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PiperOrigin-RevId: 288772878
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PacketLooping is already a member on the passed Route.
PiperOrigin-RevId: 288721500
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...enabling us to remove the "CreateNamedLoopbackNIC" variant of
CreateNIC and all the plumbing to connect it through to where the value
is read in FindRoute.
PiperOrigin-RevId: 288713093
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Support deprecating network endpoints on a NIC. If an endpoint is deprecated, it
should not be used for new connections unless a more preferred endpoint is not
available, or unless the deprecated endpoint was explicitly requested.
Test: Test that deprecated endpoints are only returned when more preferred
endpoints are not available and SLAAC addresses are deprecated after its
preferred lifetime
PiperOrigin-RevId: 288562705
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Test: Test that an IPv6 link-local address is not auto-generated for loopback
NICs, even when it is enabled for non-loopback NICS.
PiperOrigin-RevId: 288519591
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Pass the NIC-internal name to the NIC name function when generating opaque IIDs
so implementations can use the name that was provided when the NIC was created.
Previously, explicit NICID to NIC name resolution was required from the netstack
integrator.
Tests: Test that the name provided when creating a NIC is passed to the NIC name
function when generating opaque IIDs.
PiperOrigin-RevId: 288395359
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Support using opaque interface identifiers when generating IPv6 addresses via
SLAAC when configured to do so.
Note, this change does not handle retries in response to DAD conflicts yet.
That will also come in a later change.
Test: Test that when SLAAC addresses are generated, they use opaque interface
identifiers when configured to do so.
PiperOrigin-RevId: 288078605
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Support generating opaque interface identifiers as defined by RFC 7217 for
auto-generated IPv6 link-local addresses. Opaque interface identifiers will also
be used for IPv6 addresses auto-generated via SLAAC in a later change.
Note, this change does not handle retries in response to DAD conflicts yet.
That will also come in a later change.
Tests: Test that when configured to generated opaque IIDs, they are properly
generated as outlined by RFC 7217.
PiperOrigin-RevId: 288035349
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PiperOrigin-RevId: 287217899
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Added the ability to get/set the IP_RECVTOS socket option on UDP endpoints. If
enabled, TOS from the incoming Network Header passed as ancillary data in the
ControlMessages.
Test:
* Added unit test to udp_test.go that tests getting/setting as well as
verifying that we receive expected TOS from incoming packet.
* Added a syscall test
PiperOrigin-RevId: 287029703
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This change supports clearing all host-only NDP state when NICs become routers.
All discovered routers, discovered on-link prefixes and auto-generated addresses
will be invalidated when becoming a router. This is because normally, routers do
not process Router Advertisements to discover routers or on-link prefixes, and
do not do SLAAC.
Tests: Unittest to make sure that all discovered routers, discovered prefixes
and auto-generated addresses get invalidated when transitioning from a host to
a router.
PiperOrigin-RevId: 286902309
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PiperOrigin-RevId: 286639163
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When listen(2) is called on an unbound socket, the socket is
automatically bound to a random free port with the local address
set to INADDR_ANY.
PiperOrigin-RevId: 286305906
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This change removes the requirement that a new routing table be provided when a
router or prefix discovery event happens so that an updated routing table may
be provided to the stack at a later time from the event.
This change is to address the use case where the netstack integrator may need to
obtain a lock before providing updated routes in response to the events above.
As an example, say we have an integrator that performs the below two operations
operations as described:
A. Normal route update:
1. Obtain integrator lock
2. Update routes in the integrator
3. Call Stack.SetRouteTable with the updated routes
3.1. Obtain Stack lock
3.2. Update routes in Stack
3.3. Release Stack lock
4. Release integrator lock
B. NDP event triggered route update:
1. Obtain Stack lock
2. Call event handler
2.1. Obtain integrator lock
2.2. Update routes in the integrator
2.3. Release integrator lock
2.4. Return updated routes to update Stack
3. Update routes in Stack
4. Release Stack lock
A deadlock may occur if a Normal route update was attemped at the same time an
NDP event triggered route update was attempted. With threads T1 and T2:
1) T1 -> A.1, A.2
2) T2 -> B.1
3) T1 -> A.3 (hangs at A.3.1 since Stack lock is taken in step 2)
4) T2 -> B.2 (hangs at B.2.1 since integrator lock is taken in step 1)
Test: Existing tests were modified to not provide or expect routing table
changes in response to Router and Prefix discovery events.
