The dns_dispatch_gettcp() function is used for finding an existing TCP
connection that can be reused for sending a query from a specified local
address to a specified remote address. The logic for matching the
provided <local address, remote address> tuple to one of the existing
TCP connections is implemented in the dispatch_match() function:
- if the examined TCP connection already has a libuv handle assigned,
it means the connection has already been established; therefore,
compare the provided <local address, remote address> tuple against
the corresponding address tuple for the libuv handle associated with
the connection,
- if the examined TCP connection does not yet have a libuv handle
assigned, it means the connection has not yet been established;
therefore, compare the provided <local address, remote address>
tuple against the corresponding address tuple that the TCP
connection was originally created for.
This logic limits TCP connection reuse potential as the libuv handle
assigned to an existing dispatch object may have a more specific local
<address, port> tuple associated with it than the local <address, port>
tuple that the dispatch object was originally created for. That's
because the local address for outgoing connections can be set to a
wildcard <address, port> tuple (indicating that the caller does not care
what source <address, port> tuple will be used for establishing the
connection, thereby delegating the task of picking it to the operating
system) and then get "upgraded" to a specific <address, port> tuple when
the socket is bound (and a libuv handle gets associated with it). When
another dns_dispatch_gettcp() caller then tries to look for an existing
TCP connection to the same peer and passes a wildcard address in the
local part of the tuple, the function will not match that request to a
previously-established TCP connection (unless isc_nmhandle_localaddr()
returns a wildcard address as well).
Simplify dispatch_match() so that the libuv handle associated with an
existing dispatch object is not examined for the purpose of matching it
to the provided <local address, remote address> tuple; instead, always
examine the <local address, remote address> tuple that the dispatch
object was originally created for. This enables reuse of TCP
connections created without providing a specific local socket address
while still preventing other connections (created for a specific local
socket address) from being inadvertently shared.
This commit ensures that BIND enables TLS SNI support for outgoing DoT
connections (when possible) in order to improve compatibility with
other DNS server software.
This commit adds support for setting SNI hostnames in outgoing
connections over TLS.
Most of the changes are related to either adapting the code to accept
and extra argument in *connect() functions and a couple of changes to
the TLS Stream to actually make use of the new SNI hostname
information.
Previously, we had an ISC_CONSTEXPR macro that was expanded to either
`constexpr` or `static const`, depending on compiler support. To make
the code cleaner, move `constexpr` support detection to Autoconf; if
`constexpr` support is missing from the compiler, define `constexpr` as
`static const` in config.h.
Since BIND 9 headers are not longer public, there's no reason to keep
the ISC_LANG_BEGINDECL and ISC_LANG_ENDDECL macros to support including
them from C++ projects.
This is a second attempt to rewrite the GLUE cache to not use per
database version hash table. Instead of keeping a hash table indexed by
the node, use a directly linked list of GLUE records for each
slabheader. This was attempted before, but there was a data race caused
by the fact that the thread cleaning the GLUE records could be slower
than accessing the slab headers again and reinitializing the wait-free
stack.
The improved design builds on the previous design, but adds a new
dns_gluelist structure that has a pointer to the database version.
If a dns_gluelist belonging to a different (old) version is detected, it
is just detached from the slabheader and left for the closeversion() to
clean it up later.
The 'remote-servers' named.conf reference conflicts with the standard
term from the glossary. Rename the standard term to server-list to
make the docs build.
Add back the top blocks 'parental-agents', 'primaries', and 'masters'
to the configuration. Do not document them as so many names for the
same clause is confusing.
This has a slight negative side effect that a top block 'primaries'
can be referred to with a zone statement 'parental-agents' for example,
but that shouldn't be a big issue.
Having zone statements that are also top blocks is confusing, and if
we want to add more in the future (which I suspect will be for
generalized notifications, multi-signer), we need to duplicate a lot
of code.
Remove top blocks 'parental-agents' and 'primaries' and just have one
top block 'remote-servers' that you can refer to with zone statements.
this commit removes the deprecated "sortlist" option. the option
is now marked as ancient; it is a fatal error to use it in
named.conf.
the sortlist system test has been removed, and other tests that
referenced the option have been modified.
the enabling functions, dns_message_setsortorder() and
dns_rdataset_towiresorted(), have also been removed.
named-checkzone will now, as part of the zone's integrity checks,
look to see if there are A or AAAA records being served and if so
check that the nameservers have A or AAAA records respectively.
These are a sometimes overlooked checks that, if not met, can mean
that a service that is supposed to reachable over IPv6 will not be
resolvable when the recursive resolver is IPv6 only. Similarly for
IPv4 servers when there are IPv4 only resolvers.
- remove obsolete DNS_LOGMODULE_RBT and DNS_LOGMODULE_RBTDB
- correct the misuse of the wrong log modules in dns/rpz.c and
dns/catz.c, and add DNS_LOGMODULE_RPZ and DNS_LOGMODULE_CATZ
to support them.
`shutdown_trigger_close_cb` is not called in the main loop since
queued events in the `loop->async_trigger`, including loop teardown
(shutdown_server) are processed first, before the `uv_close` callback
is executed..
In order to pass the information to the queued events, it is necessary
to set the flag earlier in the process and not wait for the `uv_close`
callback to trigger.
Search directive from resolv.conf had a maximum of 8 domains. Any
more were ignored. Do not ignore them anymore; iterate over any
number of domains.
