This commit adds PROXYv2 support into dig by the means of adding
+[no]proxy and +[no]proxy-plain options. Since this commit dig
supports sending PROXYv2 headers on all supported DNS-transports.
The support for PROXYv2 is modelled after that one in kdig.
When all the servers are exhausted for UDP setup emit "no servers
could be reached" in udp_ready(). This message can also be emitted
for a recv_done() error and for TCP connection failure similarly.
Instead of creating new memory pools for each new dns_message, change
dns_message_create() method to optionally accept externally created
dns_fixedname_t and dns_rdataset_t memory pools. This allows us to
preallocate the memory pools in ns_client and dns_resolver units for the
lifetime of dns_resolver_t and ns_clientmgr_t.
the prior practice of passing a dns_name containing the
expanded name of an algorithm to dns_tsigkey_create() and
dns_tsigkey_createfromkey() is unnecessarily cumbersome;
we can now pass the algorithm number instead.
- remove the 'ring' parameter from dns_tsigkey_createfromkey(),
and use dns_tsigkeyring_add() to add key objects to a keyring instead.
- add a magic number to dns_tsigkeyring_t
- change dns_tsigkeyring_dumpanddetach() to dns_tsigkeyring_dump();
we now call dns_tsigkeyring_detach() separately.
- remove 'maxgenerated' from dns_tsigkeyring_t since it never changes.
- style cleanups.
- simplify the function parameters to dns_tsigkey_create():
+ remove 'restored' and 'generated', they're only ever set to false.
+ remove 'creator' because it's only ever set to NULL.
+ remove 'inception' and 'expiry' because they're only ever set to
(0, 0) or (now, now), and either way, this means "never expire".
+ remove 'ring' because we can just use dns_tsigkeyring_add() instead.
- rename dns_keyring_restore() to dns_tsigkeyring_restore() to match the
rest of the functions operating on dns_tsigkeyring objects.
The check_if_done() function can pass control back out to
dighost_shutdown() (which is part of dig.c, host.c, or nslookup.c),
and calling that twice can cause unexpected problems, if it is not
designed to be idempotent.
Since cancel_lookup() calls check_if_done() implicitly, don't call
check_if_done() again when 'next' is NULL.
When fatal is called we may be holding memory allocated by OpenSSL.
This may result in the reference count for the FIPS provider not
going to zero and the shared library not being unloaded during
OPENSSL_cleanup. When the shared library is ultimately unloaded,
when all remaining dynamically loaded libraries are freed, we have
already destroyed the memory context we where using to track memory
leaks / late frees resulting in INSIST being called.
Disable triggering the INSIST when fatal has being called.
The isc_time_now() and isc_time_now_hires() were used inconsistently
through the code - either with status check, or without status check,
or via TIME_NOW() macro with RUNTIME_CHECK() on failure.
Refactor the isc_time_now() and isc_time_now_hires() to always fail when
getting current time has failed, and return the isc_time_t value as
return value instead of passing the pointer to result in the argument.
When the loopmanager is shutting down following a signal,
`dig` and `host` should stop cleanly. Before this commit
they were oblivious to ISC_R_SHUTTINGDOWN.
The `isc_signal` callbacks now report this kind of mistake
with a stack backtrace.
Instead of marking the unused entities with UNUSED(x) macro in the
function body, use a `ISC_ATTR_UNUSED` attribute macro that expans to
C23 [[maybe_unused]] or __attribute__((__unused__)) as fallback.
Change the isc_job_run() to not-make any allocations. The caller must
make sure that it allocates isc_job_t - usually as part of the argument
passed to the callback.
For simple jobs, using isc_async_run() is advised as it allocates its
own separate isc_job_t.
stop and restart the server in the 'tsiggss' test, in order
to confirm that GSS negotiated TSIG keys are saved and restored
when named loads.
added logging to dns_tsigkey_createfromkey() to indicate whether
a key has been statically configured, generated via GSS negotiation,
or restored from a file.
