This pull request adds six flags to instruct the parser under various circumstances to skip parsing of the returned RR records so the raw data can be retrieved.
Fixes Bug: #686
Fix By: Erik Lax (@eriklax)
ahost wasn't printing both ipv4 and ipv6 addresses. This day and age, it really should.
This PR also adds the ability to specify the servers to use.
Fix By: Brad House (@bradh352)
Some environments may send router advertisements on a link setting their link-local (fe80::/10) address as a valid DNS server to the remote system. This will cause a DNS entry to be created like `fe80::1%iface`, since all link-local network interfaces are technically part of the same /10 subnet, it must be told what interface to send packets through explicitly if there are multiple physical interfaces.
This PR adds support for the %iface modifier when setting DNS servers via `/etc/resolv.conf` as well as via `ares_set_servers_csv()`.
For MacOS and iOS it is assumed that libresolve will set the `sin6_scope_id` and should be supported, but my test systems don't seem to read the Router Advertisement for RDNSS link-local. Specifying the link-local dns server on MacOS via adig has been tested and confirmed working.
For Windows, this is similar to MacOS in that the system doesn't seem to honor the RDNSS RA, but specifying manually has been tested to work.
At this point, Android support does not exist.
Fixes Bug #462
Supersedes PR #463
Fix By: Brad House (@bradh352) and Serhii Purik (@sergvpurik)
c-ares does not have any concept of thread-safety. It has always been 100% up to the implementor to ensure they never call c-ares from more than one thread at a time. This patch adds basic thread-safety support, which can be disabled at compile time if not desired. It uses a single recursive mutex per channel, which should be extremely quick when uncontested so overhead should be minimal.
Fixes Bug: #610
Also sets the stage to implement #611
Fix By: Brad House (@bradh352)
For historic reasons, we have users depending on ares_set_servers_*()
to return ARES_SUCCESS when passing no servers and actually *clear*
the server list. It appears they do this for test cases to simulate
DNS unavailable or similar. Presumably they could achieve the same
effect in other ways (point to localhost on a port that isn't in use).
But it seems like this might be wide-spread enough to cause headaches
so we just will document and test for this behavior, clearly it hasn't
caused "issues" for anyone with the old behavior.
See: https://github.com/nodejs/node/pull/50800
Fix By: Brad House (@bradh352)
This PR implements a query cache at the lowest possible level, the actual dns request and response messages. Only successful and `NXDOMAIN` responses are cached. The lowest TTL in the response message determines the cache validity period for the response, and is capped at the configuration value for `qcache_max_ttl`. For `NXDOMAIN` responses, the SOA record is evaluated.
For a query to match the cache, the opcode, flags, and each question's class, type, and name are all evaluated. This is to prevent matching a cached entry for a subtly different query (such as if the RD flag is set on one request and not another).
For things like ares_getaddrinfo() or ares_search() that may spawn multiple queries, each individual message received is cached rather than the overarching response. This makes it possible for one query in the sequence to be purged from the cache while others still return cached results which means there is no chance of ever returning stale data.
We have had a lot of user requests to return TTLs on all the various parsers like `ares_parse_caa_reply()`, and likely this is because they want to implement caching mechanisms of their own, thus this PR should solve those issues as well.
Due to the internal data structures we have these days, this PR is less than 500 lines of new code.
Fixes#608
Fix By: Brad House (@bradh352)
The retry timeout values were using a fixed calculation which could cause multiple simultaneous queries to timeout and retry at the exact same time. If a DNS server is throttling requests, this could cause the issue to never self-resolve due to all requests recurring at the same instance again.
This PR also creates a maximum timeout option to make sure the random value selected does not exceed this value.
Fix By: Ignat (@Kontakter)
This PR implements ares_reinit() to safely reload a channel's configuration even if there are existing queries. This function can be called when system configuration is detected to be changed, however since c-ares isn't thread aware, care must be taken to ensure no other c-ares calls are in progress at the time this function is called. Also, this function may update the open file descriptor list so care must also be taken to wake any event loops and reprocess the list of file descriptors.
Fixes Bug #301
Fix By: Brad House (@bradh352)
adig previously performed manual parsing of the DNS records. Now it can focus strictly on formatting of output data for printing. It simply iterates across the parsed DNS packet and queries for the RRs, parameters for each RR, and the datatypes for each parameter. adig will now automatically pick up new RRs from the c-ares library due to the dynamic nature.
The adig format also now more closely resembles that of BIND's `dig` output.
