCH which is
how we indicate "not server available" when connecting for LLMNR or DNS,
since that's what this really is: we have no server we could connect to
in this address family.
This allows us to ensure that no server errors are always handled the same
way.
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So far we handled immediate "no server" query results differently from
"no server" results we ran into during operation: the former would cause
the dns_query_go() call to fail with ESRCH, the later would result in
the query completion callback to be called.
Remove the duplicate codepaths, by always going through the completion
callback. This allows us to remove quite a number of lines for handling
the ESRCH.
This commit should not alter behaviour at all.
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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.
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only maintain one question RR key per transaction and other fixes
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We do so for Unicast DNS and LLMNR anyway, let's also do this for mDNS,
and simplify things.
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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.
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It shouldn't happen that we try to resolve IPv4 addresses via LLMNR on
IPv6 and vice versa, but let's explicitly verify that we don't turn an
IPv4 LLMNR lookup into an IPv6 TCP connection.
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We explicitly need to turn off name compression when marshalling or
demarshalling RRs for bus transfer, since they otherwise refer to packet
offsets that reference packets that are not transmitted themselves.
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