Test resolv.conf support by checking the first and last domain in
the search list. Ignore the domains between; just ensure that the
last domain in the configuration is the last domain parsed.
Only call eatline() to skip to the next line if we're not
already at the end of a line when parsing an unknown directive.
We were accidentally skipping the next line when there was only
a single unknown directive on the current line.
The DNS_R_MUSTBESECURE lost its meaning with removal of
dnssec-must-be-secure option, so replace the few remaining (and a bit
confusing) use of this result code with DNS_R_NOVALIDSIG.
The dnssec-must-be-secure feature was added in the early days of BIND 9
and DNSSEC and it makes sense only as a debugging feature. There are no
reasons to keep this feature in the production code anymore.
Remove the feature to simplify the code.
Commit af7db89513 as part of #4141 was
supposed to apply the 'max-recursion-queries' quota to validator
queries, but the counter was never actually passed on to
dns_resolver_createfetch(). This has been fixed, and the global query
counter ('max-query-count', per client request) is now also added.
Upstream code doesn't do regular releases, so we need to regularly
sync the code from the upstream repository. This is synchronization up
to the commit f8d0513 from Jan 29, 2024.
While implementing the global limit 'max-query-count', initially I
thought adding the variable to the resolver structure. But the limit
is per client request so it was moved to the view structure (and
counter in ns_query structure). However, I forgot to remove the
variable from the resolver structure again. This commit fixes that.
The root cause is the fix for CVE-2024-0760 (part 3), which resets
the TCP connection on a failed send. Specifically commit
4b7c61381f stops reading on the socket
because the TCP connection is throttling.
When the tcpdns_send_cb callback thinks about restarting reading
on the socket, this fails because the socket is a client socket.
And nsupdate is a client and is using the same netmgr code.
This commit removes the requirement that the socket must be a server
socket, allowing reading on the socket again after being throttled.
Add another option to configure how many outgoing queries per
client request is allowed. The existing 'max-recursion-queries' is
per restart, this one is a global limit.
Previously, the update policy rules check was moved earlier in the
sequence, and the keep rule match pointers were kept to maintain the
ability to verify maximum records by type.
However, these pointers can become invalid if server reloading
or reconfiguration occurs before update completion. To prevent
this issue, extract the maximum records by type value immediately
during processing and only keep the copy of the values instead of the
full ssurule.
the generated grammar for named.conf clauses that may or may not be
enabled at compile time will now print the same comment regardless of
whether or not they are.
previously, the grammar didn't print a comment if an option was enabled,
but printed "not configured" if it was disabled. now, in both cases,
it will say "optional (only available if configured)".
as an incidental fix, clarified the documentation for "named-checkconf -n".
Add support for Extended DNS Errors (EDE) error 22: No reachable
authority. This occurs when after a timeout delay when the resolver is
trying to query an authority server.
The lame-ttl processing was overriden to be disabled in the config,
but the code related to the lame-ttl was still kept in the resolver
code. More importantly, the DNS_RESOLVER_BADCACHETTL() macro would
cause the entries in the resolver badcache to be always cached for at
least 30 seconds even if the lame-ttl would be set to 0.
Remove the dns_badcache code from the dns_resolver unit, so we save some
processing time and memory in the resolver code.
Instead of cleaning the dns_badcache opportunistically, add per-loop
LRU, so each thread-loop can clean the expired entries. This also
allows removal of the atomic operations as the badcache entries are now
immutable, instead of updating the badcache entry in place, the old
entry is now deleted from the hashtable and the LRU list, and the new
entry is inserted in the LRU.
The code that listens on individual interfaces is now stable and doesn't
require any changes. The code that would bind to IPv6 wildcard address
and then use IPv6 pktinfo structure to get the source address is not
going to be completed, so it's better to just remove the dead cruft.
In 2024, it is reasonable to assume that IPv4 and IPv6 is always
available on a socket() level. We still keep the option to enable or
disable each IP version individually, as the routing might be broken or
undesirable for one of the versions.
There was a data race dns_validator_cancel() was called when the
offloaded operations were in progress. Make dns_validator_cancel()
respect the data ownership and only set new .shuttingdown variable when
the offloaded operations are in progress. The cancel operation would
then finish when the offloaded work passes the ownership back to the
respective thread.
Previously a ISC_R_CANCELED result code switch-case has been added to
the zone.c:zone_xfrdone() function, which did two things:
1. Schedule a new zone transfer if there's a scheduled force reload of
the zone.
2. Reset the primaries list.
This proved to be not a well-thought change and causes problems,
because the ISC_R_CANCELED code is used not only when the whole transfer
is canceled, but also when, for example, a particular primary server is
unreachable, and named still needs to continue the transfer process by
trying the next server, which it now no longer does in some cases. To
solve this issue, three changes are made:
1. Make sure dns_zone_refresh() runs on the zone's loop, so that the
sequential calls of dns_zone_stopxfr() and dns_zone_forcexfr()
functions (like done in 'rndc retransfer -force') run in intended
order and don't race with each other.
2. Since starting the new transfer is now guaranteed to run after the
previous transfer is shut down (see the previous change), remove the
special handling of the ISC_R_CANCELED case, and let the default
handler to handle it like before. This will bring back the ability to
try the next primary if the current one was interrupted with a
ISC_R_CANCELED result code.
3. Change the xfrin.c:xfrin_shutdown() function to pass the
ISC_R_SHUTTINGDOWN result code instead of ISC_R_CANCELED, as it makes
more sense.