A few more helpers needed to be added to the c-ares library that were missing. There ware a couple of minor bugs and enhancements also needed.
Example:
```
./adig -t ANY www.google.com
; <<>> c-ares DiG 1.21.0 <<>> www.google.com
;; Got answer:
;; ->>HEADER<<- opcode: QUERY, status: RCODE, id: 23913
;; flags: qr rd ra; QUERY: 1, ANSWER: 11, AUTHORITY: 0, ADDITIONAL: 1
;; OPT PSEUDOSECTION:
; EDNS: version: 0, flags: 0; udp: 512
;; QUESTION SECTION:
;www.google.com. IN ANY
;; ANSWER SECTION:
www.google.com. 162 IN A 142.251.107.99
www.google.com. 162 IN A 142.251.107.105
www.google.com. 162 IN A 142.251.107.103
www.google.com. 162 IN A 142.251.107.147
www.google.com. 162 IN A 142.251.107.104
www.google.com. 162 IN A 142.251.107.106
www.google.com. 162 IN AAAA 2607:f8b0:400c:c32::93
www.google.com. 162 IN AAAA 2607:f8b0:400c:c32::69
www.google.com. 162 IN AAAA 2607:f8b0:400c:c32::68
www.google.com. 162 IN AAAA 2607:f8b0:400c:c32::6a
www.google.com. 21462 IN HTTPS 1 . alpn="h2,h3"
;; MSG SIZE rcvd: 276
```
Fix By: Brad House (@bradh352)
All DNS servers support EDNS, by using this by default, it will allow larger responses without the need to switch to TCP. If by chance a DNS server is hit that doesn't support EDNS, this is detected due to the lack of the OPT RR in the response and will be automatically retried without EDNS.
Fix By: Brad House (@bradh352)
`ares_channel` is defined as `typedef struct ares_channeldata *ares_channel;`. The problem with this, is it embeds the pointer into the typedef, which means an `ares_channel` can never be declared as `const` as if you write `const ares_channel channel`, that expands to `struct ares_channeldata * const ares_channel` and not `const struct ares_channeldata *channel`.
We will now typedef `ares_channel_t` as `typedef struct ares_channeldata ares_channel_t;`, so if you write `const ares_channel_t *channel`, it properly expands to `const struct ares_channeldata *channel`.
We are maintaining the old typedef for API compatibility with existing integrations, and due to typedef expansion this should not even cause any compiler warnings for existing code. There are no ABI implications with this change. I could be convinced to keep existing public functions as `ares_channel` if a sufficient argument exists, but internally we really need make this change for modern best practices.
This change will allow us to internally use `const ares_channel_t *` where appropriate. Whether or not we decide to change any public interfaces to use `const` may require further discussion on if there might be ABI implications (I don't think so, but I'm also not 100% sure what a compiler internally does with `const` when emitting machine code ... I think more likely ABI implications would occur going the opposite direction).
FYI, This PR was done via a combination of sed and clang-format, the only manual code change was the addition of the new typedef, and a couple doc fixes :)
Fix By: Brad House (@bradh352)
When referring to another c-ares function use \fI function(3) \fP to let
the webpage rendering find and cross-link them appropriately.
SEE ALSO references should be ".BR name (3),", with a space before the
open parenthesis. This helps the manpage to HTML renderer.
Closes#565
As per #266, TCP queries are basically broken. If we get a partial reply, things just don't work, but unlike UDP, TCP may get fragmented and we need to properly handle that.
I've started creating a basic parser/buffer framework for c-ares for memory safety reasons, but it also helps for things like this where we shouldn't be manually tracking positions and fetching only a couple of bytes at a time from a socket. This parser/buffer will be expanded and used more in the future.
This also resolves#206 by allowing NULL to be specified for some socket callbacks so they will auto-route to the built-in c-ares functions.
Fixes: #206, #266
Fix By: Brad House (@bradh352)
The acountry utility required a third party DNSBL service from nerd.dk in order to operate. That service has been offline for about a year and there is no other comparable service offering. We are keeping the code in the repository as an example, but no longer building it.
Fixes: #537
Fix By: Brad House (@bradh352)
Add a new ARES_OPT_UDP_MAX_QUERIES option with udp_max_queries parameter that can be passed to ares_init_options(). This value defaults to 0 (unlimited) to maintain existing compatibility, any positive number will cause new UDP ephemeral ports to be created once the threshold is reached, we'll call these 'connections' even though its technically wrong for UDP.