`libirs` used to be a reference implementation of `getaddrinfo` and
related modern resolver APIs. It was stripped down in BIND 9.18
leaving only the `irs_resconf` module, which parses
`/etc/resolv.conf`. I have kept its include path and namespace prefix,
so it remains a little fragment of libirs now embedded in libdns.
as there is no further use of isc_task in BIND, this commit removes
it, along with isc_taskmgr, isc_event, and all other related types.
functions that accepted taskmgr as a parameter have been cleaned up.
as a result of this change, some functions can no longer fail, so
they've been changed to type void, and their callers have been
updated accordingly.
the tasks table has been removed from the statistics channel and
the stats version has been updated. dns_dyndbctx has been changed
to reference the loopmgr instead of taskmgr, and DNS_DYNDB_VERSION
has been udpated as well.
Free/detach tsigkey and sig0key when exiting and then call
dst_lib_destroy if we have previously called dst_lib_init. This will,
in theory, allow OPENSSL_cleanup to free all memory.
removed some functions that are no longer used and unlikely to
be resurrected, and also some that were only used to support Windows
and can now be replaced with generic versions.
* rbt node chains were sized to allow for bitstring labels, so they
had 256 levels; but in the absence of bistrings, 128 is enough.
* dns_byaddr_createptrname() had a redundant options argument,
and a very outdated doc comment.
* A number of comments referred to bitstring labels in a way that is
no longer helpful. (A few informative comments remain.)
Return 'isc_result_t' type value instead of 'bool' to indicate
the actual failure. Rename the function to something not suggesting
a boolean type result. Make changes in the places where the API
function is being used to check for the result code instead of
a boolean value.
DSCP has not been fully working since the network manager was
introduced in 9.16, and has been completely broken since 9.18.
This seems to have caused very few difficulties for anyone,
so we have now marked it as obsolete and removed the
implementation.
To ensure that old config files don't fail, the code to parse
dscp key-value pairs is still present, but a warning is logged
that the feature is obsolete and should not be used. Nothing is
done with configured values, and there is no longer any
range checking.
Additionally to renaming, it changes the function definition so that
it accepts a pointer to pointer instead of returning a pointer to the
new object.
It is mostly done to make it in line with other functions in the
module.
Additionally to renaming, it changes the function definition so that
it accepts a pointer to pointer instead of returning a pointer to the
new object.
It is mostly done to make it in line with other functions in the
module.
Remove the trailing '\0' so that the length field of the dns_name_t
structure is correct. The old data just happens to work with
dns_name_issubdomain but would fail with dns_name_equal.
All we need for compression is a very small hash set of compression
offsets, because most of the information we need (the previously added
names) can be found in the message using the compression offsets.
This change combines dns_compress_find() and dns_compress_add() into
one function dns_compress_name() that both finds any existing suffix,
and adds any new prefix to the table. The old split led to performance
problems caused by duplicate names in the compression context.
Compression contexts are now either small or large, which the caller
chooses depending on the expected size of the message. There is no
dynamic resizing.
There is a behaviour change: compression now acts on all the labels in
each name, instead of just the last few.
A small benchmark suggests this is about 2x faster.
In several places, the structures were cleaned with memset(...)) and
thus the semantic patch converted the isc_mem_get(...) to
isc_mem_getx(..., ISC_MEM_ZERO). Use the designated initializer to
initialized the structures instead of zeroing the memory with
ISC_MEM_ZERO flag as this better matches the intended purpose.
Add new semantic patch to replace the straightfoward uses of:
ptr = isc_mem_{get,allocate}(..., size);
memset(ptr, 0, size);
with the new API call:
ptr = isc_mem_{get,allocate}x(..., size, ISC_MEM_ZERO);
There's a known memory leak in the engine_pkcs11 at the time of writing
this and it interferes with the named ability to check for memory leaks
in the OpenSSL memory context by default.
Add an autoconf option to explicitly enable the memory leak detection,
and use it in the CI except for pkcs11 enabled builds. When this gets
fixed in the engine_pkc11, the option can be enabled by default.
As we can't check the deallocations done in the library memory contexts
by default because it would always fail on non-clean exit (that happens
on error or by calling exit() early), we just want to enable the checks
to be done on normal exit.