Add missing locks in dns_zone_getxfrsource4 et al. Addresses CID
468706, 468708, 468741, 468742, 468785 and 468778.
Cleanup dns_zone_setxfrsource4 et al to now return void.
Remove double copies with dns_zone_getprimaryaddr and dns_zone_getsourceaddr.
- dns_rdatatype_ismulti() returns true if a given type can have
multiple answers: ANY, RRSIG, or SIG.
- dns_rdatatype_issig() returns true for a signature: RRSIG or SIG.
- dns_rdatatype_isaddr() returns true for an address: A or AAAA.
- dns_rdatatype_isalias() returns true for an alias: CNAME or DNAME.
The calling fetch has already called fcount_incr() for this zone;
calling it again for a QMIN query results in double counting.
When resuming after a QMIN query is answered, however, we do now
ensure before continuing that the fetches-per-zone limit has not
been exceeded.
When all the addresses were already iterated over, the
dns_remote_curraddr() function asserts. So before calling it,
dns_zone_getprimaryaddr() now checks the address list using the
dns_remote_done() function. This also means that instead of
returning 'isc_sockaddr_t' it now returns 'isc_result_t' and
writes the primary's address into the provided pointer only when
returning success.
the target name parameter to dns_adb_createfind() was always passed as
NULL, so we can safely remove it.
relatedly, the 'target' field in the dns_adbname structure was never
referenced after being set. the 'expire_target' field was used, but
only as a way to check whether an ADB name represents a CNAME or DNAME,
and that information can be stored as a single flag.
previously, dns_name_fromtext() took both a target name and an
optional target buffer parameter, which could override the name's
dedicated buffer. this interface is unnecessarily complex.
we now have two functions, dns_name_fromtext() to convert text
into a dns_name that has a dedicated buffer, and dns_name_wirefromtext()
to convert text into uncompressed DNS wire format and append it to a
target buffer.
in cases where it really is necessary to have both, we can use
dns_name_fromtext() to load the dns_name, then dns_name_towire()
to append the wire format to the target buffer.
the target buffer passed to dns_name_concatenate() was never
used (except for one place in dig, where it wasn't actually
needed, and has already been removed in a prior commit).
we can safely remove the parameter.
this parameter was added as a (minor) optimization for
cases where dns_name_towire() is run repeatedly with the
same compression context, as when rendering all of the rdatas
in an rdataset. it is currently only used in one place.
we now simplify the interface by removing the extra parameter.
the compression offset value is now part of the compression
context, and can be activated when needed by calling
dns_compress_setmultiuse(). multiuse mode is automatically
deactivated by any subsequent call to dns_compress_permitted().
There was just a single use of passing an extra buffer to
dns_name_downcase() which have been replaced by simple call to
isc_ascii_lowercase() and the 'target' argument from dns_name_downcase()
function has been removed.
There was a back-and-forth between static arrays and the pointers to the
offsets. Since we are now only using the static arrays, we can cleanup
the usage of the pointers that would previously point either to the
static array or name->offsets if available.
The offsets were meant to speed-up the repeated dns_name operations, but
it was experimentally proven that there's actually no real-world
benefit. Remove the offsets and labels fields from the dns_name and the
static offsets fields to save 128 bytes from the fixedname in favor of
calculating labels and offsets only when needed.
The DNS header shows if a message has multiple questions or invalid
NOTIFY sections. We can drop these messages early, right after parsing
the question. This matches RFC 9619 for multi-question messages and
Unbound's handling of NOTIFY.
To further add further robustness, we include an additional check for
unknown opcodes, and also drop those messages early.
Add early_sanity_check() function to check for these conditions:
- Messages with more than one question, as required by RFC 9619
- NOTIFY query messages containing answer sections (like Unbound)
- NOTIFY messages containing authority sections (like Unbound)
- Unknown opcodes.
Instead of relying on unreliable order of execution of the library
constructors and destructors, move them to individual binaries. The
advantage is that the execution time and order will remain constant and
will not depend on the dynamic load dependency solver.
This requires more work, but that was mitigated by a simple requirement,
any executable using libisc and libdns, must include <isc/lib.h> and
<dns/lib.h> respectively (in this particular order). In turn, these two
headers must not be included from within any library as they contain
inlined functions marked with constructor/destructor attributes.
Previously a hard-coded limitation of maximum two key or message
verification checks were introduced when checking the message's
SIG(0) signature. It was done in order to protect against possible
DoS attacks. The logic behind choosing the number two was that more
than one key should only be required only during key rotations, and
in that case two keys are enough. But later it became apparent that
there are other use cases too where even more keys are required, see
issue number #5050 in GitLab.