Implementation Details:
* Each server entry in a channel now has a linked-list of connections/ports for udp and tcp. The first connection in the list is the one most likely to be eligible to accept new queries.
* Queries are now tracked by connection rather than by server.
* Every time a query is detached from a connection, the connection that it was attached to will be checked to see if it needs to be cleaned up.
* Insertion, lookup, and searching for connections has been implemented as O(1) complexity so the number of connections will not impact performance.
* Remove is_broken from the server, it appears it would be set and immediately unset, so must have been invalidated via a prior patch. A future patch should probably track consecutive server errors and de-prioritize such servers. The code right now will always try servers in the order of configuration, so a bad server in the list will always be tried and may rely on timeout logic to try the next.
* Various other cleanups to remove code duplication and for clarification.
Fixes Bug: #444
Fix By: Brad House (@bradh352)
A lot of time has passed since the original timeouts and retry counts were chosen. We have on and off issues reported due to this. Even on geostationary satellite links, latency is worst case around 1.5s. This PR changes the per-server timeout to 2s and the retry count lowered from 4 to 3.
Fix By: Brad House (@bradh352)
All files have their licence and copyright information clearly
identifiable. If not in the file header, they are set separately in
.reuse/dep5.
All used license texts are provided in LICENSES/
As per #487, documentation states the port should be in network byte
order, but we can see from the test cases using MockServers on
different ports that this is not the case, it is definitely in host
byte order.
Fix By: Brad House (@bradh352)
To make them render "nicer" in both terminals and on the website.
- Removes the bold
- Removes .PP lines
- Indents them more like proper code style
Fix By: Daniel Stenberg (@bagder)
There was a lot of windows initialization code specific to the era that predates Windows Vista such as reading DNS configuration from the registry, and dynamically loading libraries to get access to functions that didn't exist in XP or earlier releases.
Vista was released in January 2007, and was EOL'd in 2017, and support for Vista is still maintained with this patch set.
XP was EOL'd in Apr 8 2014.
I believe the last OS based on something earlier than Vista was POSReady 2009, as it was XP based for some reason, and that was EOL'd in January 2019. Considering any POS system falls under the PCI-DSS rules, they aren't allow to run POSReady 2009 any more so there is no reason to try to continue supporting such systems.
We have also targeted with our build system Vista support for the last few years, and while developers could change the target, we haven't had any reports that they have.
ares_gethostbyname() and ares_getaddrinfo() do a lot of similar things, however ares_getaddrinfo() has some desirable behaviors that should be imported into ares_gethostbyname(). For one, it sorts the address lists for the most likely to succeed based on the current system routes. Next, when AF_UNSPEC is specified, it properly handles search lists instead of first searching all of AF_INET6 then AF_INET, since ares_gethostbyname() searches in parallel. Therefore, this PR should also resolve the issues attempted in #94.
A few things this PR does:
1. ares_parse_a_reply() and ares_parse_aaaa_reply() had very similar code to translate struct ares_addrinfo into a struct hostent as well as into struct ares_addrttl/ares_addr6ttl this has been split out into helper functions of ares__addrinfo2hostent() and ares__addrinfo2addrttl() to prevent this duplicative code.
2. ares_getaddrinfo() was apparently never honoring HOSTALIASES, and this was discovered once ares_gethostbyname() was turned into a wrapper, the affected test cases started failing.
3. A slight API modification to save the query hostname into struct ares_addrinfo as the last element of name. Since this is the last element, and all user-level instances of struct ares_addrinfo are allocated internally by c-ares, this is not an ABI-breaking change nor would it impact any API compatibility. This was needed since struct hostent has an h_name element.
4. Test Framework: MockServer tests via TCP would fail if more than 1 request was received at a time which is common when ares_getaddrinfo() queries for both A and AAAA records simultaneously. Infact, this was a long standing issue in which the ares_getaddrinfo() test were bypassing TCP alltogether. This has been corrected, the message is now processed in a loop.
5. Some tests had to be updated for overall correctness as they were invalid but somehow passing prior to this change.
Change By: Brad House (@bradh352)
CAA (Certification Authority Authorization) was introduced in RFC 6844.
This has been obsoleted by RFC 8659. This commit added the possibility
to query CAA resource records with adig and adds a parser for CAA
records, that can be used in conjunction with ares_query(3).
Closes Bug: #292
Fix By: Daniela Sonnenschein (@lxdicted)