PiperOrigin-RevId: 286274712
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This change makes sure that test variables are captured before running tests
in parallel, and removes unneeded buffered channel allocations. This change also
removes unnecessary timeouts.
PiperOrigin-RevId: 286255066
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PiperOrigin-RevId: 286003946
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Fixed a bug where the interface identifier was not properly generated from an
Ethernet address.
Tests: Unittests to make sure the functions generating the EUI64 interface
identifier are correct.
PiperOrigin-RevId: 285494562
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The implementation follows the linux behavior where specifying
a TCP_USER_TIMEOUT will cause the resend timer to honor the
user specified timeout rather than the default rto based timeout.
Further it alters when connections are timedout due to keepalive
failures. It does not alter the behavior of when keepalives are
sent. This is as per the linux behavior.
PiperOrigin-RevId: 285099795
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We're missing several packages that runsc doesn't depend on. Most notable are
several tcpip link packages.
To find packages, I looked at a diff of directories on master vs go:
$ bazel build //:gopath
$ find bazel-bin/gopath/src/gvisor.dev/gvisor/ -type d > /tmp/gopath.txt
$ find . -type d > /tmp/master.txt
$ sed 's|bazel-bin/gopath/src/gvisor.dev/gvisor/||' < /tmp/gopath.txt > /tmp/gopath.trunc.txt
$ sed 's|./||' < /tmp/master.txt > /tmp/master.trunc.txt
$ vimdiff /tmp/gopath.trunc.txt /tmp/master.trunc.txt
Testing packages are still left out because :gopath can't depend on testonly
targets...
PiperOrigin-RevId: 285049029
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This change adds support to let an integrator know when it receives an NDP
Router Advertisement message with the NDP Recursive DNS Server option with at
least one DNS server's address. The stack will not maintain any state related to
the DNS servers - the integrator is expected to maintain any required state and
invalidate the servers after its valid lifetime expires, or refresh the lifetime
when a new one is received for a known DNS server.
Test: Unittest to make sure that an event is sent to the integrator when an NDP
Recursive DNS Server option is received with at least one address.
PiperOrigin-RevId: 284890502
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Next steps include adding support to the transport demuxer and the UDP endpoint.
PiperOrigin-RevId: 284652151
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Fix bugs in updates to TCP CurrentEstablished stat.
Fixes #1277
PiperOrigin-RevId: 284292459
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This change marks the socket as ESTABLISHED and creates the receiver and sender
the moment we send the final ACK in case of an active TCP handshake or when we
receive the final ACK for a passive TCP handshake. Before this change there was
a short window in which an ACK can be received and processed but the state on
the socket is not yet ESTABLISHED.
This can be seen in TestConnectBindToDevice which is flaky because sometimes
the socket is in SYN-SENT and not ESTABLISHED even though the other side has
already received the final ACK of the handshake.
PiperOrigin-RevId: 284277713
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This change allows the netstack to do SLAAC as outlined by RFC 4862 section 5.5.
Note, this change will not break existing uses of netstack as the default
configuration for the stack options is set in such a way that SLAAC
will not be performed. See `stack.Options` and `stack.NDPConfigurations` for
more details.
This change reuses 1 option and introduces a new one that is required to take
advantage of SLAAC, all available under NDPConfigurations:
- HandleRAs: Whether or not NDP RAs are processes
- AutoGenGlobalAddresses: Whether or not SLAAC is performed.
Also note, this change does not deprecate SLAAC generated addresses after the
preferred lifetime. That will come in a later change (b/143713887). Currently,
only the valid lifetime is honoured.