This change introduces two new configuration options for the views,
sig0key-checks-limit and sig0message-checks-limit, which define how
many keys are allowed to be checked to find a matching key, and how
many message verifications are allowed to take place once a matching
key has been found. The latter protects against expensive cryptographic
operations when there are keys with colliding tags and algorithm
numbers, with default being 2, and the former protects against a bit
less expensive key parsing operations and defaults to 16.
Expose the average transfer rate (in bytes-per-second) during the
last full 'min-transfer-rate-in <bytes> <minutes>' minutes interval.
If no such interval has passed yet, then the overall average rate is
reported instead.
This new option sets a minimum amount of transfer rate for
an incoming zone transfer that will abort a transfer, which
for some network related reasons run very slowly.
Add a new dns_rdataset_equals() function to check whether two
rdatasets are equal in DNSSEC terms.
When an rdataset being cached is rejected because its trust
level is lower than the existing rdataset, we now check to see
whether the rejected data was identical to the existing data.
This allows us to cache a potentially useful RRSIG when handling
CD=1 queries, while still rejecting RRSIGs that would definitely
have resulted in a validation failure.
The "raw" version of the header was used for the noqname and the closest
proofs to save around 152 bytes of the dns_slabheader_t while bringing
an additional complexity. Remove the raw version of the dns_slabheader
API at the slight expense of having unused dns_slabheader_t data sitting
in front of the proofs.
The function name dns_slabheader_fromrdataset() was too similar
to dns_rdataslab_fromrdataset(). Instead, we now have an rdataset
method 'getheader' which is implemented for slab-type rdatasets.
A new NOHEADER rdataset attribute is set for rdatasets using
raw slabs (i.e., noqname and closest encloser proofs); when
called on rdatasets with that flag set, dns_rdataset_getheader()
returns NULL.
when dns_rdataslab_fromrdataset() is run, in addition to
allocating space for a slab header, it also partially
initializes it, setting the type match rdataset->type and
rdataset->covers, the trust to rdataset->trust, and the TTL to
rdataset->ttl.
there are now two functions for creating an rdataslab from an
rdataset: dns_rdataslab_fromrdataset() creates a full slab (including
space for a slab header), and dns_rdataslab_raw_fromrdataset() creates
a raw slab.
- there are now two functions for getting rdataslab size:
dns_rdataslab_size() is for full slabs and dns_rdataslab_sizeraw()
for raw slabs. there is no longer a need for a reservelen parameter.
- dns_rdataslab_count() also no longer takes a reservelen parameter.
(currently it's never used for raw slabs, so there is no _countraw()
function.)
- dns_rdataslab_rdatasize() has been removed, because
dns_rdataslab_sizeraw() can do the same thing.
- dns_rdataslab_merge() and dns_rdataslab_subtract() both take
slabheader parameters instead of character buffers, and the
reservelen parameter has been removed.
if both rdataslabs being compared have zero length, return true.
also, since these functions are only ever called on slabheaders
with sizeof(dns_slabheader_t) as the reserve length, we can
simplify the API: remove the reservelen argument, and pass the
slabs as type dns_slabheader_t * instead of unsigned char *.
The dns_slabheader object uses the 'next' pointer for two purposes.
In the first header for any given type, 'next' points to the first
header for the next type. But 'down' points to the next header of
the same type, and in that record, 'next' points back up.
This design made the code confusing to read. We now use a union
so that the 'next' pointer can also be called 'up'.
When converting SVCB records to text representation use named
SvcParamKeys values unless backward-compatible mode is activated,
in which case the values which were not defined initially in
RFC9460 and were added later (see [1]) are converted to opaque
"keyN" syntax, like, for example, "key7" instead of "dohpath".
[1] https://www.iana.org/assignments/dns-svcb/dns-svcb.xhtml
Co-authored-by: sdomi <ja@sdomi.pl>
In #1870, the expiration time of ANCIENT records were printed, but
actually the ancient records are very short lived, and the information
carries a little value.
Instead of printing the expiration of ANCIENT records, print the
expiration time of STALE records.
The original .ttl field was actually used as TTL in the dns_qpzone unit.
Restore the field by adding it to union with the .expire struct member
and cleanup all the code that added or subtracted 'now' from the ttl
field as that was misleading as 'now' would be always 0 for qpzone
database.
The old name was misleading as it never meant time-to-live, e.g. number
of seconds from now when the header should expire. The true meaning was
an expiration time e.g. now + ttl. This was the original design bug
that caused the slip when we assigned header->ttl to rdataset->ttl.
Because the name was matching, nobody has questioned the correctness of
the code both during the MR review and during the numerous re-reviews
when we were searching for the cause of the 54 year TTL.
The address lookups from ADB were not being validated, allowing
spoofed responses to be accepted and used for other lookups.
Validate the answers except when CD=1 is set in the triggering
request. Separate ADB names looked up with CD=1 from those without
CD=1, to prevent the use of unvalidated answers in the normal lookup
case (CD=0). Set the TTL on unvalidated (pending) responses to
ADB_CACHE_MINIMUM when adding them to the ADB.
