During server reconfiguration, plugin instances set up for the old views
are unloaded very close to the end of the whole process, after new
plugin instances are set up. As the log message announcing plugin
unloading is emitted at the default "info" level, the user might be
misled into thinking that it is the new plugin instances that are being
unloaded for some reason, particularly because all other messages logged
at the "info" level around the same time inform about setting things up
rather than tearing them down. Since no distinction is currently made
between destroying a view due to reconfiguration and due to a shutdown
in progress, there is no easy way to vary the contents of the log
message depending on circumstances. Since this message is not a
particularly critical one, demote it to debug level to prevent
confusion.
When the "library" part of a "plugin" configuration stanza does not
contain at least one path separator, treat it as a filename and assume
it is a name of a shared object present in the named plugin installation
directory. Absolute and relative paths can still be used and will be
used verbatim. Get the full path to a plugin before attempting to
check/register it so that all relevant log messages include the same
plugin path (apart from the one logged when the full path cannot be
determined).
Implement a helper function which, given an input string:
- copies it verbatim if it contains at least one path separator,
- prepends the named plugin installation directory to it otherwise.
This function will allow configuration parsing code to conveniently
determine the full path to a plugin module given either a path or a
filename.
While other, simpler ways exist for making sure filenames passed to
dlopen() cause the latter to look for shared objects in a specific
directory, they are very platform-specific. Using full paths is thus
likely the most portable and reliable solution.
Also added unit tests for ns_plugin_expandpath() to ensure it behaves
as expected for absolute paths, relative paths, and filenames, for
various target buffer sizes.
(Note: plugins share a directory with named on Windows; there is no
default plugin path. Therefore the source path is copied to the
destination path with no modification.)
in query_respond_any(), the assumption had previously been made that it
was impossible to get past iterating the node with a return value of
ISC_R_NOMORE but not have found any records, unless we were searching
for RRSIG or SIG. however, it is possible for other types to exist but
be hidden, such as when the zone is transitioning from insecure to
secure and DNSSEC types are encountered, and this situation could
trigger an assertion. removed the assertion and reorganized the code.
In case when a zone fails to load because the file does not exist
or is malformed, we should not run the callback that updates the
zone database when the load is done. This is achieved by
unregistering the callbacks if at zone load end if the result
indicates something else than success.
As pointed out in !813 db_registered is sort of redundant. It is
set to `true` only in `dns_zone_rpz_enable_db()` right before the
`dns_rpz_dbupdate_callback()` callback is registered. It is only
required in that callback and it is the only place that the callback
is registered. Therefore there is no path that that `REQUIRE` can
fail.
The `db_registered` variable is only set to `false` in
`dns_rpz_new_zone`, so it is not like the variable is unset again
later.
The only other place where `db_registered` is checked is in
`rpz_detach()`. If `true`, it will call
`dns_db_updatenotify_unregister()`. However if that happens, the
`db_registered` is not set back to `false` thus this implies that
this may happen multiple times. If called a second time, most
likely the unregister function will return `ISC_R_NOTFOUND`, but
the return value is not checked anyway. So it can do without the
`db_registered` check.
This may happen when loading an RPZ failed and the code path skips
calling dns_db_endload(). The dns_rpz_zone_t object is still kept
marked as having registered db. So when this object is finally
destroyed in rpz_detach(), this code will incorrectly call
`dns_db_updatenotify_unregister()`:
if (rpz->db_registered)
dns_db_updatenotify_unregister(rpz->db,
dns_rpz_dbupdate_callback, rpz);
and trigger this assertion failure:
REQUIRE(db != NULL);
To fix this, only call `dns_db_updatenotify_unregister()` when
`rpz->db` is not NULL.
If `dns_dnssec_keyfromrdata` failed we don't need to call
`dst_key_free` because no `dstkey` was created. Doing so
nevertheless will result in an assertion failure.
This can happen if the key uses an unsupported algorithm.
When a mirror zone is verified, the 'ignore_kskflag' argument passed to
dns_zoneverify_dnssec() is set to false. This means that in order for
its verification to succeed, a mirror zone needs to have at least one
key with the SEP bit set configured as a trust anchor. This brings no
security benefit and prevents zones signed only using keys without the
SEP bit set from being mirrored, so change the value of the
'ignore_kskflag' argument passed to dns_zoneverify_dnssec() to true.
The "mirror" system test checks whether log messages announcing a mirror
zone coming into effect are emitted properly. However, the helper
functions responsible for waiting for zone transfers and zone loading to
complete do not wait for these exact log messages, but rather for other
ones preceding them, which introduces a possibility of false positives.
This problem cannot be addressed by just changing the log message to
look for because the test still needs to discern between transferring a
zone and loading a zone.
Add two new log messages at debug level 99 (which is what named
instances used in system tests are configured with) that are to be
emitted after the log messages announcing a mirror zone coming into
effect. Tweak the aforementioned helper functions to only return once
the log messages they originally looked for are followed by the newly
added log messages. This reliably prevents races when looking for
"mirror zone is now in use" log messages and also enables a workaround
previously put into place in the "mirror" system test to be reverted.
Transfer statistics are currently only reported for incoming transfers,
even though they are equally useful for outgoing transfers. Define a
separate structure for keeping track of the number of messages, records,
and bytes sent during each outgoing transfer, along with the time each
outgoing transfer took. Repurpose the 'nmsg' field of the xfrout_ctx_t
structure for tracking the number of messages actually sent, ensuring it
is only increased after isc_socket_send() indicates success. Report the
statistics gathered when an outgoing transfer completes.
The 'nmsg' field of the xfrout_ctx_t structure is an integer, even
though it is only ever compared against 0 (for tracking whether the
QUESTION section has already been sent to the client). Use a boolean
instead as it is more appropriate and also enables 'nmsg' to be
repurposed.
- there was a memory leak when using negotiated TSIG keys.
- TKEY responses could only be signed when using a newly negotiated
key; if an existent matching TSIG was found in in the keyring it
would not be used.
- options that were flagged as obsolete or not implemented in 9.0.0
are now flagged as "ancient", and are a fatal error
- the ARM has been updated to remove these, along with other
obsolete descriptions of BIND 8 behavior
- the log message for obsolete options explicitly recommends removal
This adds a test for rndc dumpdb to ensure the correct "stale
comment" is printed. It also adds a test for non-stale data to
ensure no "stale comment" is printed for active RRsets.
In addition, the serve-stale tests are hardened with more accurate
grep calls.
This change makes rndc dumpdb correctly print the "; stale" line.
It also provides extra information on how long this data may still
be served to clients (in other words how long the stale RRset may
still be used).