Tests: Unittest to make sure that SLAAC generates and adds addresses only when
configured to do so. Tests also makes sure that conflicts with static addresses
do not modify the static address.
PiperOrigin-RevId: 284265317
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This change adds a type to represent the NDP Recursive DNS Server option, as
defined by RFC 8106 section 5.1.
PiperOrigin-RevId: 284005493
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If the socket is bound to ANY and connected to a loopback address,
getsockname() has to return the loopback address. Without this fix,
getsockname() returns ANY.
PiperOrigin-RevId: 283647781
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The code in rcv.consumeSegment incorrectly transitions to
CLOSED state from LAST-ACK before the final ACK for the FIN.
Further if receiving a segment changes a socket to a closed state
then we should not invoke the sender as the socket is now closed
and sending any segments is incorrect.
PiperOrigin-RevId: 283625300
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This change does not introduce any new features, or modify existing ones.
This change tests handling TCP segments right away for connections that were
completed from a listening endpoint.
PiperOrigin-RevId: 282986457
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This involves allowing getsockopt/setsockopt for the corresponding socket
options, as well as allowing hostinet to process control messages received from
the actual recvmsg syscall.
PiperOrigin-RevId: 282851425
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These are necessary for iptables to read and parse headers for packet filtering.
PiperOrigin-RevId: 282372811
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Packets written via SOCK_RAW are guaranteed to have network headers, but not
transport headers. Check first whether there are enough bytes left in the packet
to contain a transport header before attempting to parse it.
PiperOrigin-RevId: 282363895
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PiperOrigin-RevId: 282194656
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PiperOrigin-RevId: 282068093
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This allows us to ensure that the correct port reservation is released.
Fixes #1217
PiperOrigin-RevId: 282048155
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PiperOrigin-RevId: 282045221
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PiperOrigin-RevId: 282023891
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PiperOrigin-RevId: 280763655
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As we move to CLOSE state from LAST-ACK or TIME-WAIT,
ensure that we re-match all in-flight segments to any
listening endpoint.
Also fix LISTEN state handling of any ACK segments as per RFC793.
Fixes #1153
PiperOrigin-RevId: 280703556
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Sniffer assumed that outgoing packets have transport headers, but
users can write packets via SOCK_RAW with arbitrary transport headers that
netstack doesn't know about. We now explicitly check for the presence of network
and transport headers before assuming they exist.
PiperOrigin-RevId: 280594395
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PiperOrigin-RevId: 280455453
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PiperOrigin-RevId: 280280156
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This change drops TCP packets with a non-unicast IP address as the source or
destination address as TCP is meant for communication between two endpoints.
Test: Make sure that if the source or destination address contains a non-unicast
address, no TCP packet is sent in response and the packet is dropped.
PiperOrigin-RevId: 280073731
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This change allows the netstack to do NDP's Prefix Discovery as outlined by
RFC 4861 section 6.3.4. If configured to do so, when a new on-link prefix is
discovered, the routing table will be updated with a device route through
the nic the RA arrived at. Likewise, when such a prefix gets invalidated, the
device route will be removed.
Note, this change will not break existing uses of netstack as the default
configuration for the stack options is set in such a way that Prefix Discovery
will not be performed. See `stack.Options` and `stack.NDPConfigurations` for
more details.
This change reuses 1 option and introduces a new one that is required to take
advantage of Prefix Discovery, all available under NDPConfigurations:
- HandleRAs: Whether or not NDP RAs are processes
- DiscoverOnLinkPrefixes: Whether or not Prefix Discovery is performed (new)
Another note: for a NIC to process Prefix Information options (in Router
Advertisements), it must not be a router itself. Currently the netstack does not
have per-interface routing configuration; the routing/forwarding configuration
is controlled stack-wide. Therefore, if the stack is configured to enable
forwarding/routing, no router Advertisements (and by extension the Prefix
Information options) will be processed.
Tests: Unittest to make sure that Prefix Discovery and updates to the routing
table only occur if explicitly configured to do so. Unittest to make sure at
max stack.MaxDiscoveredOnLinkPrefixes discovered on-link prefixes are
remembered.