In order to avoid to loop to find the next position to store an EDE in
a dns_edectx_t, add a "nextede" state which holds the next available
position.
Also, in order ot avoid to loop to find if an EDE is already existing in
a dns_edectx_t, and avoid a duplicate, use a bitmap to immediately know
if the EDE is there or not.
Those both changes applies for adding or copying EDE.
Also make the direction of dns_ede_copy more explicit/avoid errors by
making "edectx_from" a const pointer.
Migrate tests cases in client_test code which were exclusively testing
code which is now all wrapped inside ede compilation unit. Those are
testing maximum number of EDE, duplicate EDE as well as truncation of
text of an EDE.
Also add coverage for the copy of EDE from an edectx to another one, as
well as checking the assertion of the maximum EDE info code which can be
used.
Instead of mixing the dns_resolver and dns_validator units directly with
the EDE code, split-out the dns_ede functionality into own separate
compilation unit and hide the implementation details behind abstraction.
Additionally, the EDE codes are directly copied into the ns_client
buffers by passing the EDE context to dns_resolver_createfetch().
This makes the dns_ede implementation simpler to use, although sligtly
more complicated on the inside.
Co-authored-by: Colin Vidal <colin@isc.org>
Co-authored-by: Ondřej Surý <ondrej@isc.org>
Add support for EDE codes 1 (Unsupported DNSKEY Algorithm) and 2
(Unsupported DS Digest Type) which might occurs during DNSSEC
validation in case of unsupported DNSKEY algorithm or DS digest type.
Because DNSSEC internally kicks off various fetches, we need to copy
all encountered extended errors from fetch responses to the fetch
context. Upon an event, the errors from the fetch context are copied
to the client response.
the isc_mem allocation functions can no longer fail; as a result,
ISC_R_NOMEMORY is now rarely used: only when an external library
such as libjson-c or libfstrm could return NULL. (even in
these cases, arguably we should assert rather than returning
ISC_R_NOMEMORY.)
code and comments that mentioned ISC_R_NOMEMORY have been
cleaned up, and the following functions have been changed to
type void, since (in most cases) the only value they could
return was ISC_R_SUCCESS:
- dns_dns64_create()
- dns_dyndb_create()
- dns_ipkeylist_resize()
- dns_kasp_create()
- dns_kasp_key_create()
- dns_keystore_create()
- dns_order_create()
- dns_order_add()
- dns_peerlist_new()
- dns_tkeyctx_create()
- dns_view_create()
- dns_zone_setorigin()
- dns_zone_setfile()
- dns_zone_setstream()
- dns_zone_getdbtype()
- dns_zone_setjournal()
- dns_zone_setkeydirectory()
- isc_lex_openstream()
- isc_portset_create()
- isc_symtab_create()
(the exception is dns_view_create(), which could have returned
other error codes in the event of a crypto library failure when
calling isc_file_sanitize(), but that should be a RUNTIME_CHECK
anyway.)
Track inside the dns_dnsseckey structure whether we have seen the
private key, or if this key only has a public key file.
If the key only has a public key file, or a DNSKEY reference in the
zone, mark the key 'pubkey'. In dnssec-signzone, if the key only
has a public key available, consider the key to be offline. Any
signatures that should be refreshed for which the key is not available,
retain the signature.
So in the code, 'expired' becomes 'refresh', and the new 'expired'
is only used to determine whether we need to keep the signature if
the corresponding key is not available (retaining the signature if
it is not expired).
In the 'keysthatsigned' function, we can remove:
- key->force_publish = false;
- key->force_sign = false;
because they are redundant ('dns_dnsseckey_create' already sets these
values to false).
Extended DNS error mechanism (EDE) enables to have several EDE raised
during a DNS resolution (typically, a DNSSEC query will do multiple
fetches which each of them can have an error). Add support to up to 3
EDE errors in an DNS response. If duplicates occur (two EDEs with the
same code, the extra text is not compared), only the first one will be
part of the DNS answer.
Because the maximum number of EDE is statically fixed, `ns_client_t`
object own a static vector of `DNS_DE_MAX_ERRORS` (instead of a linked
list, for instance). The array can be fully filled (all slots point to
an allocated `dns_ednsopt_t` object) or partially filled (or
empty). In such case, the first NULL slot means there is no more EDE
objects.
In some places there was a limitation of the maximum timeout
value of INT16_MAX, which is only about 32 seconds. Refactor
the code to remove the limitation.
The network manager layer has two different timers with their
own timeout values for TCP connections: connect timeout and read
timeout. Separate the connect and the read TCP timeouts in the
dispatch module too.
struct fetchctx does have a list of pending validators as well as a
pointer to the HEAD validator. Remove the validator pointer to avoid
confusion, as there is no perticular reasons to have it directly
accessible outside of the list.