PiperOrigin-RevId: 280049278
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* Basic tests for the SO_REUSEADDR and SO_REUSEPORT options.
* SO_REUSEADDR functional tests for TCP and UDP.
* SO_REUSEADDR and SO_REUSEPORT interaction tests for UDP.
* Stubbed support for UDP getsockopt(SO_REUSEADDR).
PiperOrigin-RevId: 280049265
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PiperOrigin-RevId: 279814493
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This change adds explicit support for honoring the 2MSL timeout
for sockets in TIME_WAIT state. It also adds support for the
TCP_LINGER2 option that allows modification of the FIN_WAIT2
state timeout duration for a given socket.
It also adds an option to modify the Stack wide TIME_WAIT timeout
but this is only for testing. On Linux this is fixed at 60s.
Further, we also now correctly process RST's in CLOSE_WAIT and
close the socket similar to linux without moving it to error
state.
We also now handle SYN in ESTABLISHED state as per
RFC5961#section-4.1. Earlier we would just drop these SYNs.
Which can result in some tests that pass on linux to fail on
gVisor.
Netstack now honors TIME_WAIT correctly as well as handles the
following cases correctly.
- TCP RSTs in TIME_WAIT are ignored.
- A duplicate TCP FIN during TIME_WAIT extends the TIME_WAIT
and a dup ACK is sent in response to the FIN as the dup FIN
indicates potential loss of the original final ACK.
- An out of order segment during TIME_WAIT generates a dup ACK.
- A new SYN w/ a sequence number > the highest sequence number
in the previous connection closes the TIME_WAIT early and
opens a new connection.
Further to make the SYN case work correctly the ISN (Initial
Sequence Number) generation for Netstack has been updated to
be as per RFC. Its not a pure random number anymore and follows
the recommendation in https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc6528#page-3.
The current hash used is not a cryptographically secure hash
function. A separate change will update the hash function used
to Siphash similar to what is used in Linux.
PiperOrigin-RevId: 279106406
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https://github.com/golang/go/wiki/CodeReviewComments#initialisms
This change does not introduce any new functionality. It just renames variables
from `nicid` to `nicID`.
PiperOrigin-RevId: 278992966
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PiperOrigin-RevId: 278979065
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This change allows the netstack to do NDP's Router Discovery as outlined by
RFC 4861 section 6.3.4.
Note, this change will not break existing uses of netstack as the default
configuration for the stack options is set in such a way that Router Discovery
will not be performed. See `stack.Options` and `stack.NDPConfigurations` for
more details.
This change introduces 2 options required to take advantage of Router Discovery,
all available under NDPConfigurations:
- HandleRAs: Whether or not NDP RAs are processes
- DiscoverDefaultRouters: Whether or not Router Discovery is performed
Another note: for a NIC to process Router Advertisements, it must not be a
router itself. Currently the netstack does not have per-interface routing
configuration; the routing/forwarding configuration is controlled stack-wide.
Therefore, if the stack is configured to enable forwarding/routing, no Router
Advertisements will be processed.
Tests: Unittest to make sure that Router Discovery and updates to the routing
table only occur if explicitly configured to do so. Unittest to make sure at
max stack.MaxDiscoveredDefaultRouters discovered default routers are remembered.
PiperOrigin-RevId: 278965143
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PacketBuffers are analogous to Linux's sk_buff. They hold all information about
a packet, headers, and payload. This is important for:
* iptables to access various headers of packets
* Preventing the clutter of passing different net and link headers along with
VectorisedViews to packet handling functions.
This change only affects the incoming packet path, and a future change will
change the outgoing path.
Benchmark Regular PacketBufferPtr PacketBufferConcrete
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
BM_Recvmsg 400.715MB/s 373.676MB/s 396.276MB/s
BM_Sendmsg 361.832MB/s 333.003MB/s 335.571MB/s
BM_Recvfrom 453.336MB/s 393.321MB/s 381.650MB/s
BM_Sendto 378.052MB/s 372.134MB/s 341.342MB/s
BM_SendmsgTCP/0/1k 353.711MB/s 316.216MB/s 322.747MB/s
BM_SendmsgTCP/0/2k 600.681MB/s 588.776MB/s 565.050MB/s
BM_SendmsgTCP/0/4k 995.301MB/s 888.808MB/s 941.888MB/s
BM_SendmsgTCP/0/8k 1.517GB/s 1.274GB/s 1.345GB/s
BM_SendmsgTCP/0/16k 1.872GB/s 1.586GB/s 1.698GB/s
BM_SendmsgTCP/0/32k 1.017GB/s 1.020GB/s 1.133GB/s
BM_SendmsgTCP/0/64k 475.626MB/s 584.587MB/s 627.027MB/s
BM_SendmsgTCP/0/128k 416.371MB/s 503.434MB/s 409.850MB/s
BM_SendmsgTCP/0/256k 323.449MB/s 449.599MB/s 388.852MB/s
BM_SendmsgTCP/0/512k 243.992MB/s 267.676MB/s 314.474MB/s
BM_SendmsgTCP/0/1M 95.138MB/s 95.874MB/s 95.417MB/s
BM_SendmsgTCP/0/2M 96.261MB/s 94.977MB/s 96.005MB/s
BM_SendmsgTCP/0/4M 96.512MB/s 95.978MB/s 95.370MB/s
BM_SendmsgTCP/0/8M 95.603MB/s 95.541MB/s 94.935MB/s
BM_SendmsgTCP/0/16M 94.598MB/s 94.696MB/s 94.521MB/s
BM_SendmsgTCP/0/32M 94.006MB/s 94.671MB/s 94.768MB/s
BM_SendmsgTCP/0/64M 94.133MB/s 94.333MB/s 94.746MB/s
BM_SendmsgTCP/0/128M 93.615MB/s 93.497MB/s 93.573MB/s
BM_SendmsgTCP/0/256M 93.241MB/s 95.100MB/s 93.272MB/s
BM_SendmsgTCP/1/1k 303.644MB/s 316.074MB/s 308.430MB/s
BM_SendmsgTCP/1/2k 537.093MB/s 584.962MB/s 529.020MB/s
BM_SendmsgTCP/1/4k 882.362MB/s 939.087MB/s 892.285MB/s
BM_SendmsgTCP/1/8k 1.272GB/s 1.394GB/s 1.296GB/s
BM_SendmsgTCP/1/16k 1.802GB/s 2.019GB/s 1.830GB/s
BM_SendmsgTCP/1/32k 2.084GB/s 2.173GB/s 2.156GB/s
BM_SendmsgTCP/1/64k 2.515GB/s 2.463GB/s 2.473GB/s
BM_SendmsgTCP/1/128k 2.811GB/s 3.004GB/s 2.946GB/s
BM_SendmsgTCP/1/256k 3.008GB/s 3.159GB/s 3.171GB/s
BM_SendmsgTCP/1/512k 2.980GB/s 3.150GB/s 3.126GB/s
BM_SendmsgTCP/1/1M 2.165GB/s 2.233GB/s 2.163GB/s
BM_SendmsgTCP/1/2M 2.370GB/s 2.219GB/s 2.453GB/s
BM_SendmsgTCP/1/4M 2.005GB/s 2.091GB/s 2.214GB/s
BM_SendmsgTCP/1/8M 2.111GB/s 2.013GB/s 2.109GB/s
BM_SendmsgTCP/1/16M 1.902GB/s 1.868GB/s 1.897GB/s
BM_SendmsgTCP/1/32M 1.655GB/s 1.665GB/s 1.635GB/s
BM_SendmsgTCP/1/64M 1.575GB/s 1.547GB/s 1.575GB/s
BM_SendmsgTCP/1/128M 1.524GB/s 1.584GB/s 1.580GB/s
BM_SendmsgTCP/1/256M 1.579GB/s 1.607GB/s 1.593GB/s
PiperOrigin-RevId: 278940079
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